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Conditions

Conditions are logical blocks which can be combined with other conditions inside a target rule. A condition is expected to implement match() method which always returns a boolean.

To implement a condition, you need to implement 2 parts:

Implementing a Condition

As stated before, a condition needs to implement the ConditionInterface. The most important method in the interface is the match() method which receives the current VisitorInfo instance and is expected to return a boolean which indicates if the condition matches or not.

As an example let's build a condition which matches if the current time of the day is later than the configured one. E.g. if configured to 15:00, the condition would start to match at 15:00 until midnight.

Start by creating a condition class implementing the ConditionInterface. For simplicity's sake we just check the current hour, not the full time.

<?php

// src/AppBundle/Targeting/Condition/TimeOfTheDay.php

namespace AppBundle\Targeting\Condition;

use Pimcore\Targeting\Condition\ConditionInterface;
use Pimcore\Targeting\Model\VisitorInfo;

class TimeOfTheDay implements ConditionInterface
{
    /**
     * @var int|null
     */
    private $hour;

    public function __construct(int $hour = null)
    {
        $this->hour = $hour;
    }

    public static function fromConfig(array $config)
    {
        $hour = $config['hour'] ?? null;
        if (!empty($hour)) {
            $hour = (int)$hour;
        }

        // build an instance from the config as configured
        // in the admin UI
        return new self($hour);
    }

    public function canMatch(): bool
    {
        // basic validation if the condition is able to match
        return null !== $this->hour && $this->hour >= 0 && $this->hour <= 23;
    }

    public function match(VisitorInfo $visitorInfo): bool
    {
        $hour = (int)(new \DateTime())->format('H');

        return $hour >= $this->hour;
    }
}

After implementing your condition, you need to register it to the system with the following configuration. The identifier timeoftheday will later be used from your JS implementation, so make sure you choose a unique name and to reuse the same name when implementing the JS class.

pimcore:
    targeting:
        conditions:
            timeoftheday: AppBundle\Targeting\Condition\TimeOfTheDay

Building a Condition Instance

When an instance of your condition is build, by default the ConditionFactory will call the static fromConfig() method with the data configured in the admin UI. Avoid injecting any services or custom data into your condition and use the data provider system instead to add data to the VisitorInfo. However, if you need more control over how your condition is built you can either:

  • overwrite the ConditionFactory service definition (not recommended) and implement your own logic instead of calling fromConfig()
  • or handle the TargetingEvents::BUILD_CONDITION event and set an instance of your condition on the event. The BuildConditionEvent contains all the info you need to build a condition instance (type, class name, config data). If you set a condition on the event via setCondition, the standard logic will be omitted and the event condition will be used.

Condition Data

If your condition needs any outside data, implement the DataProviderDependentInterface and define a list of data provider keys which need to be set on the VisitorInfo before matching. We'll enhance our TimeOfTheDay condition on the Data Providers chapter. For further examples, you can take a look at existing core conditions.

Condition Variables

An important part are variable conditions which support the session_with_variables rule matching scope. A condition implementing this interface is expected to return an array of the variables which led to match the condition in the getMatchedVariables() method. This data will be used to determine if the rule was already applied with the exact same data.

You should implement this interface whenever possible. To get started, you can use the AbstractVariableCondition which contains helper methods to collect variable data. Make sure you build your data in a deterministic way (e.g. using the same order of keys in an array structure or the same format when serializing data) as a hash of this data is used to compare it to previous evaluations in order to decide if a rule needs to be applied.

As example: the country condition sets the ISO country code which led to match as its data (based on GeoLocation). If a rule is executed in the session_with_variables scope the the country condition is the only condition on that rule, it won't be executed twice for the same resolved country.

Taking our TimeOfTheDay condition, it can easily be enhanced to store variables. The variable we'll store will be the resolved current hour.

<?php

namespace AppBundle\Targeting\Condition;

use Pimcore\Targeting\Condition\AbstractVariableCondition;
use Pimcore\Targeting\Model\VisitorInfo;

class TimeOfTheDay extends AbstractVariableCondition
{
    // ...

    public function match(VisitorInfo $visitorInfo): bool
    {
        $hour = (int)(new \DateTime())->format('H');

        if ($hour >= $this->hour) {
            $this->setMatchedVariable('hour', $hour);

            return true;
        }

        return false;
    }
}

Admin UI

To make your condition configurable, you need to create a JS class defining the admin interface for your condition. To do so, create a class extending pimcore.settings.targeting.condition.abstract and register it to the system by calling pimcore.settings.targeting.conditions.register().

Have a look at Pimcore's core conditions and the Customer Management Framework for examples.

Start by adding a new JS file implementing the admin UI panel for your condition:

// src/AppBundle/Resources/public/js/targeting/conditions.js

(function () {
    'use strict';

    pimcore.settings.targeting.conditions.register(
        'timeoftheday',
        Class.create(pimcore.settings.targeting.condition.abstract, {
            getName: function () {
                return 'Time of the Day';
            },

            getPanel: function (panel, data) {
                var id = Ext.id();

                var storeData = [];
                for (var i = 0; i < 24; i++) {
                    storeData.push([i, i]);
                }

                return new Ext.form.FormPanel({
                    id: id,
                    forceLayout: true,
                    style: 'margin: 10px 0 0 0',
                    bodyStyle: 'padding: 10px 30px 10px 30px; min-height:40px;',
                    tbar: pimcore.settings.targeting.conditions.getTopBar(this, id, panel, data),
                    items: [
                        {
                            name: 'hour',
                            fieldLabel: 'Hour',
                            xtype: 'combo',
                            store: storeData,
                            mode: 'local',
                            width: 300,
                            value: ('undefined' !== typeof data.hour) ? data.hour : 0,
                            editable: false,
                            triggerAction: 'all'
                        },
                        {
                            xtype: 'displayfield',
                            hideLabel: true,
                            value: 'Matches if the current hour is >= the configured one.',
                            cls: 'pimcore_extra_label'
                        },
                        {
                            xtype: 'hidden',
                            name: 'type',
                            value: 'timeoftheday' // the identifier chosen before when registering the PHP class
                        }
                    ]
                });
            }
        })
    );
}());

As soon as you configured Pimcore to load the newly created file you should see your new condition in the list of available conditions:

Time of the Day Condition