ENROLMENT MODULES ----------------- (Yes, that's the correct English spelling ;-) ) enrol.class.php contains a simple 'factory' method that will instantiate your class when called. For an example of a complete class, take a look at the 'manual' class. Each plugin is in a subfolder here. Except for the configuration methods, most methods defined in the API are optional -- callers will use method_exists() to determine whether your plugin offers the functionality they are after. Mandatory methods ================= config_form() process_config() Login-time methods ================== Before Moodle 1.7 ----------------- get_student_courses() get_teacher_courses() You probably will want to offer at least get_student_courses(). These methods are triggered when a user logs in successfully, and they are expected to populate $USER->student and $USER->teacher arrays and maintain (add/delete) entries from user_students and user_teachers. These methods are relevant for most plugins, and are the main interest for plugins that work with a read-only backend such as LDAP or a database. Note that with the multi-enrol infrastructure two things have changed. We now have an 'enrol' field in those tables, and each plugin must maintain only its own enrolment records. Conversely, the $USER->student and ->teacher arrays have the enrolment type as value, like $USER->student = array ( $courseid => $plugintype ); Moodle 1.7 and later -------------------- setup_enrolments() With the advent of roles, there could well not be students and teachers any more, so enrolment plugins have to be more flexible about how they map outside data to the internal roles. This one method should do everything, calling functions from lib/accesslib.php as necessary to set up relationships. Interactive enrolment methods ============================= print_entry() check_entry() check_group_entry() get_access_icons() These methods are for enrolment plugins that allow for user driven enrolment. These methods are relevant for plugins that implement payment gateways (credit card, paypal), as well as "magic password" schemes. Only one interactive enrolment method can be active for a given course. The site default can be set from Admin->Enrolment, and then individual courses can be set to specific interactive enrolment methods. Cron ==== If your class offers a cron() method, it will be invoked by the standard Moodle cron every time it is called. Note that if the tasks are not lightweight you must control how frequently they execute, perhaps offering a config option. For really heavy cron processing, an alternative is to have a separate script to be called separately. Currently the LDAP and DB plugins have external scripts. Guilty Parties -------------- Martin Dougiamas and Shane Elliott, Moodle.com Martin Langhoff and Patrick Li, Catalyst IT