CONTENTS OF THIS FILE --------------------- * Introduction * Installation * Configuration * Tabs * Filter operators * Maintainers INTRODUCTION ------------ This module provides a method for filtering modules on the modules page as well as for filtering projects on the update status report. The supplied filter is simpler than using your browsers find a feature which searches the entire page. The provided filter will filter modules/projects that do not meet your input. Along with the filter textfield there are additional checkboxes that help to narrow the search more. The modules page contains 3 checkboxes: Enabled, Disabled, and Unavailable. While the first two are self-explanatory, the latter two can take an explanation. The Required checkbox affects visibility of modules that are enabled and have other module(s) that require it also enabled. The Unavailable checkbox affects visibility of modules that are disabled and depend on module(s) that are missing. The update status report filter also contains four checkboxes: Up-to-Date, Update available, Security update, and Unknown. These directly affect the visibility of each project; whether it is up-to-date, there is an update available, a security update is available, or the status is unknown. Installation ------------ To install this module, do the following: 1. Extract the tarball that you downloaded from Drupal.org. 2. Upload the entire directory and all its contents to your modules directory. Configuration ------------- To enable and configure this module do the following: 1. Go to Admin -> Modules, and enable Module Filter. 2. Go to Admin -> Configuration -> User interface -> Module filter, and make any necessary configuration changes. Tabs ---- By default Module Filter alters the modules page into tabs (Can be disabled on configuration page). In the tabs view, each package is converted to a vertical tab rather than a fieldset which greatly increases the ability to browse them. There are several benefits to using the tabs view over the standard view for the modules page. I've listed the key benefits below as well as additional information that pertains to each. 1. The increased ease of browsing between packages. 2. Allows all modules to be listed alphabetically outside of their package, making it all the easier to find the module by name rather than package it happens to be in. 3. The operations for a module are moved within the description column giving the description more "elbow room". 4. Filtering is restricted to within the active tab or globally when no tab is selected. By default no tab is selected which will list all modules. When a tab is active and you want to get back to the 'all' state click on the active tab to deselect it. 5. The number of enabled modules per tab is shown on the active tab. (Can be disabled on configuration page) 6. Nice visual aids become available showing what modules are to be enabled/disabled and the number of matching modules in each tab when filtering. (Can be disabled on configuration page) 7. The save configuration button becomes more accessible, either staying at the bottom of the window when the tabs exceed past the bottom and at the top when scrolling past the tabs. (Can be disabled on configuration page) 8. When filtering, tabs that do not contain matches can be hidden. (Can be enabled on configuration page) 9. Tab states are remembered like individual pages allowing you to move forward and backward within your selections via your browsers forward/backward buttons. 10. When viewing all modules (no active tab) and mousing over modules it's tab becomes highlighted to signify which tab it belongs to. Filter operators ---------------- The modules page's filter has three filter operators available. Filter operators allow alternative filtering techniques. A filter operator is applied by typing within the filter textfield 'operator:' (where operator is the operator type) followed immediately with the string to pass to the operator function (e.g. 'requires:block'). The available operators are: description: Filter based on a module's description. requiredBy: Filter based on what a module is required by. requires: Filter based on what a module requires. Multiple filters (or queries) can be applied by space delimiting. For example, the filter string 'description:ctools views' would filter down to modules with "ctools" in the description and "views" within the module's name. To pass a space within a single query wrap it within double quotes (e.g. 'requires:"chaos tools"' or '"bulk export"'). Maintainers ------------------ - Green Skin (greenSkin) - https://www.drupal.org/u/greenskin - Andrey Troeglazov (andrey.troeglazov) - https://www.drupal.org/u/andreytroeglazov