live coverage at the new york times
TRANSCRIPT
Live Coverage at The New York Times
WordPress VIP Developer Workshop Napa, California - May 5, 2015
Scott Taylor• Core Developer, WordPress
open source project
• Release Lead for 4.4
• Sr. Software Engineer, The New York Times
• @wonderboymusic on Twitter/Instagram/Swarm
• I like Music, NYC, and Mexican food
Blogs at the New York Times• The 00s were the glory days
for Blogs and WordPress
• Separate from the rest of the codebase (NYT4)
• Global NYTimes CSS and JS, CSS for all Blogs, custom CSS per-blog
• A universe that assumed jQuery AND Prototype were loaded on the page in global scope
What could possibly go wrong here?
• Inline HTML from 2008 that assumes Prototype will still be a thing in 2015, stored in post_content
• Widgets and inline code that add their own version of jQuery/Prototype, because YOLO
• Even better: widgets/modules from other teams that use a different version of jQuery … at times there could be 4 jQuerys on the page (4 diff versions)
No shared modules• Code/HTML markup can get out of sync with other
projects regularly (header/footer/nav)
• The CSS and JS files split across multiple SVN repos - changes to global assets can affect us without us knowing. Fixing the code requires scouring through multiple repos.
• The blogs team divided front-end and back-end responsibilities. Typically, no one had a full view of features or the architecture as a whole
At the NYT, we don’t use …• WordPress Comments: There is an entire team that deals with
these for the site globally, in a different system called CRNR
• Media: There is another CMS at the Times, Scoop, which stores the images, videos, slideshows, etc
• WordPress native post-locking: This only landed in WordPress core in version 3.6, we have yet to reconcile the differences
• There is layer for Bylines which is separate from Users: Our users are employees authenticated via LDAP, most post authors don’t actually enter the content themselves
Live Blogs at the TimesSince 2008
• A Blog would create a post and check “Start Live Blogging”
• the updates related to the post were stored in custom tables in the database
• the APIs for interacting with these tables duplicated tons of WordPress functionality
• Custom Post Types didn’t exist until WordPress 3.0 (June 2010) - the NYT code was never rewritten to leverage them (would have required porting the content as well)
As Time Went On, A Mess to Update and Maintain
The Next Iteration: Dashboards/Dashblogs
• A Live Blog would be its own blog in the network, its own set of tables
• A special dashboard theme that had hooks to add custom JS/CSS for each individual blog, without baking them into the theme
• Making an entirely new site in the network for a 4-hour event is overkill
• For every 10 or so new blogs that are added, you are adding 100 new database tables - gross!
2013: The New FrontierI arrived at the New York Times
NYT5• NYT5 “apps” are Git repos that are transformed via
Grunt into a new directory structure. You can’t run your repo as a website: it has to be built
• Impossible to create a “theme” this time with shared JS and CSS - CSS is SASS, JS is Require.
• PHP for shared components has Composer dependencies and uses namespaces - the directories are expanded via Grunt in accordance with PSR-0 Autoloading Standard
NYT5 Dealbreakers• We can’t just point at WordPress on every request
and have our code figure out routing. Apache points to app.php in NYT5
• Because PHP Namespaces are used, WP has to load early and outside of them (global scope)
• On the frontend, WP cannot exit prematurely before hitting the framework, which returns the response to the server via Symfony\HttpFoundation
NYT5 Advantages
• “shared” modules - we inherit the “shell” of the page, which includes: navigation, footer, login, etc.
• our nyt5 theme doesn’t need to produce an entire HTML document, just the “content” portion
• With WP in global scope, all of its code is available even when we hit the MVC parts of the NYT5 framework.
• WP output is captured via an output buffer on load - it’s accessible downstream when the app logic is running.
• We can inherit the global Varnish setup and ditch Batcache
• Instead of rendering media HTML, our [nytmedia] shortcodes can just output “markers”
• The NYT5 logic for articles already knows to replace these markers with markup that is generated from shared modules - and the data is fetched using parallel HTTP from internal asset stores (JSON).
• At the end of the day, we were able to eradicate a lot of old, terrible code and lean on code from foundation and shared repos
What about the old code that used inline Prototype JS code?• I wrote a filter on ‘the_content’ that does a quick string
scan to see if one of the old slideshows exists in post’s content. If it does, I wrote RegEx that replaces the slideshow blob on the fly with a new blob that leverages our Require code. I am not proud of this, but it works, and it replaces the need to migrate potentially 100s or 1000s of posts in the database.
• Whenever I can, I choose to not ignore legacy or archival content - since it’s all still searchable on the net, why let it die a death by Prototype?
Bad News for Blogs• Blogs were duplicating Section Fronts, Columns: Mark Bittman has column in the paper.The column also exists on the web as an article. He contributes to the Diner’s Journal blog. There is a section front for dining. He also has his own NYTimes blog. Why?
• Blogs and WordPress were combined in everyone’s mind. So whenever WordPress was mentioned as a solution for anything, the response was: aren’t blogs going away? #dark
First Draft Lens
Live Coverage
What if…• Instead of using those custom tables
and all of that weird code, we could actually create new object types: events and updates!
• To create a new “Live Blog”: you only need to create an event, then go to a Backbone-powered screen to add updates
• Even if WordPress isn’t desired for the front end, it could be the backend for anything that wants a JSON feed for live event data
• Because we would be using custom post types, building a Live Event UI that looks like the NYT5 theme would be nominal
• Built an admin interface with Backbone to quickly produce content - which in turn could be read from JSON feeds.
• When saving, the updates post into a service we have called Invisible City
• Our first real foray into using the JSON API (WP-API)
• Our plan was just to be admin to produce data via self-service URLs
What we did
Live EventsThe new Live Blogs
Complete Rewrite of 2008 code
• nytimes.com/live/{event} and nytimes.com/live/{event}/{update}
• Brand new admin interface: Backbone app that uses the WP-API. Constantly updated filterable stream - Backbone collections that re-fetch on Heartbeat tick
• Custom JSON endpoints that handle processes that need to happen on save
• Front end served by WordPress for SEO, but data is received by web socket from Invisible City and rendered via React
Responsive on Mobile
Some gotchas…
Most plugins only handle POST
• WP-API and Backbone speak REST
• REST will send you requests via PUT, DELETE, POST
$hook = add_menu_page( . . . );add_action( “load-$hook”, ‘custom_load’ );
function old_custom_load() { if ( ‘POST’ !== $_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD’] ) { return; } . . .
}
function new_custom_load() { if ( ‘GET’ === $_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD’] ) { return; } . . .
}
HTTP is time-consuming• Admin needs to be fast
• The front end is typically cached, but page generation shouldn’t be bogged down by HTTP requests
• It is easy to lose track of how many things are happening on the ‘save_post’ hook
• Anything which is time-consuming should be offloaded to a separate “process” or request who response you don’t need to handle
wp_remote_post( $url, wp_parse_args( array(‘timeout’ => 0.01,‘blocking’ => false
), $args ) );
Fire and Forget*
* Stolen from Mark Jaquith’s nginx cache invalidation technique: wp_remote_get( $url, array(
‘timeout’ => 0.01, ‘blocking’ => false, ‘headers’ => array( ‘X-Nginx-Cache-Purge’ => ‘1’ )
) );
Custom JSON Endpoints for POST
• Use fire-and-forget technique on save, instead of waiting for responses inline. You can still log/handle/re-try responses in the separate request.
• Most things that happen on ‘save_post’ only need to know $post_id for context, the endpoint handler can call get_post() from there
Register a route:$routes[ '/live-events/(?P<post_id>\d+)/sns' ] = array(
array( array( $this, 'live_event_sns' ), WP_JSON_Server::CREATABLE
),);
$routes[ '/async-cream-invalidation' ] = array(array(
array( $this, 'async_cream' ), WP_JSON_Server::CREATABLE
),);
Handle the route:public function async_cream() {
$urls = array_map( 'stripslashes', $_POST['urls'] );if ( $urls ) {
nyt_cream_invalidation( $urls );}exit();
}
Trigger the process:NYT_Admin_JSON::async_request( '/async-cream-invalidation', array(‘body’ => array('urls' => $urls
))
);
Custom JSON Endpoints for GET
• We do not hit these endpoints on the front-end
• We have a storage mount that is fronted via Varnish and Akamai
• JSON feeds can show up on the homepage of the NYT to dynamically render “promos” - these have to massively scale
An “Interactive Promo” on an article page
Questions?