30 Oct 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Morpht: LLMs, Drupal core and web development

An exploration of the multifaceted implications of AI in Drupal core development, addressing both the challenges and the immense opportunities it presents.

30 Oct 2025 12:54am GMT

29 Oct 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Web Wash: Using AI Automators (Drupal AI) in Drupal CMS

Artificial intelligence continues to reshape content management systems, and Drupal is embracing this transformation through the Drupal AI initiative.

The video above demonstrates how to use AI Automators in Drupal CMS to automate content generation, transcribe audio files, and streamline editorial workflows.

This guide covers AI Automators within the Drupal AI module suite. Learn to set up basic and chained automators, transcribe audio, integrate AI into CKEditor, and auto-generate social media posts.

29 Oct 2025 6:57pm GMT

Drupal.org blog: GitLab issue migration: immediate changes

At DrupalCon Vienna, we opened the opt-in period for module maintainers to volunteer their modules to be migrated to GitLab issues. You can opt yours in at #3409678: Opt-in GitLab issues.

That means that we will have some projects with issues on Drupal.org and some other projects with their issues on GitLab during this transition period. Due to this, some things will change in our current systems.

Changes to Drupal.org

The issue cockpit on each project's page will go away. The current issue cockpit that will see in projects reads data from our internal issues, but as projects transition to GitLab issues this block no longer makes sense. We will replace this for a simple "Issues" link that will take you to the right issue queue, whether it is GitLab or Drupal.org.

issue cockpit

Parent and related issues will now be connected via a full URL. It used to be connected via entity reference fields, pointing at internal issues. Now that we have two systems for this, these will be links, that once rendered will bring the metadata information, like title and issue status, as we did with internal issues. We will be able to link both Drupal.org and GitLab issues into these new fields, and the old entity reference fields will go away.

What's next?

We ask project maintainers to help us at the Drupal Association iterate and improve on this process as we migrate more and more projects. We know that change can take time to be adopted, and we are really excited to help project maintainers move their issues into GitLab.

There are almost 200 projects with more than 1000 issues, and around 2000 projects with more than 100.
Drupal "core" has more than 115K issues.

The roadmap will be (in each iteration, we will address feedback, fix bugs...):

  • Migrate projects that opted in
  • Make this the default for new projects
  • Migrate low-risk, low-usage, and/or sandbox projects
  • Migrate remaining projects, excluding a few selected high-volume, high-risk
  • Migrate the rest of the projects, including core

We are very excited about this transition, and we truly think it will be an improvement to the contribution experience. We are also thankful to the community for helping us with this.

29 Oct 2025 3:52pm GMT

Drupal Association blog: Drupal to Enhance Security and Developer Tools thanks to Sovereign Tech Fund Investment

The Drupal Association has received €201,000 from the Sovereign Tech Fund to enhance Drupal's GitLab infrastructure, with a focus on security, testing efficiency, and design tools. This funding will enable critical improvements including completing the migration of Drupal's security issue management system to GitLab, optimizing CI/CD testing across thousands of repositories, and implementing new tools for UX and design contributors.

This continues the Sovereign Tech Fund's support of Drupal. In 2023, the Sovereign Tech Fund funded major work to support the move from Drupal.org's homebuilt contribution tools to the GitLab platform.

The self-hosted GitLab instance at git.drupalcode.org is maintained by the Drupal Association and used by contributors all over the globe. In 2024, there were 7,276 unique individuals using git.drupalcode.org to contribute to 69,204 issues. These contributors represent an international community of users who support critical Drupal installations serving the public.

The additional funding will enable the Drupal Association to further enhance our use of GitLab in the following key areas:

  • Migrate security issue management to GitLab
    Our existing security portal is running on an end-of-life version of Drupal, under extended support, and isn't integrated with our modern developer tools. Finalizing the move of our security team issue management to GitLab will provide the security team with better tools and make it easier to onboard new members.
  • Optimize CI/CD testing
    We currently support testing for tens of thousands of repositories in the Drupal ecosystem. By further optimizing our testing configuration, we can reduce redundant tests, improve performance, and potentially expand to new types of testing like visual and performance regression testing.
  • Improve tools for UX and Design contributors
    We'll implement better project management templates and explore integrating with design tools like Storybook and/or Figma to support our UX and Design contributors-who will then have the tools they need to help make Drupal easier, more intuitive, and more beautiful than ever. .
  • Share our CI strategy with other open source projects
    We'll document and share our approach to managing CI testing across thousands of repositories to help other large open source projects facing similar challenges.

The work commissioned by the Sovereign Tech Fund will not only enable us to advance strategically, driving meaningful progress and making a positive impact within the Drupal community but also strengthen the open source platform for users everywhere.

We are grateful to the Sovereign Tech Fund for this collaboration. This funding reflects their continued dedication to open source and their confidence in the Drupal Association and the community's ability to innovate and ensure the future of web development.

29 Oct 2025 1:42pm GMT

ImageX: Drupal’s Next Chapter: Key Highlights from the latest Driesnote in Vienna

"Whenever I look at these demo videos,

I often completely forget we're looking at Drupal.

You know, it looks so different and so much better."

29 Oct 2025 1:22pm GMT

The Drop Times: Preserving the Web: How Drupal’s Wayback Filter Uses the Internet Archive to Mend Broken Links

As old articles lose their original links to 404s and spam pages, Drupal's Wayback Filter offers a practical fix. Created by Danish developer Steven of Vertikal.dk, the module automatically adds Internet Archive links at render time, preserving the web's fading history without altering stored content.

29 Oct 2025 10:46am GMT

Dries Buytaert: The Orchestration Shift

Abstract art of a figure surrounded by swirling blue energy and birds, symbolizing motion and orchestration.

Last summer, I was building a small automation in n8n when I came across Activepieces. Both tools promise the same thing: connect your applications, automate your workflows, and host it yourself. But when I clicked through to Activepieces' GitHub repo, I noticed it's released under the MIT license. Truly Open Source, not just source-available like n8n.

As I dug deeper into these tools, I kept noticing something else: they're powerful and mature, yet almost non-existent in enterprise environments. Developers love them. Small teams rely on them. But large organizations are paying hefty premiums for proprietary integration platforms (iPaaS) or wiring integrations manually.

That gap crystallized something I'd been seeing across different contexts: business logic is moving out of individual applications and into the orchestration layer.

Today, most organizations run on dozens of disconnected tools. A product launch means logging into Mailchimp for email campaigns, Salesforce for lead tracking, Google Analytics for performance monitoring, Drupal for content publishing, Slack for team coordination, and a spreadsheet to keep everything synchronized. We copy data between systems, paste it into different formats, and manually trigger each step. In other words, most organizations are still doing orchestration by hand.

With orchestration tools maturing, this won't stay manual forever. That led me to an investment thesis that I call the Orchestration Shift: the tools we use to connect systems are becoming as important as the systems themselves.

This shift could change how we think about enterprise software architecture. For the last decade, we've talked about the "marketing technology stack" or "martech stack": collections of tools connected through rigid, point-to-point integrations. Orchestration changes this fundamentally. Instead of each tool integrating directly with others, an orchestration layer coordinates how they work together: the "martech stack" becomes a "martech network".

Why I invested in Activepieces

I believe that in the next five to ten years, orchestration platforms like Activepieces are likely to become critical infrastructure in many organizations. If that happens, this shift needs Open Source infrastructure. Not only proprietary SaaS platforms or source-available licenses with commercial restrictions, but truly open infrastructure.

The world benefits when critical infrastructure has strong Open Source alternatives. Linux gave us an alternative to proprietary operating systems. MySQL and PostgreSQL gave us alternatives to Oracle. And of course, Drupal and WordPress gave us alternatives to dozens of proprietary CMSes. When a layer becomes this foundational, Open Source options keep the entire ecosystem healthy and innovative.

That is why Activepieces stood out: it is Open Source and positioned for an important market shift.

So I reached out to Ash Samhouri, their co-founder and CEO, to learn more about their vision. After a Zoom call, I came away impressed by both the mission and the momentum. When I got the opportunity to invest, I took it.

A couple months later, n8n raised over $240 million at a $2.5 billion valuation, validation that the orchestration market was maturing rapidly.

I invested not just money, but also time and effort. Over the summer, I worked with Jürgen Haas to create a Drupal integration for Activepieces and the orchestration module for Drupal. Both shipped the week before DrupalCon Vienna, where I demonstrated them in my opening keynote.

How orchestration changes platforms

Consider what this means for platforms like Drupal, which I have led for more than two decades. Drupal has thousands of contributed modules that integrate with external services. But if orchestration tools begin offering those same integrations in a way that is easier and more powerful to use, we have to ask how Drupal's role should evolve.

Drupal could move from being the central hub that manages integrations to becoming a key node within this larger orchestration network. As I mentioned earlier, this represents the shift from "marketing stack" to "marketing network".

In this model, Drupal continues managing and publishing content while also acting as a connected participant in such a network. Events in Drupal can trigger workflows across other systems, and orchestration tools can trigger actions back in Drupal. This bidirectional connection makes both more powerful. Drupal gains capabilities without adding complexity to its core, while orchestration platforms gain access to rich content, structured data, publishing workflows, and more.

Drupal can also learn architecturally from these orchestration platforms. Tools like n8n and Activepieces use a simple but powerful pattern: every operation has defined inputs and outputs that can be chained together to build workflows. Drupal could adopt this same approach, making it easier to build internal automations and positioning Drupal as an even more natural participant in orchestration networks.

We have seen similar shifts before. TCP/IP did not make telephones irrelevant; it changed where the intelligence lived. Phones became endpoints in a network defined by the protocol connecting them. Orchestration may follow a similar path, becoming the layer that coordinates how business systems work together.

Where orchestration is heading

Today, orchestration platforms handle workflow automation: when X happens, do Y. Form submissions create CRM entries, send email notifications, post Slack updates. I demonstrated this pattern in my DrupalCon Vienna keynote, showing how predefined workflows eliminate manual work and custom integration code.

But orchestration is evolving toward something more powerful: digital workers. These AI-driven agents will understand context, make decisions, and execute complex tasks across platforms. A digital worker could interpret a goal like "Launch the European campaign for our product launch", analyze what needs to happen, build the workflows, coordinate across your martech network, execute them, and report results.

Tools like Activepieces and protocols like the Model Context Protocol are laying the groundwork for this future. We're moving from automation (executing predefined steps) to autonomy (understanding intent and figuring out how to achieve it). The future will likely require both: deterministic workflows for reliability and consistency, combined with AI-driven decision-making for flexibility and intelligence.

This shift makes the orchestration layer even more critical. It's not just connecting systems anymore; it's where business intelligence and decision-making will live.

Conclusion

When I first clicked through to Activepieces' GitHub repo last summer, I was looking for a tool to automate a workflow. What I found was something bigger: a glimpse of how business software architecture is fundamentally changing. I've been thinking about it since.

To me, the question isn't whether orchestration will become critical infrastructure. It's whether that infrastructure will be open and built collaboratively. That is a future worth investing in, both with capital and with code.

29 Oct 2025 9:43am GMT

Simon's Blog: [Drupal] Webform - Generate PDF and Attach in Email upon Submission

Intuition

A client of mine requested the feature in their existing webform (on a Drupal10 website) to be able to generate an PDF print-out of the user's input upon their every submission, and attach the generated PDF to the with the e-mail trigger by the webform's handler.

2025-10-29T113851

This will ensure they have a copy of the user's input as the ground truth to be referenced in the future, and the signature in the webform can be shared via the email as a part of the PDF, because by default the webform only allows you to attach the link of signature's PNG image, which means (if you want any user who receive the email to be able to download the signature without a Drupal authenticated account) you will have to expose via a public link.

29 Oct 2025 12:00am GMT

28 Oct 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

DXPR: DXPR Builder AI Beta: When Drupal outperforms Elementor, Divi, Webflow, and the rest

DXPR Builder AI Beta: When Drupal outperforms Elementor, Divi, Webflow, and the rest Jurriaan

TLDR: Watch it build a page from a prompt → Online Demo Download on drupal.org

So, we've been working on Drupal's content UX for over 10 years now, trying to make page building accessible to non-technical users. We've made a lot of progress, but honestly, something always felt like it was missing. The tools were getting more powerful, but making Drupal "easy" was still kind of a stretch. Your clients and their users will agree.

Then we started experimenting with AI.

I've been testing a bunch of other site builders: Webflow, Elementor, Divi, and about 10 others to see what they're doing with AI. Here's what I discovered: they're all bolting AI features on existing tools like an afterthought. They're treating AI as a feature, not a foundation. We took the opposite approach with DXPR. Instead of adding AI to a traditional editor, we built the entire experience around AI-first principles. The difference is striking, and I'd love to show you exactly how this fundamentally changes the way you build pages in Drupal.

Demo of DXPR Builder AI generating hero sections

Real-time unedited video

What We've Implemented So Far

Rather than just adding AI as a feature checkbox, we tried to think about how it could actually change the workflow. Here are the main things we've built:

Content Rewriting
We've added controls for AI-rewriting content precision and control. Our users actually spend more time editing existing website content than making new pages.
Single-Prompt Page Generation

You can describe a page in plain text and get a working layout. It's not perfect every time, but it's a pretty good starting point and saves a lot of manual setup. It's better than other AI writing tools.

Image Generation

Instead of switching to another tool, you can generate images right in the builder. It's integrated into the workflow, which seems to help with iteration speed.

Clone Competitor Pages

You can point the AI at a competitor page and have it screen-scrape the page and reproduce it with DXPR elements matching your theme. It sounds naughty but we know humans copy too, and AI does it better. For inspiration of course.

The goal was to create a workflow where these features actually work together rather than feeling like separate tools. We're trying to let the AI handle repetitive stuff so users can focus on the creative decisions.

Demo Videos

I've put together some demo videos that walk through how this actually works in practice. There are two versions: one with my narration and one with AI voiceover and edit.

These are pretty unfiltered demos. You'll see what works well and where we're still working out the kinks. I think it's important to show the real experience, especially since this is still in beta.

What This Might Mean for Drupal

I know Drupal isn't usually the first platform people think of when they want visual page building. We've always been strong on the backend, but the UI complexity has been a challenge.

What's interesting about this AI integration is that it might actually leverage Drupal's strengths in a new way. We've got this solid, flexible backend that other platforms can't match. And now we're able to put a much more accessible interface on top of it.

Obsessive optimization

Our AI performance is surprisingly fast too: page generation takes seconds, content rewrites happen in real-time. After years of building the foundation, it feels like things are finally clicking.

We even shipped a Rust / WASM HTML optimizer in DXPR Builder that runs in your browser and shaves a whopping 15% off of the token count of HTML we put into the AI, resulting in lower AI latency and better use of AI context capacity.

I Need Your Feedback

We're calling this a beta because we really want to hear from the community before we lock in the final release. What works for you? What feels off? Where do you see gaps or opportunities?

The team has put in a ton of work to get here, and I'm pretty excited about where we are. Your real-world testing is going to help us figure out what we got right and what still needs work.

If you can download DXPR Builder 2.8.0 from Drupal.org and test it out, that would be incredibly helpful. It's completely free including 10,000 words AI gen + 10 images per month in free AI credits. We've set up a FAQ and feedback page for questions and suggestions. Seriously, any input, positive or negative, helps us make this better.

And if you know anyone who might be interested in this kind of thing, feel free to share. We're trying to get this in front of people who might actually use it.

After working on this for so long, it's pretty cool to finally see how AI and Drupal can work together for content editors. Thanks for letting me share this with you all!

Want to Try It Out?

Download the DXPR Builder AI Beta and let us know what you think.

DXPR Builder AI Empty Page UI

28 Oct 2025 12:58pm GMT

Specbee: Why decoupling Drupal with React can be a win for marketers

Want to know how the duo of decoupled Drupal and React can power modern marketing? Read this blog to learn how a headless setup simplifies every marketer's tasks.

28 Oct 2025 9:21am GMT

Cheppers: Automated Accessibility Testing Made Simple

Accessibility has always been part of Drupal's DNA but keeping it consistent across large sites takes more than good intentions. As standards evolve, developers and editors must balance WCAG compliance with design, content, and performance. This post looks at how automation and AI can make that work easier. From adding automated WCAG checks to CI pipelines to using AI tools that guide content editors, Drupal teams can spot problems earlier and fix them faster. At Cheppers, we've built a reliable, developer-friendly testing system for real Drupal projects, and we're already preparing it for the next generation of WCAG guidelines.

28 Oct 2025 12:00am GMT

27 Oct 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #526 - Off The Cuff: AI News, Hooks, and Drupal 11

Today we are talking about AI News,Drupal Hooks, and Drupal 11. We'll also cover Webform Scheduled Tasks as our module of the week.

For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/526

Topics

Resources

Hosts

Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi

MOTW Correspondent

Avi Schwab - froboy.org froboy

27 Oct 2025 6:00pm GMT

The Drop Times: Visual Building with Canvas

Hi Readers,

At DrupalCon Europe 2025 in Vienna, Dries Buytaert used his keynote ("Driesnote") to outline Drupal's AI-first direction. He described AI as a major shift in how people use the web and emphasised that Drupal will evolve to meet it. Instead of focusing on new features, his keynote detailed a strategy to improve usability and integrate AI throughout the platform. The highlight was Drupal Canvas, a visual site-building tool designed to make Drupal more accessible for all users. For full context, see Dries's State of Drupal presentation, October 2025.

The community has quickly embraced this direction. Over the past 18 months, contributions to Drupal have nearly doubled, helped by the "Starshot" initiative. That progress led to Drupal Canvas, which combines Drupal's structured content system with a more intuitive interface. Dries described it as Drupal "repositioned for creators, marketers, and enterprise users." Canvas launches alongside Site Templates, Recipes, Code Components, and a new Mercury design system, all aimed at simplifying setup and improving site-building efficiency.

According to the Canvas project page, users can now build and theme entire sites directly in their browser, with little or no code. Non-developers can design and edit visually, while editors can modify content anywhere on a page. Canvas still leverages Drupal's core strengths-structured content and granular permissions-to maintain consistency and control. It's a major step toward making Drupal approachable without losing its technical flexibility.

The mix of Canvas and AI has become a central topic across the Drupal community. Canvas introduces faster, collaborative site building, while new AI tools can generate page layouts, assist with content, and suggest updates within Drupal's workflow. These improvements make it easier for small teams or non-technical users to maintain complex sites efficiently. A production-ready Drupal Canvas 1.0 is expected in November 2025, becoming the default experience in Drupal CMS 2.0 by January 2026, followed by a template marketplace in March 2026.

DISCOVER DRUPAL

TUTORIAL

EVENT

ORGANIZATION NEWS

We acknowledge that there are more stories to share. However, due to selection constraints, we must pause further exploration for now. To get timely updates, follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter, Bluesky, and Facebook. You can also join us on Drupal Slack at #thedroptimes.

Thank you.
Sincerely,
Kazima Abbas,
Sub-editor, The DropTimes.

27 Oct 2025 2:50pm GMT

The Drop Times: WebstanZ Unifies 50+ University of Namur Websites on a Single Drupal Platform

The University of Namur has unified over 50 websites into one Drupal-powered platform, streamlining its digital presence across faculties. With WebstanZ as its implementation partner, the project improves UX, centralizes governance, and lays the groundwork for scalable, multilingual engagement.

27 Oct 2025 12:22pm GMT

The Drop Times: TDT Townhall: Join Our Open Community Planning Meeting on 2025 November  05

The Drop Times (TDT) is opening our monthly Townhall meeting to the wider community on November 5, 2025, at 7:00 PM IST (13:30 UTC). Townhall is where all departments-content, social media, marketing and outreach, jobs, technology, and leadership-set the course for the month ahead. As part of our transparency initiative, anyone aligned with TDT's mission to grow Drupal's market share is welcome to join. We're a nonprofit, ad-free portal covering interviews, organization news, tutorials, module releases, events, jobs, and Drupal adoption insights. The Google Meet link will be shared shortly; come add your voice to TDT's roadmap.

27 Oct 2025 9:59am GMT

Dominique De Cooman: DEEP: The Post-Platform OS for Intelligent Experience Ecosystems

The digital experience industry is at a crossroads. We've spent the past decade evolving from simple CMS websites to full-fledged Digital Experience Platforms (DXPs) that promised to manage every touchpoint. Yet, as we stand in 2025, it's clear that the next leap forward won't come from yet another all-in-one platform. It will come from a new philosophy altogether. I call this new paradigm DEEP, or Digital Experience Enablement Platform.

27 Oct 2025 9:30am GMT