15 Jan 2026

feedDrupal.org aggregator

DDEV Blog: Planning for another great DDEV year in 2026

DDEV 2026 Plans

2026 Plans and Notes

Every year we try to lay out a bit of a plan for the coming year.

One of DDEV's primary strengths is our connection to a wonderful community, so each year turns out a bit different than expected. As we listen to people's actual experience, we try to adjust. And of course as upstream changes bring new features and bugs, we get lots of fun things to work on that we could never have anticipated. The items listed here are notes about what we think we understand at this point, but the year ahead and user experience and requests will affect what really happens.

We look forward to your input as the year goes forward.

Community

Community is core to our strength and growth. We are committed to maintaining the outstanding support that we offer for free and keeping that communication line open. And we want to continue to grow the amazing corps of contributors who offer improvements to the DDEV ecosystem.

Board of Directors

In 2025 we established Board of Directors, but now we have to learn what that means. The Board will have to establish itself, begin helping to determine priorities, and find its way to a strong oversight role. Here are a few issues to toss to the board early:

Features and Initiatives

Procedures

2026 Planning Additional Notes

Recognized Risks

We are a very small organization, so we try to pay careful attention to the risks as we go forward. In many ways, these are the same as the 2025 noted risks.

Minor Notes

Past Plans and Reviews

Previous plans and reviews have obviously framed this year's plans: 2025 Plans and 2024 review, 2024 plans

In preparing for this, we have been discussing these things in regular advisory group meetings and a specific brainstorming meeting.

We always want to hear from you about your experiences with DDEV as the year goes along!

Want to keep up as the month goes along? Follow us on:

15 Jan 2026 5:49pm GMT

A Drupal Couple: I Wanted to Celebrate Drupal's 25th. So I Built Something for Our Moms.

Image
Imagen
Drupal 25th anniversary celebration with code floating over a birthday cake representing modern
Article body

January 15, 2026 marks 25 years since Drupal 1.0.0. Twenty-five years. From a simple message board to powering some of the world's most complex websites. I wanted to do something to celebrate, but not just write a "happy birthday" post. I wanted to test what's actually possible with Drupal today.

Anilu and I had found some recipe PDFs. Two Colombian ones that I had. Five or six Costa Rican ones from her side. We'd also been cooking from the Accademia Italiana della Cucina website for a while. Our moms are both 75+, they love cooking, and these recipes were scattered around... difficult to read, impossible to search.

So we had an idea. What if we built them something? A real site. Multilingual. Searchable. Something they could actually use and we could share with friends. And what if I did it using Claude Code and modern Drupal to see how far things have come in 25 years?

The result is https://laollita.es. It took 3 days.

The Challenge

Let me be honest about what I was facing.

The Spanish PDFs were challenging. Massive amounts of content. The OCR quality was inconsistent. Recipes formatted in ways that made extraction tricky. Getting clean data required multiple passes of reading and confirmation because of the sheer volume of information.

Beyond the content problem, I needed multilingual support with AI-assisted translations. I needed search that actually worked. Facets. Filters by country and region. An interface accessible enough for someone who didn't grow up with computers.

Could Drupal and AI actually handle this without turning into a month-long project?

The AI-Assisted Development Journey

I started with the Umami demo. This is important. Umami gave me a Recipe content type, a structure, a foundation. It functioned exactly like what Drupal Recipes and templates are designed to do... get you started with something real instead of building from zero. The repetitive work was already done, so I could focus on improvements.

From there, Claudito (my Claude AI assistant) became my development partner. Not a magic wand. A helper.

Here's what AI handled well:

  • Analyzing PDFs and extracting recipe information

  • Initial translation passes and export to JSON

  • Creating migrate plugins to import recipes and translations

  • A special migration plugin specifically for translations

  • Building Views and fixing UX and CSS issues

  • Search API integration with autocomplete and facets

  • Creating a View to find recipes missing English translations

  • Bulk operations for translation (this was 100% Claudito, with me directing it to read the VBO module to understand the approach, and re-reading the AI translate module to use the right plugins)

Here's where I had to step in:

  • Redirecting AI to the right module, the right approach

  • Making sure AI read the right code or files before doing anything in Drupal

  • Guiding AI to follow best practices and modern Drupal development

  • Decisions about architecture and information structure

  • Changing fields to use more taxonomies to better standardize the recipes

Let me give you some examples. At one point, Claudito wanted to create a module to add CSS classes to a template. I redirected it to change the CSS to add selectors instead. Another time, Claudito started creating a custom module when the code could simply go in the custom theme. These redirections kept the project clean and maintainable.

Claudito let me focus on the decisions that matter. This is the human-in-the-loop approach I've written about before.

For translations, AI did most of the work in the first round. I imported those via the special migration plugin. But we still needed the View for recipes that we identified were missed in the first round, plus an extra PDF we found later. That View now serves as a way to bulk translate in the future when our moms or us add new recipes in Spanish or any other original language.

The Result

https://laollita.es is live.

Our moms can browse recipes in Spanish. Our friends can read them in English. The Italian originals are preserved. You can search by name, filter by country, filter by region. The interface is clean enough that someone who's 75 can use it without calling me for help.

Three languages. Thousands of recipes. Search, autocomplete, facets, AI translations. Three days. One person.

What This Means for Drupal at 25

Here's what surprised me. Not that it was possible. I knew Drupal could handle this technically. What surprised me was how quickly the pieces came together when you combine modern Drupal with systematic AI assistance.

The Umami demo acting as a Recipe/template meant the repetitive groundwork was already done, making modern Drupal more accessible than ever. The Drupal AI module meant translations weren't a separate nightmare. Claudito let me focus on decisions, guidance, and architecture. The ecosystem worked together.

And here's the forward-looking part. I didn't use Drupal CMS. I didn't use Canvas. I didn't use the newer Recipe installation tools. I decided to test it this way because Umami had already given us a solid foundation.

Imagine what this build would look like with those tools added. Drag-and-drop layout building. Even faster site assembly. More accessible for people who aren't command-line comfortable.

Drupal at 25 is not the Drupal I learned a decade ago. The learning curve is flattening as the ecosystem evolves. The AI integration is real and practical. The Recipe/template approach (demonstrated here with Umami) changes how fast you can get to something functional.

If you've been wondering whether Drupal is still "hard"... try building something. Give yourself a few days and a reason that matters to you. Then tell me what you built.

Happy 25th birthday, Drupal. Thanks for letting us build something for our moms.

Author
Abstract
For Drupal's 25th anniversary, I built laollita.es-a multilingual recipe site-in 3 days using AI. Here's what modern Drupal can actually do today.
Rating
No votes yet

Add new comment

15 Jan 2026 3:27pm GMT

Drupal blog: Drupal Turns 25 Today

Twenty-five years! In the world of technology, hitting a quarter-century milestone while remaining a top-notch powerhouse of the internet is an achievement so rare it's almost unheard of. Today, we're popping the confetti and cutting the cakes around the world to celebrate a colossal journey. This isn't just a birthday for a piece of software; it's a testament to resilience, constant evolution, and the deep-seated belief in doing things the right way. Join us as we look back on 25 years of shared passion, contribution, and the incredible community that has made Drupal so powerful. Happy birthday, Drupal!

Trusted by millions of sites and applications, Drupal has been the secure, flexible backbone for everyone from global governments and prestigious universities to world-renowned NGOs, major media outlets, and countless ambitious startups. Drupal's versatility allowed it to power a wide array of systems far beyond traditional websites, including intranets, booking systems, learning platforms, data hubs, and IoT dashboards.

For a quarter century, Drupal remained true to its technical soul. Its strength remains in structured content, best-in-class workflow features-including moderation, granular permissions, and multilingual support-and delivery to various displays via reusable content and APIs. Under the hood, proven performance, precise caching, and a mature security process ensure scalability. Its core strengths of extendability, customizability, and openness solidify its status as a uniquely flexible and sovereign digital platform.

Not only technically capable itself, Drupal's design and culture inherently promoted sharing and reuse. This encouraged people to build widely capable and powerful general components, and contribute them back, a mindset that fueled the growth of over 50,000 modules.

But beyond the millions of sites, the technical power, and the tens of thousands of modules, Drupal's true magic lies in the people. It's a platform that created careers. For many, Drupal was the first step into the world of content management. For tens of thousands more, it blossomed into a fulfilling career. Developers, architects, designers, editors, trainers, marketers, agency founders-a full spectrum of digital careers have flourished around Drupal.

Drupal's influence stretches far beyond the codebase and business, it is also a world-class social network. It sparked friendships, and yes, even led to a few real life Drupal families. People who would otherwise never have met have become lifelong friends. We have learned together, collaborated on projects, and passionately argued over UIs, policies and APIs, but with the goal of emerging with a stronger connection. This vibrant, global community is the true essence of Drupal: a place where even disagreement comes from a shared passion, and where professional collaboration blossoms into genuine human friendship.

Without the community, Drupal wouldn't be here today. So raise a glass for yourselves! The thinkers, designers, marketers, organizers, testers, developers, maintainers, managers, documenters, trainers, reviewers, bugfixers, funders, accessibility professionals, translators, authors, photographers, videographers and countless others who made Drupal what it is.

Drupal is here today not because it chased trends. But because people cared and they did the right thing. Happy birthday, Drupal!

Thanks to Gábor Hojtsy, Frederick Wouters, Surabhi Gokte, Nick Vanpraet and Joris Vercammen for their contributions to this post.

15 Jan 2026 12:05pm GMT

Drupal Association blog: Drupal Turns 25 Today

Twenty-five years! In the world of technology, hitting a quarter-century milestone while remaining a top-notch powerhouse of the internet is an achievement so rare it's almost unheard of. Today, we're popping the confetti and cutting the cakes around the world to celebrate a colossal journey. This isn't just a birthday for a piece of software; it's a testament to resilience, constant evolution, and the deep-seated belief in doing things the right way. Join us as we look back on 25 years of shared passion, contribution, and the incredible community that has made Drupal so powerful. Happy birthday, Drupal!

Trusted by millions of sites and applications, Drupal has been the secure, flexible backbone for everyone from global governments and prestigious universities to world-renowned NGOs, major media outlets, and countless ambitious startups. Drupal's versatility allowed it to power a wide array of systems far beyond traditional websites, including intranets, booking systems, learning platforms, data hubs, and IoT dashboards.

For a quarter century, Drupal remained true to its technical soul. Its strength remains in structured content, best-in-class workflow features-including moderation, granular permissions, and multilingual support-and delivery to various displays via reusable content and APIs. Under the hood, proven performance, precise caching, and a mature security process ensure scalability. Its core strengths of extendability, customizability, and openness solidify its status as a uniquely flexible and sovereign digital platform.

Not only technically capable itself, Drupal's design and culture inherently promoted sharing and reuse. This encouraged people to build widely capable and powerful general components, and contribute them back, a mindset that fueled the growth of over 50,000 modules.

But beyond the millions of sites, the technical power, and the tens of thousands of modules, Drupal's true magic lies in the people. It's a platform that created careers. For many, Drupal was the first step into the world of content management. For tens of thousands more, it blossomed into a fulfilling career. Developers, architects, designers, editors, trainers, marketers, agency founders-a full spectrum of digital careers have flourished around Drupal.

Drupal's influence stretches far beyond the codebase and business, it is also a world-class social network. It sparked friendships, and yes, even led to a few real life Drupal families. People who would otherwise never have met have become lifelong friends. We have learned together, collaborated on projects, and passionately argued over UIs, policies and APIs, but with the goal of emerging with a stronger connection. This vibrant, global community is the true essence of Drupal: a place where even disagreement comes from a shared passion, and where professional collaboration blossoms into genuine human friendship.

Without the community, Drupal wouldn't be here today. So raise a glass for yourselves! The thinkers, designers, marketers, organizers, testers, developers, maintainers, managers, documenters, trainers, reviewers, bugfixers, funders, accessibility professionals, translators, authors, photographers, videographers and countless others who made Drupal what it is.

Drupal is here today not because it chased trends. But because people cared and they did the right thing. Happy birthday, Drupal!

Thanks to Gábor Hojtsy, Frederick Wouters, Surabhi Gokte, Nick Vanpraet and Joris Vercammen for their contributions to this post.

15 Jan 2026 12:05pm GMT

Drupal Core News: Introducing the main branch for Drupal core

We are excited to announce that the main branch is now the official Drupal core development branch. Using a main branch aligns Drupal core with the best practices of industry and major open-source projects. This move is the final step of infrastructure changes that began in 2023.

Going forward, main is the new, primary development trunk for Drupal core. Most active work and outstanding issues currently filed against 11.x should now be targeted at main. The 11.x branch will remain for Drupal-11-specific issues, while Drupal 12 development will happen in the main branch.

Simplifying issue management

With this update, it will be easier for contributors to identify the primary development branch. Contributors don't need to know what the current development version number is.

This change also eliminates the overhead of mass updates to change the version number on open issues. The use of version-specific development branches required a cumbersome cycle of new branches and mass updating of issues with each major version release. Using a main branch significantly simplifies our release and issue management.

What contributors need to do

Use main for most issues

Most merge requests for Drupal Core should now be submitted to the main branch. In general, only backports or issues that do not affect Drupal 12 should be filed against other branches.

Update local checkouts

If you have any local clones of the repository, you should update them:

git fetch origin
git branch -u origin/main main

Update merge requests

Merge requests will be automatically updated to target the main branch this week, so there should not be a need to do this manually. However this retargeting will not include a rebase or adding the main branch to the issue fork, which may be necessary steps. These could be done when other changes are being made to the MR. To make contributors' work easier, MRs that cleanly apply to main will be committed for now, even if the main branch does not exist in the MR.

Update the issue version number

Issues against 11.x on Drupal.org will have the version number updated to main via an automated process within the next few days. Updating issues to point to main in the meantime is OK but does not need to be done manually in bulk.

We appreciate your patience and flexibility as we have worked to implement this important step in modernizing the Drupal core development workflow.

15 Jan 2026 11:29am GMT

Dries Buytaert: 25 years of Drupal: what I've learned

Drupal turns 25 today. A quarter of a century.

What started as a hobby became a community, and then, somehow, a pillar of the web's infrastructure.

Looking back, the most important things I learned weren't really about software. They were about people, scale, and what it takes to build something that lasts.

Twenty-five years, twenty-five lessons.

A speaker on stage hugs a large blue Drupal mascot while an audience takes photos at DrupalCon Paris 2009.

1. You can do well and do good

I used to think I had to choose: build a sustainable business or build something generous. Drupal taught me that is a false choice. Growth and generosity can reinforce each other. The real challenge is making sure one does not crowd out the other.

2. You can architect for community

Community doesn't just happen. You have to design for it. Drupal's modular system created clear places to contribute, our open logo invited people to make their own variants, and our light governance made it easy for people to step into responsibility. You cannot force a community to exist, but you can create the conditions for one to grow.

3. A few decisions define everything

Most choices don't matter much in hindsight, but a few end up shaping a project's entire trajectory. For Drupal, that included licensing under the GPL, the hook system, the node system, starting the Drupal Association, and even the credit system. You never know which decisions those are when you're making them.

4. Coordination is the product

In the early days, coordination was easy: you knew most people by name and you could fix things in a single late night IRC conversation. Then Drupal grew, slowly at first and then all at once, and I remember release cycles where the hardest part was not the code but aligning hundreds of people across time zones, cultures, companies, and priorities, with far too much energy spent "bike shedding". That is when I learned that at scale, code is not the product. It is what we ship, but coordination is what makes it possible.

5. Everyone's carrying something

I've worked with people navigating challenges I couldn't see at first. Mental health struggles, caregiving burdens, personal crises. It taught me that someone's behavior in a moment rarely tells the whole story. A healthy community makes room for people. Patience and grace are how you keep good people around.

6. Nobody fully understands Drupal anymore, including me

After 25 years and tens of thousands of contributors, Drupal has grown beyond any single person's understanding. I also google Drupal's documentation. I'm strangely proud of that, because it's how I know it has become something bigger than any one of us.

7. Volunteerism alone doesn't scale

In the early years, everything in Drupal was built by volunteers, and for a long time that felt like enough. At some point, it wasn't. The project was growing faster than the time people could give, and some important work needed more hands. Paid contributors brought stability and depth, while volunteers continued to innovate. The best projects make room for both.

8. Your words carry more weight than you realize

As recently as a few weeks ago, I sent a Slack message I thought was harmless and watched it create confusion and frustration. I have been making that same mistake, in different forms, for years. As a project grows, so does the gravity of what you say. A passing comment can redirect weeks of work or demoralize someone who is trying their best. I had to learn to speak more carefully, not because I am important, but because my role is. I am still learning to do this better.

9. Maintenance is leadership with no applause

The bottleneck in Open Source is rarely new ideas or new code. It's people willing to maintain what already exists: reviewing, deciding, onboarding new people, and holding context for years. I have seen projects stall because nobody wanted to do that work, and others survive because a few people quietly stepped up. Maintainers do the work that keeps everything together. If you want a project to last, you have to take care of your maintainers.

10. Culture is forged under stress

The Drupal community was not just built on good vibes. It was built in the weeks before releases and DrupalCons, in late night debugging sessions, and in messy moments of disagreement and drama. I have seen stress bring out the best in us and, sometimes, the worst. Both mattered because they forced us to learn how to disagree, decide, and recover. Those hard moments forged trust you cannot manufacture in calm times, and they are a big reason the community is still here.

11. Leadership has to outgrow its founder

For Drupal to last, leadership had to move beyond me, and for that to happen I had to let go. That meant stepping back from decisions I cared deeply about and trusting others to take the project in directions I might not have chosen. There were moments when I felt sidelined in the project I started, which was nobody's fault, but not easy. Letting go was not always easy, but it is one of the reasons Drupal is still here.

12. Open source is not a meritocracy

I used to say that the only real limitation to contributing was your willingness to learn. I was wrong. Free time is a privilege, not an equal right. Some people have jobs, families, or responsibilities that leave no room for unpaid work. You can only design for equity when you stop pretending that Open Source is a meritocracy.

13. Changing your mind in public builds trust

Over the years, I've had to reverse positions I once argued for. Doing that in public taught me that admitting you were wrong builds more trust than claiming you were right. People remember how you handle being wrong longer than they remember what you were wrong about.

14. Persistence beats being right early

In 2001, Open Source was a curiosity that enterprises avoided. Now it runs the world. I believed in it long before I could prove it, and I kept working anyway. It took many years before the world caught up, and I learned that sticking with something you believe in matters more than being right quickly.

15. The hardest innovation is not breaking things

For years, I insisted that breaking backward compatibility was a core value. Upgrades were painful, but I thought that was the price of progress. The real breakthrough came when we built enough test coverage to keep moving forward without breaking what people had built. Today, Drupal has more than twice as much test code as production code. That discipline was harder than any rewrite, and it earned more trust than any new feature.

16. Most people are here for the right reasons

Every large community has bad actors and trolls, and they can consume all your attention if you let them. If you focus too much on the worst behavior, you start to miss the quiet, steady work of the many people who are here to build something good. Your energy is better spent supporting those people.

17. Talk is silver. Contribution is gold

Words matter. They set direction and invite people in. But the people who shaped Drupal most were the ones who kept showing up to do the work. Culture is shaped by what actually gets done, and by who shows up to do it.

18. Vision doesn't have to come from the top

For a long time, I thought being project lead meant having the vision. Over time, I learned that it meant creating the conditions for good ideas to come from anywhere. The best decisions often came from people I'd never met, solving problems I didn't know we had.

19. The spark is individual but the fire is not

A single person can change a project's direction, but no contribution survives on its own. Every new feature comes with a maintenance cost and eventually depends on people the original author will never meet. Successful projects have to hold both truths at once: the spark is individual, but the fire is not.

20. At scale, even your bugs become features

Once enough people depend on your software, every observable behavior becomes a commitment, whether you intended it or not. Sooner or later, someone will build a workflow around an edge case or quirk. That is why maintaining compatibility is not a lesser form of work. It is core to the product.

21. A good project is measured by what people build next

For a long time, it felt like a loss when top contributors moved on from Drupal. Over time, I started to notice what they built next and realized they were carrying what they learned here into everything they did. Many went on to lead teams, start companies, or build new Open Source projects. I have come to see that as one of Drupal's most meaningful outcomes.

22. Longevity comes from not chasing trends

Drupal is still here because we resisted the urge to chase every new trend and kept building on things that last, like structured content, security, extensibility, and openness. Those things mattered twenty years ago, they still matter today, and they will still matter twenty years from now.

23. If it matters, keep saying it

A community isn't a room. People join at different times, pay attention to different things, and hear through different filters. An idea has to land again and again before it takes hold. If it matters, keep saying it. The ideas that stick are the ones the community picks up and carries forward.

24. It takes a community to see the whole road

Sometimes the path forward seems clear, but it takes the perspective of a community to see the cracks, the forks, and the doubts. Being right alone brings clarity. Bringing others along brings confidence.

25. Start before you feel ready

When I released Drupal 1.0.0, I knew almost nothing. For much of the journey, I felt out of my depth. I was often nervous, sometimes intimidated. I didn't know how to scale software, how to build a community, or how to lead. I kept shipping anyway. You don't become ready by waiting. You become ready by doing.

Areal photo of DrupalCon Seattle 2019 attendees.
A group photo taken at DrupalCon Seattle in 2019.

For those who have been here for years, these lessons will feel familiar. We learned them together, sometimes slowly, sometimes through debate, and often the hard way.

If Drupal has been part of your daily life for a long time, you are not just a user or a contributor. You are part of its history. And for all of you, I am grateful.

I am still here, still learning, and still excited about what we can build together next. Thank you for building it with me.

15 Jan 2026 4:06am GMT

14 Jan 2026

feedDrupal.org aggregator

DDEV Blog: DDEV 2025 Year in Review

DDEV 2025 Year in Review

2025 has been a year of significant growth and accomplishment for DDEV. With 579 commits to the main repository and releases from v1.24.0 through v1.24.10, we've made substantial progress on features, infrastructure, and community building. Here's a look back at what we all achieved together.

Table of Contents

Organizational Milestones

Community Engagement

The DDEV open-source community continues excellent engagement on several fronts.

Major Features and Improvements

Sponsorship Communication

Add-on Ecosystem

Container and Infrastructure

Upcoming v1.25.0:

Developer Experience

Upcoming v1.25.0:

Language and Database Updates

Upcoming v1.25.0:

Windows Improvements

ddev.com Website and Documentation

IDE Integration

DDEV Developer Improvements

AI in DDEV Development

2025 saw significant AI integration in our development workflow:

Removals in v1.25.0

Challenges and things that could have gone better

Comparing Outcomes to 2025 Goals

In 2025 Plans we laid out ambitious plans for 2025. Here are the outcomes:

By the Numbers

Wow, Community Contributions!

As an open-source project we truly value the amazing contributions of the community. There are so many ways these contributions happen, including support requests and issues (we learn so much from those!) but also direct contributions.

By Contributor

I know this is "Too Much Information" but here is a simple and inadequate list of the amazing contributions directly to the main project by contributors other than Randy and Stas. It inspires me so much to see this consolidated list.

Ralf Koller - rpkoller - 36 contributions

Akiba - AkibaAT - 7 contributions

Ariel Barreiro - hanoii - 6 contributions

tyler36 - tyler36 - 4 contributions

Travis Carden - TravisCarden - 3 contributions

Laryn - laryn - 3 contributions

Andrew Berry - deviantintegral - 2 contributions

Raphael Portmann - raphaelportmann - 2 contributions

cyppe - cyppe - 2 contributions

Peter Bowyer - pbowyer - 2 contributions

Shelane French - shelane - 2 contributions

Pierre Paul Lefebvre - PierrePaul - 2 contributions

Sven Reichel - sreichel - 2 contributions

lguigo22 - lguigo22 - 1 contribution

Justin Vogt - JUVOJustin - 1 contribution

grummbeer - grummbeer - 1 contribution

crowjake - crowjake - 1 contribution

Markus Sommer - BreathCodeFlow - 1 contribution

James Sansbury - q0rban - 1 contribution

Moshe Weitzman - weitzman - 1 contribution

Yan Loetzer - yanniboi - 1 contribution

Garvin Hicking - garvinhicking - 1 contribution

Benny Poensgen - vanWittlaer - 1 contribution

Rob Loach - RobLoach - 1 contribution

JshGrn - JshGrn - 1 contribution

E - ara303 - 1 contribution

Alan Doucette - dragonwize - 1 contribution

Brooke Mahoney - brookemahoney - 1 contribution

gitressa - gitressa - 1 contribution

Eduardo Rocha - hockdudu - 1 contribution

Dezső BICZÓ - mxr576 - 1 contribution

Tomas Norre Mikkelsen - tomasnorre - 1 contribution

Danny Pfeiffer - danny2p - 1 contribution

Popus Razvan Adrian - punkrock34 - 1 contribution

Daniel Huf - dhuf - 1 contribution

Ayu Adiati - adiati98 - 1 contribution

Peter Philipp - das-peter - 1 contribution

O'Briat - obriat - 1 contribution

Andreas Hager - andreashager - 1 contribution

Bill Seremetis - bserem - 1 contribution

Olivier Mengué - dolmen - 1 contribution

Rui Chen - chenrui333 - 1 contribution

michaellenahan - michaellenahan - 1 contribution

August Miller - AugustMiller - 1 contribution

Loz Calver - lozcalver - 1 contribution

Tim Kelty - timkelty - 1 contribution

Pedro Antonio Fructuoso Merino - pfructuoso - 1 contribution

Bang Dinh - bangdinhnfq - 1 contribution

nmangold - nmangold - 1 contribution

Jeremy Gonyea - jgonyea - 1 contribution

Colan Schwartz - colans - 1 contribution

Mrtn Schndlr - barbieswimcrew - 1 contribution

Marvin Hinz - marvinhinz - 1 contribution

RubenColpaert - RubenColpaert - 1 contribution

Alexey Murz Korepov - MurzNN - 1 contribution

Adam - phenaproxima - 1 contribution

Nick Hope - Nick-Hope - 1 contribution

Damilola Emmanuel Olowookere - damms005 - 1 contribution

nickchomey - nickchomey - 1 contribution

Andrew Gearhart - AndrewGearhart - 1 contribution

Christopher Kaster - atomicptr - 1 contribution

Hervé Donner - vever001 - 1 contribution

Bernhard Baumrock - BernhardBaumrock - 1 contribution

Erik Peterson - eporama - 1 contribution

Tom Yukhayev - charginghawk - 1 contribution

Summary by Count

Contributor GitHub Count
Ralf Koller rpkoller 36
Akiba AkibaAT 7
Ariel Barreiro hanoii 6
tyler36 tyler36 4
Travis Carden TravisCarden 3
Laryn laryn 3
Andrew Berry deviantintegral 2
Raphael Portmann raphaelportmann 2
cyppe cyppe 2
Peter Bowyer pbowyer 2
Shelane French shelane 2
Pierre Paul Lefebvre PierrePaul 2
Sven Reichel sreichel 2
lguigo22 lguigo22 1
Justin Vogt JUVOJustin 1
grummbeer grummbeer 1
crowjake crowjake 1
Markus Sommer BreathCodeFlow 1
James Sansbury q0rban 1
Moshe Weitzman weitzman 1
Yan Loetzer yanniboi 1
Garvin Hicking garvinhicking 1
Benny Poensgen vanWittlaer 1
Rob Loach RobLoach 1
JshGrn JshGrn 1
E ara303 1
Alan Doucette dragonwize 1
Brooke Mahoney brookemahoney 1
gitressa gitressa 1
...and 36 more contributors

Blog Guest Contributors

Guest contributions to the blog are always welcome and key contributors added significant posts this year:

Ajith Thampi Joseph - atj4me

Bill Seremetis - bserem

Garvin Hicking - garvinhicking

Jeremy Gonyea - jgonyea

ayalon - ayalon

And thanks to all of you who use DDEV, report issues, answer questions in Discord and other venues, and spread the word. Your support makes this project possible.

Amazing Official Add-on Maintainers

There are so many unofficial add-ons being maintained by so many people, but here are the folks that maintained official repositories:

  1. @tyler36 - ddev-browsersync, ddev-cron, ddev-cypress, ddev-qr, plus contributions to 20+ other add-ons
  2. @weitzman (Moshe Weitzman) - ddev-drupal-contrib, ddev-selenium-standalone-chrome
  3. @cmuench (Christian Münch) - ddev-opensearch
  4. @julienloizelet (Julien Loizelet) - ddev-mongo, ddev-redis-insight
  5. @mkalkbrenner - ddev-solr
  6. @robertoperuzzo - ddev-sqlsrv
  7. @b13 (TYPO3 agency) - ddev-typo3-solr, ddev-rabbitmq
  8. @jedubois - ddev-varnish
  9. @hussainweb - ddev-redis
  10. @seebeen - ddev-ioncube, ddev-minio
  11. @bserem (Bill Seremetis) - ddev-adminer
  12. @AkibaAT - ddev-intellij-plugin
  13. @biati-digital - vscode-ddev-manager

Looking Ahead to 2026

Stay tuned for our 2026 plans post where we'll outline what's next for DDEV. As always, we welcome your input through all our support venues.

Claude Code and GitHub Copilot were used as assistants in gathering lists and material, and in reviewing this article.

14 Jan 2026 11:19pm GMT

Dries Buytaert: The Third Audience

An empty office chair facing several glowing computer monitors, with small glowing fragments floating upward.

I used Claude Code to build a new feature for my site this morning. Any URL on my blog can now return Markdown instead of HTML.

I added a small hint in the HTML to signal that the Markdown version exists, mostly to see what would happen. My plan was to leave it running for a few weeks and write about it later if anything interesting turned up.

Within an hour, I had hundreds of requests from AI crawlers, including ClaudeBot, GPTBot, OpenAI's SearchBot, and more. So much for waiting a few weeks.

For two decades, we built sites for two audiences: humans and search engines. AI agents are now the third audience, and most websites aren't optimized for them yet.

We learned how to play the SEO game so our sites would rank in Google. Now people are starting to invest in things like Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) and Answer Engine Optimization (AEO), which are about getting cited in AI-generated answers.

I wanted to understand what that actually means in practice, so I turned my own site into a small experiment and made every page available as Markdown.

If you've been following my blog, you know that Drupal stores my blog posts as Markdown. But when AI crawlers visited, they got HTML like everyone else. They had to wade through navigation menus and wrapper divs to find the actual content. My content already existed in a more AI-friendly format. I just wasn't serving it to them.

It only took a few changes, and Drupal made that easy.

First, I added content negotiation to my site. When a request includes Accept: text/markdown in the HTTP headers, my site returns the Markdown instead of the rendered HTML.

Second, I made it possible to append .md to any URL. For example, https://dri.es/principles-for-life.md gives you clean Markdown with metadata like title, date, and tags.

But how did those crawlers find the Markdown version so fast? I borrowed a pattern from RSS: RSS auto-discovery. Many sites include a link tag with rel="alternate" pointing to their RSS feed. I applied the same idea to Markdown: every HTML page now includes a link tag announcing that an alternative Markdown version exists at the .md URL.

That "Markdown auto-discovery" turned out to be the key. The crawlers parse the HTML, find the alternate Markdown link, and immediately switch. That explains the hundreds of requests I saw within the first hour.

In the end, this took surprisingly little work. If your content already exists in a cleaner, structured form, you might be closer to this than you think. For me, this feels like the beginning of a longer experiment.

The speed of adoption tells me AI agents are hungry for cleaner content formats and will use them the moment they find them. What I don't know yet is whether this actually benefits me. It might lead to more visibility in AI answers, or it might just make it easier for AI companies to use my content without sending traffic back.

I know not everyone will love this experiment. Humans, including me, are teaching machines how to read our sites better, while machines are teaching humans to stop visiting us. The value exchange between creators and AI companies is far from settled, and it's entirely possible that making content easier for AI to consume will accelerate the hollowing out of the web.

I don't have a good answer to that yet, but I'd rather experiment than look away. I'm going to leave this running and report back.

14 Jan 2026 10:33pm GMT

Drupal Core News: Announcing Drupal 12.0.0 platform requirements

Drupal 12 development has reached a point where the system requirements may be raised in the development branch. To prepare core developers for this and to inform the community at large, we are announcing the following requirements for Drupal 12.

Webserver

The webserver requirements have not changed since Drupal 11. They are Apache 2.4.7 or nginx 1.1 minimum. IIS is not supported.

PHP

Drupal 12 will require PHP 8.5. Older versions of PHP are not supported.

Database

The minimum database requirements for backends supported by Drupal 12 core are MySQL 8.0, MariaDB 10.11, PostgreSQL 18, and SQLite 3.45.

The MySQL and SQLite requirements have not changed since Drupal 11.0. MariaDB is raised from 10.6 and PostgreSQL from 16.

Composer

Drupal recommends the latest secure release of Composer, 2.9.3.

Browsers

The existing browser policy has not changed and there was no need to update it for Drupal 12. Drupal already drops support for older versions of browsers as new ones get released.

Drupal 11 will receive long term support

Drupal 11 will continue to be supported until mid-late 2028, at least until the release of Drupal 13.

14 Jan 2026 5:27pm GMT

ImageX: The Essential Drupal Website Maintenance Guide: Best Practices and Insights

Most things need regular care and maintenance to ensure they continue to run effectively, and your website is no exception. When it comes to website maintenance, one of the strongest parallels is with car maintenance. A vehicle only runs smoothly with routine check-ups, even if it looks perfect on the outside. You stay on the safe side when the engine is checked, parts are updated, and small issues are fixed before they turn into larger, more expensive repairs.

14 Jan 2026 2:44pm GMT

Dripyard Premium Drupal Themes: Dripyard & Lullabot Bring Future-Proof Theming to DrupalCon Chicago

I'm excited to share that I'll be teaming up with Lullabot's Andy Blum to deliver an in-depth front-end theming training at DrupalCon Chicago 2026.

This training is especially meaningful to me because it brings together a large part of the work I've been doing at Dripyard over the past few years. Teaching and sharing hard-earned lessons is one of my favorite parts of being involved in the Drupal community.

14 Jan 2026 1:11pm GMT

Specbee: 25 Reasons to Love Drupal: Celebrating 25 Years of Drupal

Drupal completes 25 years this January 15th, 2026! Let's celebrate Drupal with 25 compelling reasons why it remains a secure, scalable, open-source CMS trusted by enterprises and governments worldwide.

14 Jan 2026 9:37am GMT

12 Jan 2026

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Nonprofit Drupal posts: January 2026 Drupal for Nonprofits Chat

Join us THURSDAY, January 15 at 1pm ET / 10am PT, for our regularly scheduled call to chat about all things Drupal and nonprofits. (Convert to your local time zone.)

We don't have anything specific on the agenda this month, so we'll have plenty of time to discuss anything that's on our minds at the intersection of Drupal and nonprofits. Got something specific you want to talk about? Feel free to share ahead of time in our collaborative Google document!

All nonprofit Drupal devs and users, regardless of experience level, are always welcome on this call.

This free call is sponsored by NTEN.org and open to everyone.

Information on joining the meeting can be found in our collaborative Google document.

12 Jan 2026 7:55pm GMT

Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #535 - Podcast Recording

Today we are talking about Recording Podcasts, The tech used, and How Drupal Can help with guest Stephen Cross. We'll also cover Chosen as our module of the week.

For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/535

Topics

Resources

Guests

Stephen Cross - stephencross

Hosts

Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Andy Giles - dripyard.com andyg5000

MOTW Correspondent

Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu

12 Jan 2026 7:00pm GMT

Dries Buytaert: When backward compatibility became an advantage

Twenty years ago, I argued passionately that breaking backward compatibility was one of Drupal's core values:

The only viable long-term strategy is to focus exclusively on getting the technology right. The only way to stay competitive is to have the best product. [...] If you start dragging baggage along, your product will, eventually, be replaced by something that offers the same functionality but without the baggage.

I warned that preserving backward compatibility would be the beginning of the end:

I fear that this will be the end of Drupal as we have come to know it. Probably not immediately, maybe not even for several years, but eventually Drupal will be surpassed by technology that can respond more quickly to change.

Twenty years later, I have to admit I was wrong.

So what changed?

In 2006, Drupal had almost no automated tests. We couldn't commit to backward compatibility because we had no way to know when we broke it. Two years later in 2008, we embraced test-driven development.

Line chart showing Drupal's production code and test code from 2012 to 2026. Test code grows from near zero to over 650,000 lines; production code grows from 90,000 to 300,000 lines.
Drupal's test code now exceeds production code by more than two to one. Source: Drupal Core Metrics.

By 2016, we had built up significant test coverage, and with that foundation we adopted semantic versioning and committed to backward compatibility. Semantic versioning gave us a deprecation policy. We can mark old code for removal and clear it out every two years with each major release. The baggage I feared never really accumulated.

Today, according to the Drupal Core Metrics dashboard, Drupal Core has more than twice as much test code as production code. I didn't fully appreciate how much that would change things. You can't promise backward compatibility at Drupal's scale without extensive automated testing.

Our upgrades are now the smoothest in the project's history. And best of all, Drupal didn't end. It's still a top choice for organizations that need flexibility, security, and scale.

I recently came across an interview with Richard Hipp, SQLite's creator. SQLite has 90 million lines of tests for 150,000 lines of production code. That is a whopping 600-to-1 ratio. Hipp calls it "aviation-grade testing" and says it's what lets a team of three maintain billions of installations.

I suspect our test coverage will continue to grow over time. But Drupal can't match SQLite's ratio, and it doesn't need to. What matters is that we built the habits and discipline that work for us.

In 2006, I thought backward compatibility would be the end of Drupal. In 2026, I think it might be what keeps us here for another twenty years.

Thank you to everyone who wrote those tests.

It does make me wonder: what are we wrong about now? What should we be investing in today that will slowly reshape how we work and become an obvious advantage twenty years from now? And who is already saying it while the rest of us aren't listening?

12 Jan 2026 5:07pm GMT

The Drop Times: Filtering Signal from AI Noise

AI is moving quickly into the Drupal ecosystem, but the conversation around it has often been fragmented and uneven in quality. Drupal AI TV, launched by the Drupal AI Initiative, responds to this by focusing less on promotion and more on consolidation. Its core value lies in curation: selecting existing, publicly available sessions and placing them in a single, structured space where professionals can assess current thinking and practice around AI in Drupal without wading through unrelated material.

The range of content is notable for its balance. Alongside technical demonstrations, there is clear attention to ethical questions, organisational readiness, and the realities of integrating AI into existing systems. This signals a pragmatic stance toward AI adoption, one that recognises both its potential and its constraints. By including case studies and workflow-focused sessions, Drupal AI TV grounds abstract AI discussions in the day-to-day decisions faced by developers, content teams, and digital strategists.

As the platform grows, its usefulness will depend on how well it maintains this curatorial discipline. Regular updates are important, but relevance and depth matter more than volume. If Drupal AI TV continues to prioritise informed, experience-based perspectives, it can become a steady reference point for teams evaluating when and how AI meaningfully fits into their Drupal projects, rather than another channel that adds to the noise.

With that, let's move the spotlight to the important stories from the past week.

DISCOVER DRUPAL

EVENTS

DRUPAL COMMUNITY

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.

Alka Elizabeth
Sub-editor
The DropTimes

12 Jan 2026 3:27pm GMT