The rules engine can radically boost your productivity in the PIM by automating actions. As explained in this article, a rule enables you to automatically apply one or several actions to a specific list of products and product models. To set the targeted products, you have to define conditions (that are composed by fields and operators).
The rules are defined in a YML file that you can import in the PIM, using a dedicated job profile.
This feature is very, like, really powerful, and the use cases are countless. In order to guide you in the rules engine usage, we wrote this article where you will find out what you can use it for and how it works.
Name your rules
Each rule must have a unique code. It can also have a label per enabled PIM locale. This label will appear under Settings/Rules and be also visible in your product form under your smart attributes. You can add the labels settings anywhere in your rule. In the example below, it is placed at the end of the rule, and it adds labels for your American English and French locales, here is the expected format:
camera_copy_name_to_model: priority: 0 conditions: - field: family operator: IN value: - camcorders - field: camera_model_name operator: EMPTY actions: - type: copy from_field: name to_field: camera_model_name labels: en_US: 'Copy name to model' fr_FR: 'Copie nom vers modèle'
If you do not want to add labels to your rule, leave the labels settings with { }.
labels: {}
You will also be able to search on your rule labels under Settings/Rules.
Define a status for your rule
Thanks to the status, you can define if the rule must be automatically executed or not.
A status can be defined with the enabled key. When the value is false, the rule cannot be executed from cronjob or manually.
In the rule import, this key is not mandatory. If it's not specified, the rule is enabled, set to true, by default.
To define the rule status, please follow this format:
camera_copy_name_to_model: priority: 0 enabled: true conditions: - field: family operator: IN value: - camcorders - field: camera_model_name operator: EMPTY actions: - type: copy from_field: name to_field: camera_model_name labels: en_US: 'Copy name to model' fr_FR: 'Copie nom vers modèle'
Available actions
As of today, 7 actions are available in the rules engine:
- copy
- add
- set
- remove
- concatenate
- clear
- calculate
What are these actions for? Let's discover it 😉
Copy
The Copy action enables you to copy an attribute value in another one.
The expected values are:
- from_field: the code of the attribute to be copied
- to_field: the attribute code where the value will be copied
- from_locale: the locale code of the value to be copied (optional)
- from_scope: the channel code of the value to be copied (optional)
- to_locale: the locale code where the value will be copied (optional)
- to_scope: the channel code where the value will be copied (optional)
It is possible to copy values from an attribute type to another attribute of the same type (for example: from a text attribute type to another text attribute type).
You can go even further. It is possible to copy attribute values in another attribute value field even if they are two different types of values. There are some exceptions mind you! Take a look at the list below.
You can copy the given attribute to a selection of attribute types that we defined based on logical criteria:
You can copy the option code of a simple select attribute to:
- a reference entity single link attribute (the record must already exist)
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
You can copy the option codes of a multi select attribute to:
- a reference entity multiple link attribute (the records must already exist)
- a text attribute (the codes are separated by a comma)
- a textarea attribute (the codes are separated by a comma)
You can copy the value of a text attribute to:
- a textarea attribute
- a simple select attribute (the option code must already exist)
- a reference entity single link attribute (the record must already exist)
You can copy the value of an identifier attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
You can copy the value of a date attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
You can copy the value of a measurement attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
- a number attribute
You can copy the value of a number attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
- a measurement attribute
You can copy the value of a price attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
You can copy the value of a reference entity single link attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
- a simple select attribute (the option code of the simple select attribute must already exist)
You can copy the value of a reference entity multiple links attribute to:
- a text attribute
- a textarea attribute
- a multi select attribute (the option codes of the multi select attribute must already exist)
Specificity regarding simple select / multi select attributes
In a list, an option is defined by a code and a label (the label is not mandatory). When the rule engine performs a copy action, it uses the option codes.
To copy values from a simple select attribute to another, or from a multi select attribute to another, every options you want to copy must already exist in the target attribute.
Let's say you have 2 attributes: attribute 1 and attribute 2, both containing sizes. You want to copy the size filled in Attribute 1, to Attribute 2. Both have an option with code "S", but this option doesn't have the same label: in attribute 1, the label is Small whereas is Attribute 2, it is S.
When your perform a copy action on one or several products to copy this size, the option with code S will be copied from attribute 1 to attribute 2 in your Product Edit Form and the result will be:
Attribute 1: Small
Attribute 2: S
EXAMPLE
You have a scopable and localizable attribute called description. You can copy its content from the en_US locale and the print channel to the en_US locale and the e-commerce channel. The action will be defined as follows:
actions: - type: copy from_field: description from_locale: en_US from_scope: print to_field: description to_locale: en_US to_scope: ecommerce
Add
The Add action allows you to add values to a multi-select attribute or a reference entity multiple link attribute. Also, it makes it possible to add a product to categories and to groups too.
The expected values are:
- field: the attribute code or property
- items: the value codes. It has to be an array of the items you need to add.
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional)
EXAMPLE
To add the “t-shirts” category to a set of products, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: add field: categories items: - t-shirts
Add associations
The add action can also associate products/product models/groups without removing previously associated ones. You can choose to only associate products or product models or groups, or any combination you like.
For instance, the following action will associate the product_42 product and the tshirt group to your product (while keeping previously associated products and groups), and won't update the associated product models.
actions: - type: add field: associations items: X_SELL: products: - product_42 groups: - tshirts
Set
The Set action assigns values to attributes but also to the following properties: categories, status (enabled/disabled), groups, family, associations. Beware, the previous values will be replaced by the new ones.
The expected values are:
- field: the attribute code or property
- value: the attribute value or property value
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional)
EXAMPLE
To set the “My very new description for purple T-shirt” value to your description attribute in the en_US locale and for the e-commerce channel, the action will be as follows:
For instance, the following actions will disable the product and set its family to shoes. It will also categorize it in casual and women (while uncategorizing it from its previous categories), and add it to the summer group (while removing it from its previous groups).
actions: - type: set field: enabled value: false - type: set field: family value: shoes - type: set field: categories value: - casual - women - type: set field: groups value: - summer
Set associations
Just like for the add action, you can choose to associate any combination of products, product_models or groups for each association type. You can decide which associated products, product_models or groups you want to update. The other ones will not be updated.
In the example below, you can see that the following action will replace the associated products for the X_SELL association, but won't replace associated product models or groups.
And for the UPSELL association, it will replace the associated product models and groups but not the associated products.
actions: - type: set field: associations value: X_SELL: products: - product_42 - another_product UPSELL: product_models: - amor groups: - tshirts
Remove
The Remove action enables you to remove values from a multi-select attribute, a reference entity multiple link attribute, an asset collection attribute, a price collection attribute, a product category or a group.
The expected values are:
- field: the attribute code or “categories”
- items: the value codes to remove
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- include_children: if true, then it also applies the removal of the children to the given categories. It is only applicable if the field is set to “categories” (It's optional. By default, it is set to false)
EXAMPLE
To remove the “t-shirts” category, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: remove field: categories items: - t-shirts
To remove the “clothing” category and its children, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: remove field: categories items: - clothing include_children: true
To unclassify products from the whole “Master catalog” tree, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: remove field: categories items: - master include_children: true
Concatenate
The Concatenate action concatenates at least two values into a single value. A space separates each source value.
The possible source attribute types are:
- text
- textarea
- date
- identifier
- measurement
- number
- price collection
- simple select
- multi select (values are separated by a comma)
- reference entity single link
- reference entity multiple link
The possible target attribute types are:
- text
- textarea
The parameters from and to are required in this format. Depending on the source attribute type, some optional keys can be added.
The expected values are:
from
- field: the attribute code.
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- format: format of the date following the PHP format specification (optional, only relevant for date attributes). By default, it is Y-m-d (e.g. 2020-01-31)
- currency: the currency code for which the price is assigned (optional, only relevant for price_collection attributes). By default, all the prices in the collection are displayed, separated by a comma.
- label_locale: the locale code for the label of the option or record (optional, only relevant for simple select, multi-select, reference entity single link and reference entity multiple link attributes). By default, the code of the option is used.
- unit_label_locale: the locale code for the unit of the measurement (optional, only relevant for measurement attributes). By default, the code of the unit is used.
Here is an example:
actions: - type: concatenate from: - field: brand - field: color label_locale: en_US - field: name scope: ecommerce locale: en_US
to
- field: the attribute code.
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional)
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional)
EXAMPLE
To concatenate the brand (non localizable and non scopable) and the model in the en_US locale into the product title value in the en_US locale, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: concatenate from: - field: brand - field: model locale: en_US to: field: product_title locale: en_US
Clear
This action clears the value(s) assigned to an attribute, product categories, product groups, or product associations.
The expected values are:
- field: the attribute code, "categories", "groups" or "associations".
- locale: the locale code for which the value is assigned (optional).
- scope: the channel code for which the value is assigned (optional).
EXAMPLES
To clear the brand in en_US locale, the action will be as follows
actions: - type: clear field: brand locale: en_US
To clear all the categories that are linked to products, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: clear field: categories
To clear all the product associations, the action will be as follows:
actions: - type: clear field: associations
Calculate
This action allows calculating numeric attribute values, with simple mathematical operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division).
This action only accepts number, measurement or price collection attributes for both the source and the destination.
The action is split into 3 required steps, and 1 optional:
destination: the value you want to update. It is composed of:
- field: the attribute code (required)
- locale: locale code if the attribute is localizable (optional)
- scope: channel code if the attribute is scopable (optional)
- currency: currency code if the attribute is a price collection (required if the destination attribute type is a price collection)
- unit: unit code if the attribute is a measurement (optional, the default measurement unit of the attribute will be used if not set)
source: the first operand of the operation. It requires at least either a value or a field and additional items. For instance, you can have:
- value: a constant numeric value - decimal separator: dot, no thousands separator, e.g: 1515.14 (required)
OR:
- field: attribute code of the source value (required)
- locale: locale code if the attribute is localizable (optional)
- scope: channel code if the attribute is scopable (optional)
- currency: currency code if the attribute is a price collection (required if the source attribute type is a price collection)
operation_list: the list of operations to execute (at least one operation is required)
It is exactly the same format as the source property, with an additional required field:
- operator: can be either add, subtract, multiply or divide (required)
If a product value required in an operation is empty, or if a division by zero occurs, the product won't be updated.
round_precision (optional): rounds the final result of the operation(s)
If this parameter is not specified or if the value is null, the final result will not be rounded. The round precision can be:
- a positive number: it represents the number of decimals to keep
- 0: rounded with no decimal
- a negative number: the rounding will occur before the decimal point (example with precision of -1: 81 becomes 80, with precision of -2: 81 becomes 100)
If the destination attribute does not allow decimals, the action can be applied only when the result is an integer. This behavior can be changed by setting up the round_precision to 0: the result will be rounded and the action will be applied.
EXAMPLES
For instance, in order to calculate the volume of a cone (volume = (π x R² x h) / 3), given a radius and a height, you can use the following action:
actions: - type: calculate destination: field: volume unit: CUBE_CENTIMETER source: value: 3.14 operation_list: - operator: multiply field: radius - operator: multiply field: radius - operator: multiply field: height - operator: divide value: 3
The following action will calculate a price in euros, based on the price in dollars and a ratio, and round the result to the nearest integer value:
actions: - type: calculate round_precision: 0 destination: field: price scope: ecommerce currency: EUR source: field: price scope: ecommerce currency: USD operation_list: - operator: multiply field: ratio
Available fields
Now that you have discovered all the available actions, you can easily see which ones can be useful in your daily work 😉. But, to write a rule, you have to define your product selection. To do so, you need to know what are the available fields and their operators.
As of today, the following fields are supported in the rules engine, and each of them has its own business rules. Here we go!
Created
The possible operators for the created field are:
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- <
- BETWEEN
- NOT BETWEEN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
- field: created operator: = value: "2015-01-23 00:00:00" - field: created operator: < value: "-10 days"
Updated
The possible operators for the updated field are:
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- <
- BETWEEN
- NOT BETWEEN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
- field: updated operator: = value: "2015-01-23 00:00:00" - field: updated operator: '>' value: "-1 year"
Focus on the “relative date format”
The relative date format allows to specify dates that are relative to the rule execution date, it is formatted as follows:
<+/-><count> <unit>, with:
- "+" means a date in the future, "-" a date in the past
- count is an integer
- unit is one of the following values: minute, hour, day, week, month or year with an optional final s
For instance, +1 month means in one month, and -2 days means 2 days ago
Enabled (status)
The possible operators for the enabled field are:
- =
- ≠
EXAMPLE
field: enabled operator: = value: false
Completeness
The possible operators for the completeness field are:
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- <
EXAMPLE
field: completeness locale: fr_FR scope: print operator: = value: "100"
Family
The possible operators for the family field are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: family operator: IN value: - camcorders - digital_cameras
Family variant
The possible operators for the family_variant field are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: family_variant operator: IN value: - shoes_by_size - clothing_by_color
Parent
The possible operators for the parent field are:
- IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: parent operator: IN value: - model_tshirt_red - model_pants_blue
Identifier
The possible operators for the identifier field are:
- STARTS WITH
- CONTAINS
- DOES NOT CONTAIN
- =
- “!=”
- IN
- NOT IN
EXAMPLE
field: identifier operator: IN value: - model_tshirt_red - tshirt_red_xxl
Entity type
The only accepted operator for the entity_type field is:
- =
EXAMPLE
field: entity_type operator: = value: Akeneo\Pim\Enrichment\Component\Product\Model\ProductModelInterface
Groups
The possible operators for the groups field are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: groups operator: IN value: - oro_tshirts - akeneo_tshirts
Categories
The possible operators for the categories field are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- UNCLASSIFIED
- IN OR UNCLASSIFIED
- IN CHILDREN
- NOT IN CHILDREN
EXAMPLE
field: categories operator: IN value: - C0056 - F677
Attribute types
Now that the actions and the fields don't have any secret for you anymore, you can discover which attribute types you can use as targets for your rules. It means that these attributes can receive the values you defined in your rules.
Text/Textarea
The possible operators for the text/textarea attribute types are:
- STARTS WITH
- CONTAINS
- DOES NOT CONTAIN
- =
- ≠
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: description operator: CONTAINS value: "Awesome product"
text can be written with or without quotation marks.
Identifier
The possible operators for the identifier attribute type are:
- STARTS WITH
- CONTAINS
- DOES NOT CONTAIN
- =
- “!=”
- IN
- NOT IN
EXAMPLE
field: sku operator: CONTAINS value: "AKNTS_PB"
Measurement
The possible operators for the measurement attribute type are:
- <
- ≤
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- ‘>=’
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: weight operator: = value: amount: 0.5 unit: KILOGRAM
We expect numeric value and measurement unit code in the following format:
dot “.” is the decimal separator,
there is no space between thousands.
Boolean
The possible operators for the boolean attribute type are:
- =
- ≠
EXAMPLE
field: shippable_us operator: = value: false
Simple select list / Reference Entity single link
The possible operators for the Simple select list / Reference entity single link attribute types are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: size operator: IN value: - xxl
We expect option code as value.
Multiselect list / Reference Entity multiple link
The possible operators for the Multiselect list / Reference entity multiple link attribute types are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: material operator: IN value: - GOLD - LEATHER
We expect option code as value.
Number
The possible operators for the Number attribute type are:
- <
- ≤
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- ‘>=’
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: min_age operator: = value: 12
We expect a number as value.
Date
The possible operators for the Date attribute type are:
- <
- ‘>’
- =
- ≠
- BETWEEN
- NOT BETWEEN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
- field: release_date operator: = value: "2015-01-23" - field: creation_date operator: '>' value: "-1 year"
Focus on the “relative date format”
The relative date format allows to specify dates that are relative to the rule execution date, it is formatted as follows:
<+/-><count> <unit>, with:
- "+" means a date in the future, "-" a date in the past
- count is an integer
- unit is one of the following values: day, week, month or year with an optional final s
For instance, +1 month means in one month, and -2 days means 2 days ago
EXAMPLE
field: created_date operator: '>' value: "2016-05-12"
Price collection
The possible operators for the Price collection attribute type are:
- <
- ≤
- =
- ≠
- ‘>’
- ‘>=’
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: basic_price operator: <= value: amount: 12 currency: EUR field: null_price operator: NOT EMPTY value: amount: null currency: EUR
We expect numeric value and currency code in the following format:
- dot “.” is the decimal separator,
- there is no space between thousands.
Picture or file
The possible operators for the Picture or File attribute types are:
- STARTS WITH
- CONTAINS
- DOES NOT CONTAIN
- =
- ≠
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: small_image operator: CONTAINS value: ../../../ src/PimEnterprise/Bundle/InstallerBundle/Resources/fixtures/icecat_demo/images/AKNTS_PB.jpg
We expect a text as value (it should match the filename).
Asset collection
The possible operators for the Asset Collection attribute type are:
- IN
- NOT IN
- EMPTY
- NOT EMPTY
EXAMPLE
field: packshot operator: IN value: [my_product_packshot]
In this example, we select all the products that have the "my_product_packshot" asset in their "packshot" asset collection.
We expect an array of asset codes as value.
A real example
You're done with all these specifications!
We hope that you perfectly understand the rules engine operation now. But to make it crystal clear, we thought it would be better to take a real example of a rule 😉.
Let's say that, among all the attributes of your product form, you have one price collection attribute type and a boolean attribute type. In the price collection, you define the price of your product in USD. The boolean attribute is used to define if your product is ready to be sent to your ecommerce platform (if it is set to "yes", it means that the product is ready).
Manually changing the status of the boolean attribute is time-consuming and a very repetitive task... But for the rules engine, it's a perfect match! The mission of the rules engine here is to automate the status change of the boolean once the price attribute has a value.
To do so, follow these steps:
- Open a text editor to write the YML code of the rule.
- Write this:
my_rule: priority: 90 enabled: true conditions: - field: basic_price operator: NOT EMPTY value: amount: null currency: EUR actions: - field: ecommerce_ready value: true type: set labels: en_US: 'Set ecommerce_ready' fr_FR: 'Définir ecommerce_ready'
And finally, import your YML file using the Akeneo rules import job.
If you want to directly execute the rule:
- Go to Settings, Rules
- Click on the "play" button on your rule line and confirm.
The rule is executed 😉.