silverstripe-framework/docs/en/howto/extend-cms-interface.md
2011-11-22 11:09:43 +01:00

5.1 KiB

How to extend the CMS interface

Introduction

The CMS interface works just like any other part of your website: It consists of PHP controllers, templates, CSS stylesheets and JavaScript. Because it uses the same base elements, it is relatively easy to extend. As an example, we're going to add a permanent "bookmarks" bar to popular pages at the bottom of the CMS. A page can be bookmarked by a CMS author through a simple checkbox.

Overload a CMS template

First of all, create a new folder structure in your SilverStripe webroot, which will form our module for this example.

cms/
sapphire/
zzz_admin/
	_config.php
	code/
	css/
	admin/
		templates/

Note: The zzz_ prefix and admin/ subfolder are only a temporary measure necessary to ensure our templates are included after the original CMS templates. At the moment, you can't use the mysite/ folder to achieve the same result.

CMS templates are inherited based on their controllers, similar to subclasses of the common Page object (a new PHP class MyPage will look for a MyPage.ss template). We can use this to create a different base template with LeftAndMain.ss (which corresponds to the LeftAndMain PHP controller class).

Copy the template markup of the base implementation at sapphire/admin/templates/LeftAndMain.ss into zzz_admin/admin/templates/LeftAndMain.ss. It will automatically be picked up by the CMS logic. Add a new section after the $Content tag:

:::ss
...
<div class="cms-container" data-layout="{type: 'border'}">
	$Menu
	$Content
	<div class="cms-bottom-bar south">
		<ul>
			<li><a href="admin/page/edit/show/1">Edit "My popular page"</a></li>
			<li><a href="admin/page/edit/show/99">Edit "My other page"</a></li>
		</ul>
	</div>
</div>
...

Refresh the CMS interface with admin/?flush=all, and you should see the new bottom bar with some hardcoded links. We'll make these dynamic further down.

You might have noticed that we didn't write any JavaScript to add our layout manager. The important piece of information is the south class in our new <div> structure, plus the height value in our CSS. It instructs the existing parent layout how to render the element. This layout manager (jLayout) allows us to build complex layouts with minimal JavaScript configuration.

Include custom CSS in the CMS

In order to show the links in one line, we'll add some CSS, and get it to load with the CMS interface. Paste the following content into a new file called zzz_mysite/css/BookmarkedPages.css:

:::css
.cms-bottom-bar {height: 20px; padding: 5px; background: #C6D7DF;}
.cms-bottom-bar ul {list-style: none; margin: 0; padding: 0;}
.cms-bottom-bar ul li {float: left; margin-left: 1em;}
.cms-bottom-bar a {color: #444444;}

Load the new CSS file into the CMS, by adding the following line to zzz_admin/_config.php:

:::php
<?php
LeftAndMain::require_css('zzz_admin/css/CMSBookmarkBar.css');

Create a "bookmark" flag on pages

Now we'll define which pages are actually bookmarked, a flag that is stored in the database. For this we need to decorate the page record with a DataExtension. Create a new file called zzz_admin/code/BookmarkedPageExtension.php and insert the following code.

:::php
<?php
class BookmarkedPageExtension extends DataExtension {
	function extraStatics() {
		return array('db' => array('IsBookmarked' => 'Boolean'));
	}
	function updateCMSFields(&$fields) {
		$fields->addFieldToTab('Root.Main',
			new CheckboxField('IsBookmarked', "Show in CMS bookmarks?")
		);
	}
}

Enable the extension with the following line in zzz_mysite/_config.php:

:::php
Object::add_extension('SiteTree', 'BookmarkedPageExtension');

In order to add the field to the database, run a dev/build/?flush=all. Refresh the CMS, open a page for editing and you should see the new checkbox.

Retrieve the list of bookmarks from the database

One piece in the puzzle is still missing: How do we get the list of bookmarked pages from the datbase into the template we've already created (with hardcoded links)? Again, we extend a core class: The main CMS controller called LeftAndMain.

Add the following code to a new file zzz_admin/code/BookmarkedLeftAndMainExtension.php;

:::php
<?php
class BookmarkedPagesLeftAndMainExtension extends LeftAndMainExtension {
	function BookmarkedPages() {
		return DataList::create('Page')->where('"IsBookmarked" = 1');
	}
}

Enable the extension with the following line in zzz_mysite/_config.php:

:::php
Object::add_extension('LeftAndMain', 'BookmarkedPagesLeftAndMainExtension');

As the last step, replace the hardcoded links with our list from the database. Find the <ul> you created earlier in zzz_admin/admin/templates/LeftAndMain.ss and replace it with the following:

:::ss
<ul>
	<% control BookmarkedPages %>
	<li><a href="admin/page/edit/show/$ID">Edit "$Title"</a></li>
	<% end_control %>
</ul>

Summary

In a few lines of code, we've customized the look and feel of the CMS. While this example is only scratching the surface, it includes most building blocks and concepts for more complex extensions as well.