silverstripe-framework/docs/en/topics/directory-structure.md

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Directory Structure

Introduction

The directory-structure in SilverStripe it built on "convention over configuration", so the placement of some files and directories is meaningful to its logic.

Core Structure

Directory Description
assets/ Contains images and other files uploaded via the SilverStripe CMS. You can also place your own content inside it, and link to it from within the content area of the CMS.
cms/ Contains all the files that form the CMS area of your site. Its structure is similiar to the mysite/ directory, so if you find something interesting, it should be easy enough to look inside and see how it was built.
framework/ The framework that builds both your own site and as the CMS that powers it. Youll be utilizing files in this directory often, both directly and indirectly.

Custom Code Structure

We're using <mysite> as an example - arbitrary directory-names are allowed, as long as they don't collide with existing modules or the directories lists in "Core Structure".

Directory Description
<mysite>/ This directory contains all of your code that defines your website.
<mysite>/code PHP code for model and controller (subdirectories are optional)
<mysite>/templates HTML templates with *.ss-extension
<mysite>/css CSS files
<mysite>/images Images used in the HTML templates
<mysite>/javascript Javascript and other script files

Themes Structure

themes/blackcandy/ Standard "blackcandy" theme
themes/blackcandy_blog/ Theme additions for the blog module
themes/yourtheme/ The themes folder can contain more than one theme - here's your own

See themes

Module Structure

Modules are currently top-level folders that need to have a _config.php-file present. They should follow the same conventions as posed in "Custom Site Structure"

Example Forum:

Directory Description
forum/ This directory contains all of your code that defines your website.
forum/code PHP code for model and controller (subdirectories are optional)
... ...

PHP Include Paths

Due to the way [api:ManifestBuilder] recursively detects php-files and includes them through PHP5's __autoload()-feature, you don't need to worry about include paths. Feel free to structure your php-code into subdirectories inside the code-directory.

Best Practices

Making /assets readonly

See secure-development#filesystem