12 KiB
title: ModelAdmin summary: Create admin UI's for managing your data records.
ModelAdmin
ModelAdmin provides a simple way to utilize the SilverStripe Admin UI with your own data models. It can create searchables list and edit views of DataObject subclasses, and even provides import and export of your data.
It uses the framework's knowledge about the model to provide sensible defaults, allowing you to get started in a couple of lines of code, while still providing a solid base for customization.
Let's assume we want to manage a simple product listing as a sample data model: A product can have a name, price, and a category.
mysite/code/Product.php
use SilverStripe\ORM\DataObject;
class Product extends DataObject
{
private static $db = [
'Name' => 'Varchar',
'ProductCode' => 'Varchar',
'Price' => 'Currency'
];
private static $has_one = [
'Category' => 'Category'
];
}
mysite/code/Category.php
use SilverStripe\ORM\DataObject;
class Category extends DataObject
{
private static $db = [
'Title' => 'Text'
];
private static $has_many = [
'Products' => 'Product'
];
}
To create your own ModelAdmin
, simply extend the base class, and edit the $managed_models
property with the list of
DataObject's you want to scaffold an interface for. The class can manage multiple models in parallel, if required.
We'll name it MyAdmin
, but the class name can be anything you want.
mysite/code/MyAdmin.php
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
private static $managed_models = [
'Product',
'Category'
];
private static $url_segment = 'products';
private static $menu_title = 'My Product Admin';
}
This will automatically add a new menu entry to the SilverStripe Admin UI entitled My Product Admin
and logged in
users will be able to upload and manage Product
and Category
instances through http://yoursite.com/admin/products.
Permissions
Each new ModelAdmin
subclass creates its' own permission code, for the example above this would be
CMS_ACCESS_MyAdmin
. Users with access to the Admin UI will need to have this permission assigned through
admin/security/
or have the ADMIN
permission code in order to gain access to the controller.
The DataObject API has more granular permission control, which is enforced in ModelAdmin by default.
Available checks are canEdit()
, canCreate()
, canView()
and canDelete()
. Models check for administrator
permissions by default. For most cases, less restrictive checks make sense, e.g. checking for general CMS access rights.
mysite/code/Category.php
use SilverStripe\Security\Permission;
use SilverStripe\ORM\DataObject;
class Category extends DataObject
{
// ...
public function canView($member = null)
{
return Permission::check('CMS_ACCESS_MyAdmin', 'any', $member);
}
public function canEdit($member = null)
{
return Permission::check('CMS_ACCESS_MyAdmin', 'any', $member);
}
public function canDelete($member = null)
{
return Permission::check('CMS_ACCESS_MyAdmin', 'any', $member);
}
public function canCreate($member = null)
{
return Permission::check('CMS_ACCESS_MyAdmin', 'any', $member);
}
Searching Records
ModelAdmin uses the SearchContext class to provide a search form, as well as get the
searched results. Every DataObject can have its own context, based on the fields which should be searchable. The
class makes a guess at how those fields should be searched, e.g. showing a checkbox for any boolean fields in your
$db
definition.
To remove, add or modify searchable fields, define a new DataObject::$searchable_fields static on your model class (see SearchContext docs for details).
mysite/code/Product.php
use SilverStripe\ORM\DataObject;
class Product extends DataObject
{
private static $searchable_fields = [
'Name',
'ProductCode'
];
}
Displaying Results
The results are shown in a tabular listing, powered by the GridField, more specifically the GridFieldDataColumns component. This component looks for a DataObject::$summary_fields static on your model class, where you can add or remove columns. To change the title, use DataObject::$field_labels.
mysite/code/Product.php
use SilverStripe\ORM\DataObject;
class Product extends DataObject
{
private static $field_labels = [
'Price' => 'Cost' // renames the column to "Cost"
];
private static $summary_fields = [
'Name',
'Price'
];
}
The results list are retrieved from SearchContext::getResults(), based on the parameters passed through the search form. If no search parameters are given, the results will show every record. Results are a DataList instance, so can be customized by additional SQL filters, joins.
For example, we might want to exclude all products without prices in our sample MyAdmin
implementation.
mysite/code/MyAdmin.php
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
public function getList()
{
$list = parent::getList();
// Always limit by model class, in case you're managing multiple
if($this->modelClass == 'Product') {
$list = $list->exclude('Price', '0');
}
return $list;
}
}
You can also customize the search behavior directly on your ModelAdmin
instance. For example, we might want to have a
checkbox which limits search results to expensive products (over $100).
mysite/code/MyAdmin.php
use SilverStripe\Forms\CheckboxField;
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
public function getSearchContext()
{
$context = parent::getSearchContext();
if($this->modelClass == 'Product') {
$context->getFields()->push(new CheckboxField('q[ExpensiveOnly]', 'Only expensive stuff'));
}
return $context;
}
public function getList()
{
$list = parent::getList();
$params = $this->getRequest()->requestVar('q'); // use this to access search parameters
if($this->modelClass == 'Product' && isset($params['ExpensiveOnly']) && $params['ExpensiveOnly']) {
$list = $list->exclude('Price:LessThan', '100');
}
return $list;
}
}
To alter how the results are displayed (via GridField), you can also overload the getEditForm()
method. For
example, to add a new component.
mysite/code/MyAdmin.php
use SilverStripe\Forms\GridField\GridFieldFilterHeader;
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
private static $managed_models = [
'Product',
'Category'
];
// ...
public function getEditForm($id = null, $fields = null)
{
$form = parent::getEditForm($id, $fields);
// $gridFieldName is generated from the ModelClass, eg if the Class 'Product'
// is managed by this ModelAdmin, the GridField for it will also be named 'Product'
$gridFieldName = $this->sanitiseClassName($this->modelClass);
$gridField = $form->Fields()->fieldByName($gridFieldName);
// modify the list view.
$gridField->getConfig()->addComponent(new GridFieldFilterHeader());
return $form;
}
}
The above example will add the component to all GridField
s (of all managed models). Alternatively we can also add it
to only one specific GridField
:
mysite/code/MyAdmin.php
use SilverStripe\Forms\GridField\GridFieldFilterHeader;
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
private static $managed_models = [
'Product',
'Category'
];
public function getEditForm($id = null, $fields = null)
{
$form = parent::getEditForm($id, $fields);
$gridFieldName = 'Product';
$gridField = $form->Fields()->fieldByName($gridFieldName);
if ($gridField) {
$gridField->getConfig()->addComponent(new GridFieldFilterHeader());
}
return $form;
}
}
Data Import
The ModelAdmin
class provides import of CSV files through the CsvBulkLoader API. which has support for column
mapping, updating existing records, and identifying relationships - so its a powerful tool to get your data into a
SilverStripe database.
By default, each model management interface allows uploading a CSV file with all columns auto detected. To override with a more specific importer implementation, use the ModelAdmin::$model_importers static.
Data Export
Export is available as a CSV format through a button at the end of a results list. You can also export search results. This is handled through the GridFieldExportButton component.
To customize the exported columns, create a new method called getExportFields
in your ModelAdmin
:
use SilverStripe\Admin\ModelAdmin;
class MyAdmin extends ModelAdmin
{
// ...
public function getExportFields()
{
return [
'Name' => 'Name',
'ProductCode' => 'Product Code',
'Category.Title' => 'Category'
];
}
}