mirror of
https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-framework
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8d077203d4
* API Implement support for public/ webroot folder * Bugfixes and refactor based on feedback
106 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
106 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
# Directory Structure
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## Introduction
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The directory-structure in SilverStripe it built on "convention over configuration", so the placement of some files and
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directories is meaningful to its logic.
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## Core Structure
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Directory | Description
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--------- | -----------
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`public/` | Webserver public webroot
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`public/assets/` | 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.
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`public/resources/` | Exposed public files added from modules. Folders within this parent will match that of the source root location.
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`vendor/` | SilverStripe modules and other supporting libraries (the framework is in `vendor/silverstripe/framework`)
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`themes/` | Standard theme installation location
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## Custom Code Structure
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We're using `<mysite>` as an example - arbitrary directory-names are allowed, as long as they don't collide with
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existing modules or the directories lists in "Core Structure".
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| Directory | Description |
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| --------- | ----------- |
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| `<mysite>/` | This directory contains all of your code that defines your website. |
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| `<mysite>/_config` | YAML configuration specific to your application |
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| `<mysite>/src` | PHP code for model and controller (subdirectories are optional) |
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| `<mysite>/tests` | PHP Unit tests |
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| `<mysite>/templates` | HTML [templates](/developer_guides/templates) with *.ss-extension for the `$default` theme |
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| `<mysite>/css ` | CSS files |
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| `<mysite>/images ` | Images used in the HTML templates |
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| `<mysite>/javascript` | Javascript and other script files |
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| `<mysite>/client` | More complex projects can alternatively contain frontend assets in a common `client` folder |
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| `<mysite>/themes/<yourtheme>` | Custom nested themes (note: theme structure is described below) |
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Check our [JavaScript Coding Conventions](javascript_coding_conventions) for more details
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on folder and file naming in SilverStripe core modules.
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## Themes Structure
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| Directory | Description |
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| ------------------ | --------------------------- |
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| `themes/simple/` | Standard "simple" theme |
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| `themes/<yourtheme>/` | Custom theme base directory |
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| `themes/<yourtheme>/templates` | Theme templates |
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| `themes/<yourtheme>/css` | Theme CSS files |
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See [themes](/developer_guides/templates/themes)
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## Module Structure {#module_structure}
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Modules are commonly stored as composer packages in the `vendor/` folder.
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They need to have a `_config.php` file or a `_config/` directory present,
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and should follow the same conventions as posed in "Custom Site Structure".
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Example Forum:
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| Directory | Description |
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| --------- | ----------- |
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| `vendor/silverstripe/blog/`| This directory contains all of your code that defines your website. |
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| `vendor/silverstripe/blog/code` | PHP code for model and controller (subdirectories are optional) |
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| ... | ... |
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Note: Before SilverStripe 4.x, modules were living as top-level folders in the webroot itself.
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Some modules might not have been upgraded to support placement in `vendor/`
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### Module documentation
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Module developers can bundle developer documentation with their code by producing
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plain text files inside a 'docs' folder located in the module folder. These files
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can be written with the Markdown syntax (See [Contributing Documentation](/contributing/documentation))
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and include media such as images or videos.
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Inside the `docs/` folder, developers should organise the markdown files into each
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separate language they wish to write documentation for (usually just `en`). Inside
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each languages' subfolder, developers then have freedom to create whatever structure
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they wish for organising the documentation they wish.
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Example Forum Documentation:
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| Directory | Description |
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| --------- | ----------- |
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| `blog/docs` | |
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| `blog/docs/_manifest_exclude` | Empty file to signify that SilverStripe does not need to load classes from this folder |
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| `blog/docs/en/` | English documentation |
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| `blog/docs/en/index.md` | Documentation homepage. Should provide an introduction and links to remaining docs |
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| `blog/docs/en/Getting_Started.md` | Documentation page. Naming convention is Uppercase and underscores. |
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| `blog/docs/en/_images/` | Folder to store any images or media |
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| `blog/docs/en/Some_Topic/` | You can organise documentation into nested folders. Naming convention is Uppercase and underscores. |
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| `blog/docs/en/04_Some_Topic/00_Getting_Started.md`|Structure is created by use of numbered prefixes. This applies to nested folders and documentations pages, index.md should not have a prefix.|
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## Autoloading
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SilverStripe recursively detects classes in PHP files by building up a manifest used for autoloading,
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as well as respecting Composer's built-in autoloading for libraries. This means
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in most cases, you don't need to worry about include paths or `require()` calls
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in your own code - after adding a new class, simply regenerate the manifest
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by using a `flush=1` query parameter. See the ["Manifests" documentation](/developer_guides/execution_pipeline/manifests) for details.
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## Best Practices
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### Making /assets readonly
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See [Secure coding](/developer_guides/security/secure_coding#filesystem)
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