maxime-rainville / recipe-react
Quickly set up your Silverstripe CMS project for React development
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Language:JavaScript
Type:silverstripe-recipe
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-10-24 16:32:24 UTC
README
The purpose of this module is to allow Silverstripe CMS developers to quickly get started building React components to customise the CMS UI.
Before you get started
This guides assumes you have the following:
- a working Silverstripe CMS project
- the
composer
executable installed in your path - the
yarn
executable installed in your path
Setting up your projects
Step 1 - Add the recipe to your project
composer require maxime-rainville/recipe-react
Installing the recipe will:
- Add a
app/cms-client
folder to your project. This is where you will put your React JS components. - Add a
app/_config/recipe-config.yml
file to your project. This will get your compiled JS/CSS code loaded in the Silverstripe CMS admin.
Step 2 - Re-install silverstripe/admin
from source
To compile app/cms-client
, you need to install silverstripe/admin
from source and download the silverstripe/admin
JS dependencies.
maxime-rainville/recipe-react
comes with a small bash script to simplyfie this process:
- Running
vendor/bin/from-source check
will validate ifsilverstripe/admin
has been installed properly to do CMS JS development. - Running
vendor/bin/from-source reinstall
will attempt to reinstallsilverstripe/admin
to allow you to compileapp/cms-client
.
Alternatively, you can run this sequence of command:
# Start in your project root. This will reinstall admin from source rm -rf vendor/silverstripe/admin composer install --prefer-source # This line will download all silverstripe/admin JS dependencies (cd vendor/silverstripe/admin && yarn install)
Step 3 - Initial build of your CMS client
You should now be able to compile your CMS client:
cd app/cms-client
yarn install
yarn dev
This should create a app/cms-client/dist
directory.
Step 4 - Expose your CMS client
The app/cms-client/dist
folder needs to be accessible to your browser. To do this you need to "expose" it.
Update your project composer.json
file. You need to add an expose
key under extra
and give it an array of paths to expose. Your composer file should look something like this when you are done.
{ "name": "your/project", "require": { "php": "^7.1 || ^8", "silverstripe/recipe-plugin": "^1.2", "silverstripe/recipe-cms": "4.x-dev", "silverstripe-themes/simple": "~3.2.0", "maxime-rainville/recipe-react": "dev-master" }, "extra": { "resources-dir": "_resources", "expose": [ "app/cms-client/dist" ] }, }
You now need to run this command to expose your cms-client:
composer vendor-expose
You should now have a folder public/_resources/app/cms-client/dist
.
Step 5 - Test your set up
You can take these optional steps to validate that everything is working correctly.
- Edit
app/cms-client/src/bundles/bundle.js
and addalert('My set up is done');
at the end. - Run
yarn dev
fromapp/cms-client
to rebuild your library. - Rebuild your Silverstripe CMS project with
vendor/bin/sake dev/build
- Access your test site in your browser. You may need to flush the Silverstripe cache with by adding
?flush=1
to your URL. - Access the CMS administration area.
You should see a JS alert with "My set up is done".
Building and using your first react component for Silverstripe CMS
In this step we will create a simple On/Off form field.
Step 1 - Create the PHP form field class
In your PHP code base, create a OnOffButton.php
file with this content. This will be the object you will be adding to your PHP form.
<?php use MaximeRainville\SilverstripeReact\ReactFormField; use SilverStripe\Forms\FormField; class OnOffButton extends ReactFormField { /** * This should match the value type that our field will manage */ protected $schemaDataType = FormField::SCHEMA_DATA_TYPE_STRING; /** * If your component renders an HTML form field, you can omit this line */ protected $renderInput = true; /** * This will be the name of the React component that will be use to * render the field. */ public function getComponent(): string { return 'OnOffButton'; } /** * You can customise the props that will be pass to your React component * by overriding the `ReactFormField::getProps` method */ public function getProps(): array { return parent::getProps(); } /** * Our field will default to `off` */ public function Value() { return parent::Value() ?: 'off'; } }
Step 2 - Create a React Component
This is the react component will render our form field. Create a app/cms-client/src/components/OnOffButton.js
file with the following content.
/* eslint-disable import/no-extraneous-dependencies */ import React from 'react'; import Button from 'components/Button/Button'; export default function ({ value, extraClass, id, onChange }) { const props = { color: 'info', className: extraClass, outline: value === 'off', // This callback will tell our parent when our form value changes onClick: (event) => { onChange(event, { id, value: value === 'off' ? 'on' : 'off' }); } }; return <Button {...props}>{value}</Button>; }
Step 3 - Register your new component
We need to register our new component our form field can be bootstrapped properly.
Update app/cms-client/src/components/index.js
with this content.
import OnOffButton from './OnOffButton'; export { OnOffButton };
We need to rebuild our CMS client with yarn dev
.
Step 4 - Seeing our new component in action
You can add your new form field to any CMS form with this code snippet.
$fields->addFieldToTab( 'Root.Main', OnOffButton::create('Toggle') );
Simply rebuild your project with vendor/bin/sake dev/build
and access your CMS form to view the result.