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Lagan is a different take on a CMS, with a focus on flexibility. Built with Slim, Redbean and Twig.

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Lagan

Any content, with a backend

Lagan lets you create flexible content objects with a simple class,
and manage them with a web interface that is 'automagically' created.

Why Lagan?

Lagan is a different take on a CMS, with a focus on flexibility.

  • Content models are easily created and modified
  • Content models consist of a simple combination of arrays
  • Content models can be any combination of properties
  • Configuration and editing are separated
  • All configuration is done by code, so developers are in control there
  • Content can be edited with a web interface, so editors can do their thing
  • Lagan is built on proven open-source PHP libraries
  • It is easy to extend with new content property types
  • Create Twig front-end templates to display your content the way you want

Lagan is built with my favourite PHP libraries:

Requirements

Install Lagan

Install Lagan and its dependencies with Composer with this command: $ php composer.phar create-project lagan/lagan [project-name]
(Replace [project-name] with the desired directory name for your new project)

The Composer script creates the cache directory, config.php file and RedBean rb.php file for you.

Update config.php with:

  • your database settings
  • your server paths
  • the admin user(s) and their password(s)

Lagan uses Slim HTTP Basic Authentication middleware to authenticate users for the admin interface. Make sure to change the password in config.php, and use HTTPS to login securely.

Use Lagan

Content models

After installing Lagan, you can begin adding your content models. This is where the "magic" of Lagan happens. Each type of content has it's own model. I added 3 example models, Crew.php, Feature.php and Hoverkraft.php. If you open them you will see they have a type, a description and an aray with different content properties.

You can add your own content models by just adding class files like this to the models/lagan directory. Lagan will automatically create and update database tables for them. Nice!
> More about the content model structure

Web interface

You can enter the Lagan web interface by going to the /admin directory on the webserver where you installed Lagan. Here you can log in with the username and password you added in the config.php file. Now you can add or edit content objects based on the Lagan models.

Routes

In the directory routes you can add your public routes to the public.php file. You can add your own route files as well. The routes are automatically included in your Lagan app.

In the routes you can use the Lagan model CRUD methods to read and manipulate your data.
> More about the content model methods

Templates

Lagan uses Twig as its template engine. You can add your templates to the templates/public directory and add them to your routes to use them in your app.

Structure of a Lagan model

All Lagan content models extend the Lagan main model. They contain a type, a description and an aray with different content properties.
The Lagan main model is part of the Lagan Core repository.

A simple Lagan model looks like this:

namespace Lagan\Model;

class Book extends \Lagan\Lagan {

  function __construct() {
    $this->type = 'book';
    
    $this->description = 'These objects contain information about a book.';

    $this->properties = [
      [
        'name' => 'title',
        'description' => 'The book title',
        'type' => '\Lagan\Property\Str',
        'input' => 'text'
      ]
    ];
  }

}

Type

$this->type is the type of the model. It is the same as the modelname in lowercase, and defines the name of the RedBean beans and the name of the table in the database.

Description

$this->description is the description of the model. It is displayed in the admin interface. It explains the function of the content model to the user.

Properties

$this->properties are the properties of the model. They are an array defining the different content data-fields of the model. Each content model should always have a string type property named title.

Each property is an array with the following keys:

  • name: Required. The name of the property. Also the name of the corresponding RedBean property. Contains only alphanumeric characters, should not contain spaces.
  • description: Required. The form-field label of the property in the admin interface.
  • input: Required. The template to use in the admin interface. Templates are located in the public/property-templates directory.
  • type: Required. The type of data of the property. This defines which property type controller to use. More information under "Property types".
  • required: Optional. Set to true if the property is required.
  • autovalue: Optional. Set to true if the property needs to set it's own value. This forces a value for a property, also if it is not submitted on creation. Like a slug or a UID for example.
  • searchable: Optional. Set to true if the property has to be searchable with the Search controller.
  • unique: Optional. Set to true if the value of this property has to be unique for this model.

There can be other optional keys for specific input types, for example the directory key for the image_select property input type.

A properties array with more keys might look like this:

$this->properties = [
  [
    'name' => 'title',
    'description' => 'The book title',
    'required' => true,
    'searchable' => true,
    'type' => '\Lagan\Property\Str',
    'input' => 'text',
    'validate' => 'minlength(3)'
  ]
];

Methods of a Lagan model

All Lagan content models extend the Lagan main model. Doing so they inherit it's methods.
Lagan offers the CRUD methods: Create, Read, Update and Delete.

Lagan uses RedBean to manipulate data in the database. Redbean returns data from the database as objects called beans.

Create

create($data) creates a RedBean bean in the database, based on the corresponding Lagan content model, and returns it. The $data variable is an array with at least the required properties. The array can be your HTML form POST data.

$book = new \Lagan\Model\Book;
$bean = $book->create($data);

Read

read($id) reads a bean based on the corresponding Lagan model from the database and returns it. The $id variable is the id of the Lagan model bean.

Read a Book model bean with id 1:

$bean = $book->read(1);

Read all Book model beans:

$beans = $book->read();

Update

update($data, $id) updates a bean based on the corresponding Lagan model from the database and returns it. The $data variable is an array with at least the required properties. The array can be your HTML form POST data. The $id variable is the id of the Lagan model bean.

Update the Book model bean with id 1:

$bean = $book->update($data, 1);

Delete

delete($id) deletes a bean based on the corresponding Lagan model from the database. The $id variable is the id of the Lagan model bean.

Delete the Book model bean with id 1:

$bean = $book->delete(1);

Searching entries of a Lagan model

Each Lagan content model can be searched using the Search controller. The search controller is part of the Lagan Core repository.
Start by setting up the search controller in a route like this: $search = new \Lagan\Search('book');
The search model now can use the GET request parameters to perform a search: $search->find( $request->getParams() )
It can only search properties that are set to be searchable.

$search = new \Lagan\Search('book');
$result = $search->find( $request->getParams() );

Search has the following options:

  • From: *min
  • To: *max
  • Contains: *has
  • Equal to: *is
  • Sort: sort by property. asc sorts ascending and desc sorts descending
  • Limit: limit number of results
  • Offset: where to start returning results

Offset only works if limit is defined too.

Some query structure examples:
path/to/search?*has=[search string]: Searches all searchable properties of a model
path/to/search?[property]*has=[search string]: Searches single [property] of a model
path/to/search?[property]*min=[number]: Searches all model with a minimum [number] value of [property]
path/to/search?[property]*has=[search string]&sort=[property]*asc: Searches single [property] of a model and sorts the result ascending

That's it! Now you know everything you need to know to start using Lagan.
Want to extend Lagan? Read on!

Extend Lagan

You can extend Lagan by adding your own property types to it. All Lagan property controllers are separate dependencies. You can include them to your Lagan app with Composer. To edit properties in the Lagan web interface you need a property template. You can add new property templates to Lagan with Composer too. Check out the composer.json file to see which properties and templates are included.

Property type controllers

Each property type controller is a dependency, added with Composer. This way new property types can be developed seperate from the Lagan project code. These are the property types now installed by Composer when installing Lagan:

Property type controller methods

A property type controller can contain a set, read, delete and options method. All methods are optional.

  • The set method is executed each time a property with this type is set.
  • The read method is executed each time a property with this type is read.
    Note: For performance reasons, the read method is only executed for reading a single bean. Related beans are not returned.
  • The delete method is executed each time a an entry with a property with this type is deleted.
  • The options method returns all possible values for this property.

Property input templates

To edit a property in the backend web interface it needs a template. Each property template is also a dependency, added with Composer. They are put in the public/property-templates directory, so outside the vendor directory. This is done using a Composer plugin. By placing them outside the Vendor directory they can contain stuff like Javascript or images.

Currently these templates are available:

  • checkbox
    Template for a checkbox input, can be used with the boolean property.

  • fileselect
    Template to edit Lagan fileselect properties.

  • instaembed
    Template to edit Lagan instaembed property.

  • manytoone
    Template to edit Lagan many-to-one properties.

  • tomany
    Template to edit Lagan one-to-many and many-to-many properties.

  • objectlink
    Template to edit Lagan objectlink properties.

  • readonly
    Template for properties that can not be edited by the content editor.

  • text
    Template for Lagan properties that require text input.

  • textarea
    Textarea template for Lagan properties that require multiple lines of text input.

  • trumbowyg
    Template that turns a textarea into a WYSIWYG editor field with the Trumbowyg WYSIWYG editor.

  • upload
    Template for Lagan upload properties.

The properties of the property and the content bean are available in the template. To get the property name for example, use this Twig syntax: {{ property.name }}. To get the content of the specific property, use {{ bean[property.name] }}.

JSON API

The Lagan JSON API route repository contains a route file to add a JSON API to your Lagan project. To install, add the api.php file to the routes directory. To protect the /api/write route, add it to the Slim HTTP Basic Authentication middleware setup in the index.php file: 'path' => ['/admin', '/api/write'].

I also created a Todo Backend implementation with Lagan (Run the specs, view the code).

Different admin template

If you're tired of the default admin temlate, try this one: https://github.com/Skayo/Lagan-Bulma-Theme

Lagan project structure

An overview of the directories of a Lagan app and their contents.

cache (directory)

The Composer script creates this directory in the project root to hold the Twig template engine cache files. If updates in your templates are not showing; remember to clear the cache directory.

models/lagan (directory)

Contains all the different Lagan content models. They are in a seperate lagan directory so you can add your own models to the main model directory.

public (directory)

Contains the index.php and .htaccess file. The index.php file includes the setup.php and route files, and includes some other files and settings.

The "public" directory is the directory holding your public web pages on your webserver. It's name can vary on different hosting providers and -environments. Other common names are "html", "private-html", "www" or "web". Put the files of the "public" directory in this public directory on your webserver.

public/property-templates (directory)

Created by Composer. Here Composer will add all the templates needed to edit a property in the backend web interface.

routes (directory)

Contains the different route files. Each route file is automatically loaded, and contains the routes for your project. Routes are built with Slim. Data is retrieved using Lagan models, or by using RedBean directly. You can add your own route files here, or add them to an existing route file.
This directory also contains functions.php which contains some route helper functions used in multiple route files.

twigextensions (directory)

Contains the Twig extensions. The CsrfExtewnsion is included with Lagan.

templates (directory)

This directory contains the template files (except the property templates). The subdirectory admin contains all the template files for the admin environment.
Bonus feature: the subdirectory static contains the template files for static pages and a 404 page. Static pages display if the route name matches their name, and no other route for this name exists. Convenient!

vendor (directory)

Created by Composer when installing the project dependencies.

config.php (file)

The Composer script renames the config_example.php file to config.php. The config.php file is needed for a Lagan project to work. Remember to add the necessary details.

setup.php (file)

This is the setup file for your Lagan app and the unit tests. The setup.php file contains the configuration for RedBean, the Composer autoloader and the autoloader for Lagan models.

Where does the name Lagan come from, and how do you pronounce it?

River Lagan is a river that runs through Belfast. I lived in Belfast when I created Lagan.
Lagan is pronounced /'laeg=n/ with stress on first syllable, /ae/ as in "cat" and /=/ as in the schwah or neutral "e" sound in English. (Eg "letter" = /'let=(r)/.)

To do

There is a Lagan wishlist on Trello.

Lagan is a project of Lútsen Stellingwerff.