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ThemesHowTo
Note: You should read the Module Reference and the Template Reference before.
We assume you want to call your new theme mytheme
.
Make sure you replace this by your module name everytime this is mentionend in this Howto.
At first create a new theme directory themes/luci-theme-mytheme
.
Create a Makefile
inside your theme directory with the following content:
include $(TOPDIR)/rules.mk
LUCI_TITLE:=Title of mytheme
include ../../luci.mk
# call BuildPackage - OpenWrt buildroot signature
Create the following directory structure inside your theme directory.
- ipkg
- htdocs
- luci-static
mytheme
- luci-static
- luasrc
- view
- themes
mytheme
- root
- etc
- uci-defaults
Create two LuCI HTML-Templates named header.htm
and footer.htm
under luasrc/view/themes/mytheme
.
The header.htm
will be included at the beginning of each rendered page and the footer.htm
at the end.
So your header.htm
will probably contain a DOCTYPE description, headers,
the menu and layout of the page and the footer.htm
will close all remaining open tags and may add a footer bar.
But hey that's your choice you are the designer ;-).
Just make sure your header.htm
begins with the following lines:
<%
require("luci.http").prepare_content("text/html")
-%>
This makes sure your content will be sent to the client with the right content type.
Of course you can adapt text/html
to your needs.
Put any stylesheets, Javascripts, images, ... into htdocs/luci-static/mytheme
.
You should refer to this directory in your header and footer templates as: <%=media%>
.
That means for a stylesheet htdocs/luci-static/mytheme/cascade.css
you would write:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="<%=media%>/cascade.css" />
If you are done with your work there are two last steps to do.
To make your theme OpenWrt-capable and selectable on the settings page you should now create a file root/etc/uci-defaults/luci-theme-mytheme
with the following contents:
#!/bin/sh
uci batch <<-EOF
set luci.themes.MyTheme=/luci-static/mytheme
commit luci
EOF
exit 0
and another file ipkg/postinst
with the following content:
#!/bin/sh
[ -n "${IPKG_INSTROOT}" ] || {
( . /etc/uci-defaults/luci-theme-mytheme ) && rm -f /etc/uci-defaults/luci-theme-mytheme
}
This is some OpenWrt magic to correctly register the template with LuCI when it gets installed.
That's all. Now send your theme to the LuCI developers to get it into the development repository - if you like.