mxc-commons/mxc-layoutscheme

Zend Framework 2 Module that allows to define layout schemes and apply custom layouts to routes, modules, controllers and actions.

v0.5.0 2013-11-13 05:00 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-11-29 03:42:24 UTC


README

Version 0.5.0 created by Frank Hein and the mxc-commons team.

MxcLayoutScheme is part of the maxence Open Source Initiative by maxence business consulting gmbh, Germany.

Introduction

Did you ever want to apply a different layout phtml based on the route matched or for a particular module, controller or action? This is what MxcLayoutScheme can do for you.

MxcLayoutScheme allows to dynamically exchange the layout template used by the renderer. You define layout schemes which are a collection of rules to select layouts. Within each scheme you can assign a distinct layout to a particular route matched. Further you can define a distinct layout for each module, controller and action.

MxcLayoutScheme supports the configuration child ViewModels together with associated view templates to get rendered to captures you define.

Further, MxcLayoutScheme intercepts dispatch errors. You can apply layouts for particular error codes and http status codes the same way you do for routes and controllers.

MxcLayoutScheme provides an event interface to allow you to select the layout scheme applied at bootstrap time.

Requirements

Features / Goals

Main design goal of MxcLayoutScheme is to encapsulate the layout specific settings within the applied layout view template as far as possible. We want to achieve that within the controller action as less as possible remains to be done regarding the layout. So controller programmers can focus on the page 'content' part of the page regardless of the target layout (which can be very different for different target platforms (JQuery, JQuery Mobile, Dojo, ... whatever).

1. Provide the capability to assign the layout dynamically

  • based on the current route matched
  • for each module
  • for each controller
  • for each action implemented by a controller

2. Provide hierarchical matching of modules, controllers, actions and routes

  • route match supersedes action match
  • action match supersedes controller match
  • controller match supersedes module match
  • module match supersedes global settings

3. Encapsulate layout selection rules into layout schemes

4. Support to add child ViewModels to the layout by configuration

5. Allow selection of active layout scheme based on custom criteria

  • You may select the layout scheme selection in response to an event provided.

6. Allow configuration of a global default layout for each layout scheme

7. Provide hooks for pre- and postprocessing

8. Provide a controller plugin to control scheme selection and setup of layout variables

9. Provide support for dispatch errors

10. Provide support for content view template

In the current version you can either assign the layout variables within the controller action via layoutScheme controller plugin. Alternatively you may supply an event handler for pre- and postprocessing. We provide an example here.

Installation

Main Setup

By cloning project

  1. Clone this project into your ./vendor/ directory.

With composer

  1. Add this project in your composer.json:

     json
    
     	"require": {
     		"mxc-commons/mxc-generics": "dev-master,
     		"mxc-commons/mxc-layoutscheme": "dev-master"
     	}
    
  2. Now tell composer to download MxcLayoutScheme by running the command:

     bash
    
     $ php composer.phar update
    

Post installation

  1. Enabling it in your application.config.phpfile.

     php
    
         <?php
         return array(
             'modules' => array(
                 // ...
     			'MxcGenerics',
                 'MxcLayoutScheme',
             ),
             // ...
         );
    
  2. Copy options file 'mxclayoutscheme.global.php.dist' to your configuration\autoload directory. Rename it to 'mxclayoutscheme.global.php'.

Options

The MxcLayoutScheme module has options to setup and select layout schemes. After installing MxcLayoutScheme, copy ./vendor/maxence/MxcLayoutScheme/config/mxclayoutscheme.global.php.dist to ./config/autoload/mxclayoutscheme.global.php and change the values as desired.

`Options are structured in two sections:

  • defaults - Settings to control service operation

  • options - Settings for different layout schemes

      'mxclayoutscheme' => array(
      	'defaults' => array(
      		'active_scheme' => 'myScheme',   //-- name of your layout scheme definition 
      		'enable_mca_layouts' => true,    //-- apply layouts based on
      								    	 //-- module, controller, action 
      		'enable_route_layouts' => true   //-- apply layouts based on routes`
      		'enable_error_layouts' => true;  //-- apply layouts for dispatch errors
      		'enable_status_layouts' => true; //-- apply layouts based on response status codes
      	),
      	'options' => array(
      		<scheme-definition>,
      		...
      	),
      );
    
  • active_scheme - Name of the scheme which is active by default. Default is zf2-standard.

  • enable_mca_layouts - Rules for module, controller, action get applied for layout selection. Default: true

  • enable_route_layouts - Rules for module, controller, action get applied for layout selection. Default: true

  • enable_status_layouts - Rules based on status code get applied for layout selection on dispatch errors. Default: true

  • enable_error_layouts - Rules based on event error code get applied for layout selection on dispatch errors. Default: true

Each <scheme-definition> is structured into four sections:

	'myScheme' => array(
		'mca_layouts' => array(
			'options' => array(
				<mca-rule-definition>,
				...
			),
			'defaults => array(
				<default-settings>
			),
		),
		'route_layouts' => array(
			'options' => array(
				<route-rule-definition>,
				...
			),
			'defaults => array(
				<default-settings>
			),
		),
		'error_layouts' => array(
			'options' => array(
				<error-rule-definition>,
				...
			),
			'defaults => array(
				<default-settings>
			),
		),
		'status_layouts' => array(
			'options' => array(
				<status-rule-definition>,
				...
			),
			'defaults => array(
				<default-settings>
			),
		),
	);

Each of these sections is optional (regardless of the enable_xxxLayouts settings).

Rule Definition Keys

All <xxx-rule-definition> have identical structure. The array key specifies the rule, the values specify the layout templates to apply.

<mca_layouts>

Keys for <mca_layouts> are like <moduleName>[\<controllerName>[\<actionName>]], where <moduleName> is the name of the module, <controllerName> is the name of the controller as it is registered to the ControllerLoader, <actionName> is the name of the the controller action.

	Examples

		Generic

			'MyModule'							//--- applies to all controllers in module
			'MyModule\MyController'				//--- applies to all actions of a controller
			'MyModule\MyController\MyAction'	//--- applies to a particular controller action

		ZfcUser controller (registered as zfcuser)

			'ZfcUser'							//--- applies to all controllers of ZfcUser (there is only one ;)
			'ZfcUser\zfcuser'					//--- applies to the controller registered with 'zfcuser'
												//--- (ZfcUser\Controller\UserController) 
			'ZfcUser\zfcuser\login'				//--- login action

		MxcUserManagement controller (registered as 'MxcUserManagement\Controller\UserManagement')

			'MxcUserManagement'					//--- applies to all controllers of module MxcUserManagement

			'MxcUserManagement\MxcUserManagement\Controller\UserManagement'	 
												//--- applies to controller registered with 'MxcUserManagement\Controller\UserManagement' 
												//--- *** In this rule the first occurance of'MxcUserManagement' identifies the module.
												//--- *** The second occurance is part of the controller registration string.

			'MxcUserManagement\MxcUserManagement\Controller\UserManagement\index'	//--- index action 

Action rules are evaluated before controller rules. Controller rules are evaluated before Module rules. So if you apply an action rule and a module rule for the same module, the module rule applies for all controllers and actions but the one action which has an own rule.

<route_layouts>

Keys for <route_layouts> are like <route>, where <route> is a registered route.

<status_layouts>

Keys for <status_layouts> are like <status>, where <status> is status code (type string).

	Example

		'403'			//--- applies to status code 403

<error_layouts>

Keys for <error_layouts> are like <error>, where <error> is the error code returned by the MvcEvent (type string).

Rule Definition Values

Each rule definition is a list of values like <capture> => <template>. The special capture 'layout' defines the layout applied to the root ViewModel. All other captures define child ViewModels which get applied to the root ViewModel with the capture <capture> using the template <template>. Template names must be resolvable by either TemplatePathStack or TemplateMap resolvers.

	Example mca rule:

		'MyModule\MyController\index' => array(
			'layout' 	=> 'layout/layout',
			'panelLeft' => 'layout/panel-left',
			'header' 	=> 'layout/header',
			'footer' 	=> 'layout/footer',
		),

Rule Construction

While constructing the layout set to apply the service initializes the set with the values from the 'defaults' section. Then, if a rule matches, the particular set associated with the rule overrides/extends the default set.

	Example

		route_layouts => array(
			'options' => array(
				'home' => array(
					'panelLeft' => 'layout/panel-left'
				),
			),
			'defaults' => array(
				'layout' => 'layout/layout',
				'header' => 'layout/header',
				'footer' => 'layout/footer',
			),
		),

Accessing the route home causes a match of the according rule. Defaults get applied and afterwards the settings from the matched rule. So the resulting template set is:

	Example result

		array(
			'panelLeft' => 'layout/panel-left'
			'layout' => 'layout/layout',
			'header' => 'layout/header',
			'footer' => 'layout/footer',
		),

How MxcLayoutScheme works

  1. On Bootstrap MxcLayoutScheme hooks into the route event of the application's EventManager with low priority (-2000).
  2. On Bootstrap MxcLayoutScheme instantiates the controller plugin 'layoutScheme' to inject a reference to the application's ServiceManager instance.
  3. On route MxcLayoutScheme evaluates the current route matched, the module name, the controller name and the action name.
  4. Then MxcLayoutScheme triggers an MxcLayoutSchemeService::HOOK_PRE_SELECT_SCHEME event. If you registered an event handler for that event in the bootstrap somewhere you can set the active scheme with $e->getTarget()->setActiveScheme($schemeName) with a $schemeNameof your choice. Alternatively, you can set the active scheme within the controller action using the controller plugin: $this->layoutScheme()->setActiveScheme($schemeName).
  5. Then, MxcLayoutScheme loads the currently active scheme.
  6. MxcLayoutScheme checks the route_layouts for a key matching the matched route name. If the key exists the layout template registered to that match gets applied. If the rule defines child view models they get merged with the (optionally) defined default child view models and get applied to the layout. If match continue at 11.
  7. MxcLayoutScheme then checks the mca_layouts for a key matching Module\Conroller\Action. If the key exists the layout template registered to that match gets applied. If the rule defines child view models they get merged with the (optionally) defined default child view models and get applied to the layout. If match continue at 11.
  8. Then, MxcLayoutScheme checks the mca_layouts for a key matching Module\Conroller. If the key exists the layout template registered to that match gets applied. If the rule defines child view models they get merged with the (optionally) defined default child view models and get applied to the layout. If match continue at 11.
  9. Then, MxcLayoutScheme checks the mca_layouts for a key matching the Module. If the key exists the layout template registered to that match gets applied. If the rule defines child view models they get merged with the (optionally) defined default child view models and get applied to the layout. If match continue at 11.
  10. Then, MxcLayoutScheme checks the default for a key global. If the key exists the layout template registered to that match gets applied. If the rule defines child view models they get merged with the (optionally) defined default child view models and get applied to the layout.
  11. Finally MxcLayoutScheme triggers an MxcLayoutSchemeService::HOOK_POST_LAYOUT_SELECT event. You may register an event handler to do custom post processing. Example: Assign variables to the selected layout ViewModel and it's child ViewModels using the controller plugin. See an example below

When applying child layouts MxcLayoutScheme maintains references to the child ViewModels for use by the 'layoutScheme' controller plugin. The controller plugin enables you to apply variables to the child view models from within the controller action.

How MxcLayoutScheme handles dispatch errors

On Bootstrap MxcLayoutScheme hooks into the dispatch.error event with priority -1000.

When a dispatch error occurs, MxcLayoutScheme first checks for a rule applying to the error code from the $event->getError(). If no rule applies MxcLayoutScheme then checks for a rule applying to the status code from $event->getResponse()->getStatusCode().

How MxcLayoutScheme handles content templates

Content templates may be specified via rules like any other template. <capture> => <template>.

While the child layouts to the root layout get attached onRoute, the content template gets attached on the dispatch event. 'MxcLayoutScheme' checks for a child template registered to the content capture. If found it replaces it's view template. If no content viewmodel is present, MxcLayoutScheme creates one and with the configured template attached to the content capture.

#####Note: If you need to set a content view template within your controller action and want it to override a given LayoutScheme definition, you need to inform layoutScheme to skip it's content view template definition (if present). Using the controller plugin you do that by $this->layoutScheme()->useControllerContentTemplate().

Example Event Handler to choose the active scheme

use MxcLayoutScheme\Service\LayoutSchemeService;

...

public function onBootstrap(MvcEvent $e)
{
	$app = $e->getApplication();
	$em = $app->getEventManager();
	$sem = $em->getSharedManager();
	$sem->attach('MxcLayoutScheme\Service\LayoutSchemeService',
		LayoutSchemeService::HOOK_PRE_SELECT_SCHEME, 
		function($e) {
			switch ($weather) {
				case 'sunny':
					$schemeName = 'sun';
					break;
				case 'rainy':
					$schemeName = 'umbrella';
					break;
				default:
					$schemeName = 'default';
					break;
			}
			$e->getTarget()->setActiveScheme($schemeName);
		}, 100);
}

Example Event Handler to do some postprocessing after layout selection has finished

use MxcLayoutScheme\Service\LayoutSchemeService;

...

public function onBootstrap(MvcEvent $e)
{
	$app = $e->getApplication();
	$em = $app->getEventManager();

    $sem = $em->getSharedManager();
    $sem->attach('MxcLayoutScheme\Service\LayoutSchemeService',
    		LayoutSchemeService::HOOK_POST_SELECT_LAYOUT,
    		function($e) {
    			$variables = array(
    					'berliner' => 'Ich',
    					'ein' => 'bin',
    					'bin' => 'ein',
    					'ich' => 'Berliner! :)'
    			);
    
    			// apply this set of variables to the layout view model and all registered
    			// registered child view models
    			$e->getTarget()->setVariables($variables);
    
    		}, 100);

}

Special Child Template Names

A child view model is defined by an array entry <capture> => <templateName>. templateName is either the name of an explicitly registered template in the ViewManager's template_map or a template name which can automatically be resolved via the ViewManager's template_path_stack.

Additionally, there are two reserved values which you can use instead: '<default>' and '<none>' (including < and >)

####templateName '<default>':

If you specify <default> as the templateName, MxcLayoutScheme computes a template name which can be resolved by the TemplatePathStack resolver. Based on the actual <module>, <controller> and <action> the rule <capture> => <default> the Zend\Filter\Word\CamelCaseToDash gets applied to the string <module>\<controller>\<action>-<capture> and the result gets assigned lowercase to the templateName.

######Example 1:

May the module be Reporting, the controller class WbsController, the action be listAction. May the the child ViewModel definition be 'header' => '<default>'.

The templateName computes to 'reporting\wbs\list-header'. If you provide a template named list-header.phtml within the folder view\reporting\wbs\ of your module directory it gets found by the TemplatePathStack resolver when rendering the header capture of the layout (by <?php echo $this->header ?> in the layout template)

######Example 2:

May the module be Reporting, the controller class WbsController, the action be prjListAction. May the the child ViewModel definition be 'panelLeft' => '<default>'.

The templateName computes to 'reporting\wbs\prj-list-panel-left'.

####templateName '<none>' :

If you specify '<none>' as the templateName the computation of the particular capture gets omitted. There is no need to specify a '<none>' rule within the 'defaults' section. That would be the same as not specifying that particular capture at all.

'<none>' rules are used to override 'defaults' for a particular route rule or mca rule.

######Example:

Given a layout template named 'layout\master' which renders to captures panelLeft and content. panelLeft provides a standard left navigation. Could look like this:

master.phtml:

	<html>
		<header>
			...
		</header>
		<body>
			<?php if ($this->panelLeft) : ?>
				<div data-role="panel-left">
					<?php echo $this->panelLeft ?>
				</div>
			<?php endif; ?>
			<div data-role="content">
				<?php echo $this->content ?>
			</div>
		</body>
</html>

In some cases you may not want to render a left navigation. The login page is a good example if anonymous users are not allowed to navigate through the application at all.

If we define have a layout scheme 'master' defined like this a default child ViewModel gets applied to capture 'panelLeft' and template 'layout\leftNavigation'. This child ViewModel gets applied by default every time MxcLayoutScheme assigns the layout 'layout\master'. The mca rule 'ZfcUser\User\login' overrides the default 'panelLeft' setting by defining 'panelLeft' => '<none>'. The resulting markup does not contain not contain the <div data-role="panel-left"> ... </div> section at all.

mxclayout_scheme.global.php:

	return array(
		'options' => array(
			'master' => array(
				'mca_layouts' => array(
					'options' => array(
						'ZfcUser\zfcuser\login' => array(
							'layout' => 'layout\master',
							'panelLeft' => '<none>',
						),
					),
					'defaults' => array(
						'panelLeft' => 'layout\leftNavigation',
					),
				),
			),
		),
		'defaults': 
			'active_scheme' => 'master',
			'enable_mca_layouts => true,
			'enable_route_layouts => true,
			'enable_error_layouts => true,
			'enable_status_layouts => true,
	);

The Controller Plugin

MxcLayoutScheme registers a controller plugin to allow access to the child view models of the layout applied. From within a controller action you can access the controller plugin with $this->layoutScheme.

layoutScheme provides the following interfaces:

getActiveScheme(): get the currently active layout scheme.

getChildViewModel($capture): returns the child view model registered for the $capture capture. Null if capture is not registered.

getChildViewModels(): returns the array of child view models like array ( 'capture' => ViewModel )

setVariables($variables, $override = false): see ViewModels setVariables for parameter specification. The layoutScheme setVariables function applies the same variables provided through $variables to the controller's layout and to all registered child ViewModels.

useControllerContentTemplate($flag = true): MxcLayoutScheme supports the provision of content templates via it's configuration (capture = 'content'). If you want to override the MxcLayoutScheme configuration with your own template set in the controller's action, you should inform MxcLayoutScheme not to override your setting by calling useControllerContentTemplate().

#####Note

If you want or need to assign different sets of variables to the main layout and the child layouts you can do this by explicit access and assignment.

Example:

$this->layout()->setVariables($varMain); // assign variables to the layout's ViewModel
$this->layoutScheme()->getChildViewModel('panelLeft')->setVariables($varPanelLeft); // assign variables to leftPanel child

Notes

If you do not define a scheme or if the active scheme does not register a master layout the ViewManager configuration gets applied. If you define a master layout (capture layout) within your schemes it overrides the ViewManager configuration.

Common use cases for MxcLayoutScheme are

  1. Apply different layouts for mobile devices based on mobile detection and distinct mobile route definitions
  2. Apply different layouts for authenticated and anonymous users or based on user roles
  3. Apply different layouts for functional modules (themes)

Credits

MxcLayoutScheme was inspired by EdpModuleLayouts by Evan Coury. EdpModuleLayouts is a lean and mean module which allows to set module specific layouts.

License

MxcLayoutScheme is released under the New BSD License. See license.txt.