- Added link to video guide on YouTube. - Formalised the customCommand docs parts I hastily added before.
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Logical Theme System
BookStack allows logical customization via the theme system which enables you to add, or extend, functionality within the PHP side of the system without needing to alter the core application files.
WARNING: This system is currently in alpha so may incur changes. Once we've gathered some feedback on usage we'll look to removing this warning. This system will be considered semi-stable in the future. The Theme::
system will be kept maintained but specific customizations or deeper app/framework usage using this system will not be supported nor considered in any way stable. Customizations using this system should be checked after updates.
Getting Started
This makes use of the theme system. Create a folder for your theme within your BookStack themes
directory. As an example we'll use my_theme
, so we'd create a themes/my_theme
folder.
You'll need to tell BookStack to use your theme via the APP_THEME
option in your .env
file. For example: APP_THEME=my_theme
.
Within your theme folder create a functions.php
file. BookStack will look for this and run it during app boot-up. Within this file you can use the Theme
facade API, described below, to hook into certain app events.
Theme
Facade API
Below details the public methods of the Theme
facade that are considered stable:
Theme::listen
This method listens to a system event and runs the given action when that event occurs. The arguments passed to the action depend on the event. Event names are exposed as static properties on the \BookStack\Theming\ThemeEvents
class.
It is possible to listen to a single event using multiple actions. When dispatched, BookStack will loop over and run each action for that event. If an action returns a non-null value then BookStack will stop cycling through actions at that point and make use of the non-null return value if possible (Depending on the event).
Arguments
- string $event
- callable $action
Example
Theme::listen(
\BookStack\Theming\ThemeEvents::AUTH_LOGIN,
function($service, $user) {
\Log::info("Login by {$user->name} via {$service}");
}
);
Theme::addSocialDriver
This method allows you to register a custom social authentication driver within the system. This is primarily intended to use with Socialite Providers.
Arguments
- string $driverName
- array $config
- string $socialiteHandler
Example
See "Custom Socialite Service Example" below.
Theme::registerCommand
This method allows you to register a custom command which can then be used via the artisan console.
Arguments
- string $driverName
- array $config
- string $socialiteHandler
Example
See "Custom Command Registration Example" below for a more detailed example.
Theme::registerCommand(new SayHelloCommand());
Available Events
All available events dispatched by BookStack are exposed as static properties on the \BookStack\Theming\ThemeEvents
class, which can be found within the file app/Theming/ThemeEvents.php
relative to your root BookStack folder. Alternatively, the events for the latest release can be seen on GitHub here.
The comments above each constant with the ThemeEvents.php
file describe the dispatch conditions of the event, in addition to the arguments the action will receive. The comments may also describe any ways the return value of the action may be used.
Example functions.php
file
<?php
use BookStack\Facades\Theme;
use BookStack\Theming\ThemeEvents;
// Logs custom message on user login
Theme::listen(ThemeEvents::AUTH_LOGIN, function($method, $user) {
Log::info("Login via {$method} for {$user->name}");
});
// Adds a `/info` public URL endpoint that emits php debug details
Theme::listen(ThemeEvents::APP_BOOT, function($app) {
\Route::get('info', function() {
phpinfo(); // Don't do this on a production instance!
});
});
Custom Command Registration Example
The logical theme system supports adding custom artisan commands to BookStack.
These can be registered in your functions.php
file by calling Theme::registerCommand($command)
, where $command
is an instance of \Symfony\Component\Console\Command\Command
.
Below is an example of registering a command that could then be ran using php artisan bookstack:meow
on the command line.
<?php
use BookStack\Facades\Theme;
use Illuminate\Console\Command;
class MeowCommand extends Command
{
protected $signature = 'bookstack:meow';
protected $description = 'Say meow on the command line';
public function handle()
{
$this->line('Meow there!');
}
}
Theme::registerCommand(new MeowCommand);
Custom Socialite Service Example
The below shows an example of adding a custom reddit socialite service to BookStack.
BookStack exposes a helper function for this via Theme::addSocialDriver
which sets the required config and event listeners in the platform.
The require statements reference composer installed dependencies within the theme folder. They are required manually since they are not auto-loaded like other app files due to being outside the main BookStack dependency list.
require "vendor/socialiteproviders/reddit/Provider.php";
require "vendor/socialiteproviders/reddit/RedditExtendSocialite.php";
Theme::listen(ThemeEvents::APP_BOOT, function($app) {
Theme::addSocialDriver('reddit', [
'client_id' => 'abc123',
'client_secret' => 'def456789',
'name' => 'Reddit',
], '\SocialiteProviders\Reddit\RedditExtendSocialite@handle');
});
In some cases you may need to customize the driver before it performs a redirect. This can be done by providing a callback as a fourth parameter like so:
Theme::addSocialDriver('reddit', [
'client_id' => 'abc123',
'client_secret' => 'def456789',
'name' => 'Reddit',
], '\SocialiteProviders\Reddit\RedditExtendSocialite@handle', function($driver) {
$driver->with(['prompt' => 'select_account']);
$driver->scopes(['open_id']);
});