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Get Someone Else to Do IT! We Build Things! Learn more... Ebook found at http://www.symfony-project.org With the addition we made yesterday on Jobeet, the frontend application is now fully useable by job seekers and job posters. It's time to talk a bit about the backend application. Today, thanks to the admin generator functionality of symfony, we will develop a complete backend interface for Jobeet in just one hour. Backend Creation The very first step is to create the backend application. If your memory serves you well, you should remember how to do it with the generate:app task: $ php symfony generate:app --escaping-strategy=on --csrf-secret=UniqueSecret1 backend
Even if the backend application will only be used by the Jobeet administrators, we have enabled all the built-in security features of symfony. If you want to use special characters in the password, like a dollar sign ($) for instance, you need to properly escape them on the command line: $ php symfony generate:app --csrf-secret=Unique\$ecret backend
The backend application is now available at http://jobeet.localhost/backend.php/ for the prod environment, and at http://jobeet.localhost/backend_dev.php/ for the dev environment. When you created the frontend application, the production front controller was named index.php. As you can only have one index.php file per directory, symfony creates an index.php file for the very first production front controller and names the others after the application name. If you try to reload the data fixtures with the doctrine:data-load task, it won't work anymore. That's because the JobeetJob::save() method needs access to the app.yml configuration file from the frontend application. As we have now two applications, symfony uses the first it finds, which is now the backend one. But as seen during day 8, the settings can be configured at different levels. By moving the content of the apps/frontend/config/app.yml file to config/app.yml, the settings will be shared among all applications and the problem will be fixed. Do the change now as we will use the model classes quite extensively in the admin generator, and so we will need the variables defined in app.yml in the backend application. The doctrine:data-load task also takes a --application option. So, if you need some specific settings from one application or another, this is the way to go: $ php symfony doctrine:data-load --application=frontend
Backend Modules For the frontend application, the doctrine:generate-module task has been used to bootstrap a basic CRUD module based on a model class. For the backend, the doctrine:generate-admin task will be used as it generates a full working backend interface for a model class: $ php symfony doctrine:generate-admin backend JobeetJob --module=job $ php symfony doctrine:generate-admin backend JobeetCategory --module=category
These two commands create a job and a category module for the JobeetJob and the JobeetCategory model classes respectively. The optional --module option overrides the module name generated by default by the task (which would have been otherwise jobeet_job for the JobeetJob class). Behind the scenes, the task has also created a custom route for each module: # apps/backend/config/routing.yml jobeet_job: class: sfDoctrineRouteCollection options: model: JobeetJob module: job prefix_path: job column: id with_wildcard_routes: true It should come as no surprise that the route class used by the admin generator is sfDoctrineRouteCollection, as the main goal of an admin interface is the management of the life-cycle of model objects. The route definition also defines some options we have not seen before: - prefix_path: Defines the prefix path for the generated route (for instance, the edit page will be something like /job/1/edit).
- column: Defines the table column to use in the URL for links that references an object.
- with_wildcard_routes: As the admin interface will have more than the classic CRUD operations, this option allows to define more object and collection actions without editing the route.
As always, it is a good idea to read the help before using a new task. $ php symfony help doctrine:generate-admin
It will give you all the task arguments and options as well as some classic usage examples. Backend Look and Feel Right off the bat, you can use the generated modules: http://jobeet.localhost/backend_dev.php/job http://jobeet.localhost/backend_dev.php/category
The admin modules have many more features than the simple modules we have generated in previous days. Without writing a single line of PHP, each module provides these great features: - The list of objects is paginated
- The list is sortable
- The list can be filtered
- Objects can be created, edited, and deleted
- Selected objects can be deleted in a batch
- The form validation is enabled
- Flash messages give immediate feedback to the user
- ... and much much more
The admin generator provides all the features you need to create a backend interface in a simple to configure package. To make the user experience a bit better, we need to customize the default backend. We will also add a simple menu to make it easy to navigate between the different modules. Replace the default layout.php file content with the code below: // apps/backend/templates/layout.php <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <head> <title>Jobeet Admin Interface</title> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="/favicon.ico" /> <?php use_stylesheet('admin.css') ?> <?php include_javascripts() ?> <?php include_stylesheets() ?> </head> <body> <div id="container"> <div id="header"> <h1> <a href="<?php echo url_for('@homepage') ?>"> <img src="/images/logo.jpg" alt="Jobeet Job Board" /> </a> </h1> </div> <div id="menu"> <ul> <li> <?php echo link_to('Jobs', '@jobeet_job_job') ?> </li> <li> <?php echo link_to('Categories', '@jobeet_category_category') ?> </li> </ul> </div> <div id="content"> <?php echo $sf_content ?> </div> <div id="footer"> <img src="/images/jobeet-mini.png" /> powered by <a href="http://www.symfony-project.org/"> <img src="/images/symfony.gif" alt="symfony framework" /></a> </div> </div> </body> </html> This layout uses an admin.css stylesheet. This file must already be present in web/css/ as it was installed with the other stylesheets during day 4.  Eventually, change the default symfony homepage in routing.yml: # apps/backend/config/routing.yml homepage: url: / param: { module: job, action: index } The symfony Cache If you are curious enough, you have probably already opened the files generated by the task under the apps/backend/modules/ directory. If not, please open them now. Surprise! The templates directories are empty, and the actions.class.php files are quite empty as well: // apps/backend/modules/job/actions/actions.class.php require_once dirname(__FILE__).'/../lib/jobGeneratorConfiguration.class.php'; require_once dirname(__FILE__).'/../lib/jobGeneratorHelper.class.php'; class jobActions extends autoJobActions { } How can it possibly work? If you have a closer look, you will notice that the jobActions class extends autoJobActions. The autoJobActions class is automatically generated by symfony if it does not exist. It is to be found in the cache/backend/dev/modules/autoJob/ directory, which contains the "real" module: // cache/backend/dev/modules/autoJob/actions/actions.class.php class autoJobActions extends sfActions { public function preExecute() { $this->configuration = new jobGeneratorConfiguration(); if (!$this->getUser()->hasCredential( $this->configuration->getCredentials($this->getActionName()) )) { // ... The way the admin generator works should remind you of some known behavior. In fact, it is quite similar to what we have already learned about the model and form classes. Based on the model schema definition, symfony generates the model and form classes. For the admin generator, the generated module can be configured by editing the config/generator.yml file found in the module: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml generator: class: sfDoctrineGenerator param: model_class: JobeetJob theme: admin non_verbose_templates: true with_show: false singular: ~ plural: ~ route_prefix: jobeet_job with_doctrine_route: 1 config: actions: ~ fields: ~ list: ~ filter: ~ form: ~ edit: ~ new: ~ Each time you update the generator.yml file, symfony regenerates the cache. As we will see today, customizing the admin generated modules is easy, fast, and fun. The automatic re-generation of cache files only occurs in the development environment. In the production one, you will need to clear the cache manually with the cache:clear task. Backend Configuration An admin module can be customized by editing the config key of the generator.yml file. The configuration is organized in seven sections: - actions: Default configuration for the actions found on the list and on the forms
- fields: Default configuration for the fields
- list: Configuration for the list
- filter: Configuration for the filters
- form: Configuration for the new/edit form
- edit: Specific configuration for the edit page
- new: Specific configuration for the new page
Let's start the customization. Title Configuration The list, edit, and new section titles of category module can be customized by defining a title option: # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml config: actions: ~ fields: ~ list: title: Category Management filter: ~ form: ~ edit: title: Editing Category "%%name%%" new: title: New Category The title for the edit section contains dynamic values: all strings enclosed between %% are replaced by their corresponding object column values.  The configuration for the job module is quite similar: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: actions: ~ fields: ~ list: title: Job Management filter: ~ form: ~ edit: title: Editing Job "%%company%% is looking for a %%position%%" new: title: Job Creation Fields Configuration The different views (list, new, and edit) are composed of fields. A field can be a column of the model class, or a virtual column as we will see later on. The default fields configuration can be customized with the fields section: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: fields: is_activated: { label: Activated?, help: Whether the user has activated the job, or not } is_public: { label: Public?, help: Whether the job can also be published on affiliate websites, or not }  The fields section overrides the fields configuration for all views, which means that the label for the is_activated field will be changed for the list, edit, and new views. The admin generator configuration is based on a configuration cascade principle. For instance, if you want to change a label for the list view only, define a fields option under the list section: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: fields: is_public: { label: "Public? (label for the list)" } Any configuration that is set under the main fields section can be overridden by view-specific configuration. The overriding rules are the following: - new and edit inherit from form which inherits from fields
- list inherits from fields
- filter inherits from fields
For form sections (form, edit, and new), the label and help options override the ones defined in the form classes. List View Configuration display By default, the columns of the list view are all the columns of the model, in the order of the schema file. The display option overrides the default by defining the ordered columns to be displayed: # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml config: list: title: Category Management display: [=name, slug] The = sign before the name column is a convention to convert the string to a link.  Let's do the same for the job module to make it more readable: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: title: Job Management display: [company, position, location, url, is_activated, email] layout The list can be displayed with different layouts. By default, the layout is tabular, which means that each column value is in its own table column. But for the job module, it would be better to use the stacked layout, which is the other built-in layout: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: title: Job Management layout: stacked display: [company, position, location, url, is_activated, email] params: | %%is_activated%% <small>%%category_id%%</small> - %%company%% (<em>%%email%%</em>) is looking for a %%=position%% (%%location%%) In a stacked layout, each object is represented by a single string, which is defined by the params option. The display option is still needed as it defines the columns that will be sortable by the user. "Virtual" columns With this configuration, the %%category_id%% segment will be replaced by the category primary key. But it would be more meaningful to display the name of the category. Whenever you use the %% notation, the variable does not need to correspond to an actual column in the database schema. The admin generator only need to find a related getter in the model class. To display the category name, we can define a getCategoryName() method in the JobeetJob model class and replace %%category_id%% by %%category_name%%. But the JobeetJob class already has a getJobeetCategory() method that returns the related category object. And if you use %%jobeet_category%%, it works as the JobeetCategory class has a magic __toString() method that converts the object to a string. # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml %%is_activated%% <small>%%jobeet_category%%</small> - %%company%% (<em>%%email%%</em>) is looking for a %%=position%% (%%location%%)  sort As an administrator, you will be probably more interested in seeing the latest posted jobs. You can configure the default sort column by adding a sort option: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: sort: [expires_at, desc] max_per_page By default, the list is paginated and each page contains 20 items. This can be changed with the max_per_page option: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: max_per_page: 10  batch_actions On a list, an action can be run on several objects. These batch actions are not needed for the category module, so, let's remove them: # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml config: list: batch_actions: {}  The batch_actions option defines the list of batch actions. The empty array allows the removal of the feature. By default, each module has a delete batch action defined by the framework, but for the job module, let's pretend we need a way to extend the validity of some selected jobs for another 30 days: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: batch_actions: _delete: ~ extend: ~ All actions beginning with a _ are built-in actions provided by the framework. If you refresh your browser and select the extend batch actions, symfony will throw an exception telling you to create a executeBatchExtend() method: // apps/backend/modules/job/actions/actions.class.php class jobActions extends autoJobActions { public function executeBatchExtend(sfWebRequest $request) { $ids = $request->getParameter('ids'); $q = Doctrine_Query::create() ->from('JobeetJob j') ->whereIn('j.id', $ids); foreach ($q->execute() as $job) { $job->extend(true); } $this->getUser()->setFlash('notice', 'The selected jobs have been extended successfully.'); $this->redirect('@jobeet_job_job'); } } The selected primary keys are stored in the ids request parameter. For each selected job, the JobeetJob::extend() method is called with an extra argument to bypass the expiration check. Update the extend() method to take this new argument into account: // lib/model/doctrine/JobeetJob.class.php class JobeetJob extends BaseJobeetJob { public function extend($force = false) { if (!$force && !$this->expiresSoon()) { return false; } $this->setExpiresAt(date('Y-m-d', time() + 86400 * sfConfig::get('app_active_days'))); $this->save(); return true; } // ... } After all jobs have been extended, the user is redirected to the job module homepage.  object_actions In the list, there is an additional column for actions you can run on a single object. For the category module, let's remove them as we have a link on the category name to edit it, and we don't really need to be able to delete one directly from the list: # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml config: list: object_actions: {} For the job module, let's keep the existing actions and add a new extend action similar to the one we have added as a batch action: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: object_actions: extend: ~ _edit: ~ _delete: ~ As for batch actions, the _delete and _edit actions are the ones defined by the framework. We need to define the listExtend() action to make the extend link work: // apps/backend/modules/job/actions/actions.class.php class jobActions extends autoJobActions { public function executeListExtend(sfWebRequest $request) { $job = $this->getRoute()->getObject(); $job->extend(true); $this->getUser()->setFlash('notice', 'The selected jobs have been extended successfully.'); $this->redirect('@jobeet_job_job'); } // ... }  actions We have already seen how to link an action to a list of objects or a single object. The actions option defines actions that take no object at all, like the creation of a new object. Let's remove the default new action and add a new action that deletes all jobs that have not been activated by the poster for more than 60 days: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: actions: deleteNeverActivated: { label: Delete never activated jobs } Until now, all actions we have defined had ~, which means that symfony configures the action automatically. Each action can be customized by defining an array of parameters. The label option overrides the default label generated by symfony. By default, the action executed when you click on the link is the name of the action prefixed with list. Create the listDeleteNeverActivated action in the job module: // apps/backend/modules/job/actions/actions.class.php class jobActions extends autoJobActions { public function executeListDeleteNeverActivated(sfWebRequest $request) { $nb = Doctrine::getTable('JobeetJob')->cleanup(60); if ($nb) { $this->getUser()->setFlash('notice', sprintf('%d never activated jobs have been deleted successfully.', $nb)); } else { $this->getUser()->setFlash('notice', 'No job to delete.'); } $this->redirect('@jobeet_job_job'); } // ... } We have reused the JobeetJobTable::cleanup() method defined yesterday. That's another great example of the reusability provided by the MVC pattern. You can also change the action to execute by passing an action parameter: deleteNeverActivated: { label: Delete never activated jobs, action: foo }  table_method The number of database requests needed to display the job list page is 14, as shown by the web debug toolbar. If you click on that number, you will see that most requests are to retrieve the category name for each job:  To reduce the number of requests, we can change the default method used to get the jobs by using the table_method option: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: list: table_method: retrieveBackendJobList Now you must create the retrieveBackendJobList method in JobeetJobTable located in lib/model/doctrine/JobeetJobTable.class.php. // lib/model/doctrine/JobeetJobTable.class.php class JobeetJobTable extends Doctrine_Table { public function retrieveBackendJobList(Doctrine_Query $q) { $rootAlias = $q->getRootAlias(); $q->leftJoin($rootAlias . '.JobeetCategory c'); return $q; } // ... The retrieveBackendJobList() method adds a join between the job and the category tables and automatically creates the category object related to each job. The number of requests is now down to four:  Form Views Configuration The form views configuration is done in three sections: form, edit, and new. They all have the same configuration capabilities and the form section only exists as a fallback for the edit and new sections. display As for the list, you can change the order of the displayed fields with the display option. But as the displayed form is defined by a class, don't try to remove a field as it could lead to unexpected validation errors. The display option for form views can also be used to arrange fields into groups: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: form: display: Content: [category_id, type, company, logo, url, position, location, description, how_to_apply, is_public, email] Admin: [_generated_token, is_activated, expires_at] The above configuration defines two groups (Content and Admin), each containing a subset of the form fields.  The columns in the Admin group do not show up in the browser yet because they have been unset in the job form definition. They will appear in a few sections when we define a custom job form class for the admin application. The admin generator has built-in support for many to many relationship. On the category form, you have an input for the name, one for the slug, and a drop-down box for the related affiliates. As it does not make sense to edit this relation on this page, let's remove it: // lib/form/doctrine/JobeetCategoryForm.class.php class JobeetCategoryForm extends BaseJobeetCategoryForm { public function configure() { unset($this['created_at'], $this['updated_at'], $this['jobeet_affiliates_list']); } } "Virtual" columns In the display options for the job form, the _generated_token field starts with an underscore (_). This means that the rendering for this field will be handled by a custom partial named _generated_token.php Create this partial with the following content: // apps/backend/modules/job/templates/_generated_token.php <div class="sf_admin_form_row"> <label>Token</label> <?php echo $form->getObject()->getToken() ?> </div> In the partial, you have access to the current form ($form) and the related object is accessible via the getObject() method. You can also delegate the rendering to a component by prefixing the field name by a tilde (~). class As the form will be used by administrators, we have displayed more information than for the user job form. But for now, some of them do not appear on the form as they have been removed in the JobeetJobForm class. To have different forms for the frontend and the backend, we need to create two form classes. Let's create a BackendJobeetJobForm class that extends the JobeetJobForm class. As we won't have the same hidden fields, we also need to refactor the JobeetJobForm class a bit to move the unset() statement in a method that will be overridden in BackendJobeetJobForm: // lib/form/doctrine/JobeetJobForm.class.php class JobeetJobForm extends BaseJobeetJobForm { public function configure() { $this->removeFields(); $this->validatorSchema['email'] = new sfValidatorAnd(array( $this->validatorSchema['email'], new sfValidatorEmail(), )); // ... } protected function removeFields() { unset( $this['created_at'], $this['updated_at'], $this['expires_at'], $this['is_activated'], $this['token'] ); } } // lib/form/doctrine/BackendJobeetJobForm.class.php class BackendJobeetJobForm extends JobeetJobForm { public function configure() { parent::configure(); } protected function removeFields() { unset( $this['created_at'], $this['updated_at'], $this['token'] ); } } The default form class used by the admin generator can be overridden by setting the class option: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml config: form: class: BackendJobeetJobForm As we have added a new class, don't forget to clear the cache. The edit form still has a small annoyance. The current uploaded logo does not show up anywhere and you cannot remove the current one. The sfWidgetFormInputFileEditable widget adds editing capabilities to a simple input file widget: // lib/form/doctrine/BackendJobeetJobForm.class.php class BackendJobeetJobForm extends JobeetJobForm { public function configure() { parent::configure(); $this->widgetSchema['logo'] = new sfWidgetFormInputFileEditable(array( 'label' => 'Company logo', 'file_src' => '/uploads/jobs/'.$this->getObject()->getLogo(), 'is_image' => true, 'edit_mode' => !$this->isNew(), 'template' => '<div>%file%<br />%input%<br />%delete% %delete_label%</div>', )); $this->validatorSchema['logo_delete'] = new sfValidatorPass(); } // ... } The sfWidgetFormInputFileEditable widget takes several options to tweak its features and rendering: - file_src: The web path to the current uploaded file
- is_image: If true, the file will be rendered as an image
- edit_mode: Whether the form is in edit mode or not
- with_delete: Whether to display the delete checkbox
- template: The template to use to render the widget
 The look of the admin generator can be tweaked very easily as the generated templates define a lot of class and id attributes. For instance, the logo field can be customized by using the sf_admin_form_field_logo class. Each field also has a class depending on the field type like sf_admin_text or sf_admin_boolean. The edit_mode option uses the sfDoctrineRecord::isNew() method. It returns true if the model object of the form is new, and false otherwise. This is of great help when you need to have different widgets or validators depending on the status of the embedded object. Filters Configuration Configuring filters is quite the same as configuring the form views. As a matter of fact, filters are just forms. And as for the forms, the classes have been generated by the doctrine:build-all task. You can also re-generate them with the doctrine:build-filters task. The form filter classes are located under the lib/filter/ directory and each model class has an associated filter form class (JobeetJobFormFilter for JobeetJobForm). Let's remove them completely for the category module: # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml config: filter: class: false For the job module, let's remove some of them: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml filter: display: [category_id, company, position, description, is_activated, is_public, email, expires_at] As filters are always optional, there is no need to override the filter form class to configure the fields to be displayed.  Actions Customization When configuration is not sufficient, you can add new methods to the action class as we have seen with the extend feature, but you can also override the generated action methods: | Method | Description | | executeIndex() | list view action | | executeFilter() | Updates the filters | | executeNew() | new view action | | executeCreate() | Creates a new Job | | executeEdit() | edit view action | | executeUpdate() | Updates a Job | | executeDelete() | Deletes a Job | | executeBatch() | Executes a batch action | | executeBatchDelete() | Executes the _delete batch action | | processForm() | Processes the Job form | | getFilters() | Returns the current filters | | setFilters() | Sets the filters | | getPager() | Returns the list pager | | getPage() | Gets the pager page | | setPage() | Sets the pager page | | buildCriteria() | Builds the Criteria for the list | | addSortCriteria() | Adds the sort Criteria for the list | | getSort() | Returns the current sort column | | setSort() | Sets the current sort column | As each generated method does only one thing, it is easy to change a behavior without having to copy and paste too much code. Templates Customization We have seen how to customize the generated templates thanks to the class and id attributes added by the admin generator in the HTML code. As for the classes, you can also override the original templates. As templates are plain PHP files and not PHP classes, a template can be overridden by creating a template of the same name in the module (for instance in the apps/backend/modules/job/templates/ directory for the job admin module): | Template | Description | | _assets.php | Renders the CSS and JS to use for templates | | _filters.php | Renders the filters box | | _filters_field.php | Renders a single filter field | | _flashes.php | Renders the flash messages | | _form.php | Displays the form | | _form_actions.php | Displays the form actions | | _form_field.php | Displays a singe form field | | _form_fieldset.php | Displays a form fieldset | | _form_footer.php | Displays the form footer | | _form_header.php | Displays the form header | | _list.php | Displays the list | | _list_actions.php | Displays the list actions | | _list_batch_actions.php | Displays the list batch actions | | _list_field_boolean.php | Displays a single boolean field in the list | | _list_footer.php | Displays the list footer | | _list_header.php | Displays the list header | | _list_td_actions.php | Displays the object actions for a row | | _list_td_batch_actions.php | Displays the checkbox for a row | | _list_td_stacked.php | Displays the stacked layout for a row | | _list_td_tabular.php | Displays a single field for the list | | _list_th_stacked.php | Displays a single column name for the header | | _list_th_tabular.php | Displays a single column name for the header | | _pagination.php | Displays the list pagination | | editSuccess.php | Displays the edit view | | indexSuccess.php | Displays the list view | | newSuccess.php | Displays the new view | Final Configuration The final configuration for the Jobeet admin is as follows: # apps/backend/modules/job/config/generator.yml generator: class: sfDoctrineGenerator param: model_class: JobeetJob theme: admin non_verbose_templates: true with_show: false singular: ~ plural: ~ route_prefix: jobeet_job with_doctrine_route: 1 config: actions: ~ fields: is_activated: { label: Activated?, help: Whether the user has activated the job, or not } is_public: { label: Public? } list: title: Job Management layout: stacked display: [company, position, location, url, is_activated, email] params: | %%is_activated%% <small>%%JobeetCategory%%</small> - %%company%% (<em>%%email%%</em>) is looking for a %%=position%% (%%location%%) max_per_page: 10 sort: [expires_at, desc] batch_actions: _delete: ~ extend: ~ object_actions: extend: ~ _edit: ~ _delete: ~ actions: deleteNeverActivated: { label: Delete never activated jobs } table_method: retrieveBackendJobList filter: display: [category_id, company, position, description, is_activated, is_public, email, expires_at] form: class: BackendJobeetJobForm display: Content: [category_id, type, company, logo, url, position, location, description, how_to_apply, is_public, email] Admin: [_generated_token, is_activated, expires_at] edit: title: Editing Job "%%company%% is looking for a %%position%%" new: title: Job Creation # apps/backend/modules/category/config/generator.yml generator: class: sfDoctrineGenerator param: model_class: JobeetCategory theme: admin non_verbose_templates: true with_show: false singular: ~ plural: ~ route_prefix: jobeet_category with_doctrine_route: 1 config: actions: ~ fields: ~ list: title: Category Management display: [=name, slug] batch_actions: {} object_actions: {} filter: class: false form: actions: _delete: ~ _list: ~ _save: ~ edit: title: Editing Category "%%name%%" new: title: New Category With just these two configuration files, we have developed a great backend interface for Jobeet in a matter of minutes. You already know that when something is configurable in a YAML file, there is also the possibility to use plain PHP code. For the admin generator, you can edit the apps/backend/modules/job/lib/jobGeneratorConfiguration.class.php file. It gives you the same options as the YAML file but with a PHP interface. To learn the method names, have a look at the generated base class in cache/backend/dev/modules/autoJob/lib/BaseJobGeneratorConfiguration.class.php. See you Tomorrow In just one hour, we have built a fully featured backend interface for the Jobeet project. And all in all, we have written less than 50 lines of PHP code. Not too bad for so many features! Tomorrow, we will see how to secure the backend application with a username and a password. This will also be the occasion to talk about the symfony user class.
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