Sergey Ponomarev 22d48305af treewide: replace "var m, s, o" with "let m, s, o" | 1 nedēļu atpakaļ | |
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htdocs | 1 nedēļu atpakaļ | |
po | 1 nedēļu atpakaļ | |
root | 1 gadu atpakaļ | |
BUILDING.md | 10 mēneši atpakaļ | |
Makefile | 6 mēneši atpakaļ | |
README.md | 1 mēnesi atpakaļ | |
YAML.md | 1 nedēļu atpakaļ | |
structure.md | 10 mēneši atpakaļ |
This app is meant to be a starting point for developing new LuCI apps using the modern JavaScript client-rendered approach. Previously the LuCI used a Lua server-side render approach which is deprecated now.
In all cases, you'll want to log out of the web interface and back in to force a cache refresh after installing the new package.
To install the luci-app-example to your OpenWrt instance (assuming your OpenWRT instance is on 192.168.1.1):
scp -r root/* root@192.168.1.1:/
scp -r htdocs/* root@192.168.1.1:/www/
# execute the UCI defaults script to create the /etc/config/example
ssh root@192.168.1.1 "sh /etc/uci-defaults/80_example"
Install the app on your OpenWrt installation. This can be an actual router/device, or something like a QEMU virtual machine.
opkg install luci-app-example
Visit the web UI for the device/virtual machine where the package was installed. Log in to OpenWrt, and Example should be present in the navigation menu.
See structure.md
for details on how to lay out a LuCI application.
The LuCI Javascript code should be indented with tabs.
js-beautify/jsbeautifier
can help with this.
The examples in this application were formatted with:
js-beautify -t -a -j -w 110 -r <filename>
You can either do direct editing on the device/virtual machine, or use something like sshfs to have remote access from your development computer.
By default, the code is minified by the build process, which makes editing it non-trivial. You can either change the build process, or just copy the file content from the git repository and replace the content on disk.
Javascript code can be found on the device/virtual machine in /www/luci-static/resources/view/example/
.
This is a JS view that uses the form.Map approach to providing a form that can change the configuration.
It relies on UCI access, and the relevant ACL declarations are in root/usr/share/rpcd/acl.d/luci-app-example.json
.
The declarations are luci-app-example > read > uci
and luci-app-example > write > uci
.
Note that for both permissions, the node name "example" is provided as a list argument to the interface type (uci); this maps to /etc/config/example
.
Since form.Map and form.JSONMap create Promises, you cannot embed them inside a E()
-built structure.
This is a read-only view that uses E()
to create DOM nodes.
Data is fetched via the function defined in load()
- these loads are done as Promises, with the promise results stored in an array.
Multiple load functions results are available in the array, and can be accessed via a single argument passed to the render()
function.
This code relies on the same ACL grants as form.js.
The signature for E()
is E(node_type, {node attributes}, [child nodes])
.
The RPC JS page is read-only, and demonstrates using RPC calls to get data. It also demonstrates using the JSONMap form object for mapping a configuration to a form, but makes the form read-only for display purposes.
The configuration is stored in /etc/config/example
.
The file must exist and created on device boot by UCI defaults script in /root/etc/uci-defaults/80_example
.
The developer guide has more details about UCI defaults.
The RPCd script is stored as /usr/libexec/rpcd/luci.example
, and can be called via ubus.
It relies on RPC access, and the relevant ACL declarations are in root/usr/share/rpcd/acl.d/luci-app-example.json
.
The declaration is luci-app-example > read > ubus > luci.example
; the list of names under this key is the list of APIs that can be called.
ACLs are global for the entire web UI - the declaration of luci-app-example in a file called acl.d/luci-app-example
is just a naming convention.
Nothing enforces that only the code in luci-app-example is mutating /etc/config/example
.
Once the ACL is defined to allow reads/writes to a UCI node, any code running from the web UI can make changes to that node.
You may wish to work with YAML data. See YAML.md for details on how to integrate YAML read support.
For a real world application (or changes to this example one that you wish to submit upstream), translations should be kept up to date.
To rebuild the translations file, from the root of the repository execute ./build/i18n-scan.pl applications/luci-app-example > applications/luci-app-example/po/templates/example.pot
If the scan command fails with an error about being unable to open/find msguniq
, install the GNU gettext
package for your operating system.