dantecoding/laravel-adminlte

Easy AdminLTE integration with Laravel

v1.19.3 2017-08-07 07:43 UTC

README

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This package provides an easy way to quickly set up AdminLTE with Laravel 5. It has no requirements and dependencies besides Laravel, so you can start building your admin panel immediately. The package just provides a Blade template that you can extend and advanced menu configuration possibilities. A replacement for the make:auth Artisan command that uses AdminLTE styled views instead of the default Laravel ones is also included.

  1. Installation
  2. Updating
  3. Usage
  4. The make:adminlte artisan command
    1. Using the authentication views without the make:adminlte command
  5. Configuration
    1. Menu
    1. Plugins
  6. Translations
  7. Customize views
  8. Issues, Questions and Pull Requests

1. Installation

  1. Require the package using composer:

    composer require jeroennoten/laravel-adminlte
    
  2. Add the service provider to the providers in config/app.php:

    Laravel 5.5 uses Package Auto-Discovery, so doesn't require you to manually add the ServiceProvider

    JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider::class,
  3. Publish the public assets:

    php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider" --tag=assets
    

2. Updating

  1. To update this package, first update the composer package:

    composer update jeroennoten/laravel-adminlte
    
  2. Then, publish the public assets with the --force flag to overwrite existing files

    php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider" --tag=assets --force
    

3. Usage

To use the template, create a blade file and extend the layout with @extends('adminlte::page'). This template yields the following sections:

  • title: for in the <title> tag
  • content_header: title of the page, above the content
  • content: all of the page's content
  • css: extra stylesheets (located in <head>)
  • js: extra javascript (just before </body>)

All sections are in fact optional. Your blade template could look like the following.

{{-- resources/views/admin/dashboard.blade.php --}}

@extends('adminlte::page')

@section('title', 'Dashboard')

@section('content_header')
    <h1>Dashboard</h1>
@stop

@section('content')
    <p>Welcome to this beautiful admin panel.</p>
@stop

@section('css')
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/admin_custom.css">
@stop

@section('js')
    <script> console.log('Hi!'); </script>
@stop

Note that in Laravel 5.2 or higher you can also use @stack directive for css and javascript:

{{-- resources/views/admin/dashboard.blade.php --}}

@push('css')

@push('js')

You now just return this view from your controller, as usual. Check out AdminLTE to find out how to build beautiful content for your admin panel.

4. The make:adminlte artisan command

Note: only for Laravel 5.2 and higher

This package ships with a make:adminlte command that behaves exactly like make:auth (introduced in Laravel 5.2) but replaces the authentication views with AdminLTE style views.

php artisan make:adminlte

This command should be used on fresh applications, just like the make:auth command

4.1 Using the authentication views without the make:adminlte command

If you want to use the included authentication related views manually, you can create the following files and only add one line to each file:

  • resources/views/auth/login.blade.php:
@extends('adminlte::login')
  • resources/views/auth/register.blade.php
@extends('adminlte::register')
  • resources/views/auth/passwords/email.blade.php
@extends('adminlte::passwords.email')
  • resources/views/auth/passwords/reset.blade.php
@extends('adminlte::passwords.reset')

By default, the login form contains a link to the registration form. If you don't want a registration form, set the register_url setting to null and the link will not be displayed.

5. Configuration

First, publish the configuration file:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider" --tag=config

Now, edit config/adminlte.php to configure the title, skin, menu, URLs etc. All configuration options are explained in the comments. However, I want to shed some light on the menu configuration.

5.1 Menu

You can configure your menu as follows:

'menu' => [
    'MAIN NAVIGATION',
    [
        'text' => 'Blog',
        'url' => 'admin/blog',
    ],
    [
        'text' => 'Pages',
        'url' => 'admin/pages',
        'icon' => 'file'
    ],
    [
        'text' => 'Show my website',
        'url' => '/',
        'target' => '_blank'
    ],
    'ACCOUNT SETTINGS',
    [
        'text' => 'Profile',
        'route' => 'admin.profile',
        'icon' => 'user'
    ],
    [
        'text' => 'Change Password',
        'route' => 'admin.password',
        'icon' => 'lock'
    ],
],

With a single string, you specify a menu header item to separate the items. With an array, you specify a menu item. text and url or route are required attributes. The icon is optional, you get an open circle if you leave it out. The available icons that you can use are those from Font Awesome. Just specify the name of the icon and it will appear in front of your menu item.

Use the can option if you want conditionally show the menu item. This integrates with Laravel's Gate functionality. If you need to conditionally show headers as well, you need to wrap it in an array like other menu items, using the header option:

[
    [
        'header' => 'BLOG',
        'can' => 'manage-blog'
    ],
    [
        'text' => 'Add new post',
        'url' => 'admin/blog/new',
        'can' => 'add-blog-post'
    ],
]

Custom Menu Filters

If you need custom filters, you can easily add your own menu filters to this package. This can be useful when you are using a third-party package for authorization (instead of Laravel's Gate functionality).

For example with Laratrust:

<?php

namespace MyApp;

use JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Builder;
use JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\FilterInterface;
use Laratrust;

class MyMenuFilter implements FilterInterface
{
    public function transform($item, Builder $builder)
    {
        if (isset($item['permission']) && ! Laratrust::can($item['permission'])) {
            return false;
        }

        return $item;
    }
}

And then add to config/adminlte.php:

'filters' => [
    JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\ActiveFilter::class,
    JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\HrefFilter::class,
    JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\SubmenuFilter::class,
    JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\ClassesFilter::class,
    //JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Menu\Filters\GateFilter::class, Comment this line out
    MyApp\MyMenuFilter::class,
]

Menu configuration at runtime

It is also possible to configure the menu at runtime, e.g. in the boot of any service provider. Use this if your menu is not static, for example when it depends on your database or the locale. It is also possible to combine both approaches. The menus will simply be concatenated and the order of service providers determines the order in the menu.

To configure the menu at runtime, register a handler or callback for the MenuBuilding event, for example in the boot() method of a service provider:

use Illuminate\Contracts\Events\Dispatcher;
use JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\Events\BuildingMenu;

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{

    public function boot(Dispatcher $events)
    {
        $events->listen(BuildingMenu::class, function (BuildingMenu $event) {
            $event->menu->add('MAIN NAVIGATION');
            $event->menu->add([
                'text' => 'Blog',
                'url' => 'admin/blog',
            ]);
        });
    }

}

The configuration options are the same as in the static configuration files.

A more practical example that actually uses translations and the database:

    public function boot(Dispatcher $events)
    {
        $events->listen(BuildingMenu::class, function (BuildingMenu $event) {
            $event->menu->add(trans('menu.pages'));

            $items = Page::all()->map(function (Page $page) {
                return [
                    'text' => $page['title'],
                    'url' => route('admin.pages.edit', $page)
                ];
            });

            $event->menu->add(...$items);
        });
    }

This event-based approach is used to make sure that your code that builds the menu runs only when the admin panel is actually displayed and not on every request.

Active menu items

By default, a menu item is considered active if any of the following holds:

  • The current path matches the url parameter
  • The current path is a sub-path of the url parameter
  • If it has a submenu containing an active menu item

To override this behavior, you can specify an active parameter with an array of active URLs, asterisks and regular expressions are supported. Example:

[
    'text' => 'Pages'
    'url' => 'pages',
    'active' => ['pages', 'content', 'content/*']
]

5.2 Plugins

By default the DataTables plugin is supported. If set to true, the necessary javascript CDN script tags will automatically be injected into the adminlte::page.blade file.

'plugins' => [
    'datatables' => true,
]

6. Translations

At the moment, English, German, French, Dutch, Portuguese and Spanish translations are available out of the box. Just specifiy the language in config/app.php. If you need to modify the texts or add other languages, you can publish the language files:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider" --tag=translations

Now, you can edit translations or add languages in resources/lang/vendor/adminlte.

7. Customize views

If you need full control over the provided views, you can publish them:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenNoten\LaravelAdminLte\ServiceProvider" --tag=views

Now, you can edit the views in resources/views/vendor/adminlte.

8. Issues, Questions and Pull Requests

You can report issues and ask questions in the issues section. Please start your issue with ISSUE: and your question with QUESTION:

If you have a question, check the closed issues first. Over time, I've been able to answer quite a few.

To submit a Pull Request, please fork this repository, create a new branch and commit your new/updated code in there. Then open a Pull Request from your new branch. Refer to this guide for more info.