Note: There was an error in the sql schema for the comments table from yesterday’s post. If you have the old version, please change it with the following statement in mysql: ALTER TABLE database_name.comments CHANGE comment_id issue_id INT You will also need to regenerate your model classes and clear out the cache: bin/cake bake model comments --force bin/cake bake model issues --force bin/cake orm_cache clear I’ve already corrected yesterdays post, so this change may not be necessary for some users.

CakePHP has always had the Bake shell command - you saw it in action yesterday - but it’s always been a bit difficult to work with. You would need to escape your actual php code, making it difficult to actually think about the contents of the template. Thanks to some excellent work by Andy Dawson, we now have quite a bit of flexibility in writing bake templates.

In CakePHP, we can use Helpers and elements in our bake templates. As well, CakePHP uses ASP-style tags - <% , <%= , and %> - to execute php code. This sounds weird, but here is an example:

<?php namespace <%= $namespace %>\View\Helper; use Cake\View\Helper; use Cake\View\View; /** * <%= $name %> helper */ class <%= $name %>Helper extends Helper { /** * Default configuration. * * @var array */ protected $_defaultConfig = []; } ?>

Any code in enclosed in <% and %> is executed by CakePHP - <%= can be used to auto-echo variables - while everything else is just normal php. The above template - when baking a PostHelper , for instance - turns into the following:

<?php namespace App\View\Helper; use Cake\View\Helper; use Cake\View\View; /** * Post helper */ class PostHelper extends Helper { /** * Default configuration. * * @var array */ protected $_defaultConfig = []; } ?>

As well, the intermediate template is output to your tmp directory, meaning you can use the intermediate files to figure out what PHP code will be executed when we actually generate your files. One last thing is that the new View-based bake allows us to hook events into the actual bake process, which means we can add/edit/remove any data going into the view. Pretty cool.

Now lets actually customize our bake templates. We’re going to customize the controller template to only bake the index , view and add for the issues controller, and modify the views such that the view will contain a form that people can use to submit comments. To do so, lets attach an event to Bake. Add the following to your app/config/bootstrap_cli.php :

<?php use Cake\Event\Event; use Cake\Event\EventManager; use Cake\Utility\Hash; EventManager::instance()->attach(function (Event $event) { $view = $event->subject; $name = Hash::get($view->viewVars, 'name'); $isController = strpos($event->data[0], 'Bake/Controller/controller.ctp') !== false; if ($isController !== false && $name == 'Issues') { $view->viewVars['actions'] = ['index', 'view', 'add']; } if ($isController && $name == 'Comments') { $view->viewVars['actions'] = ['add']; } }, 'Bake.beforeRender'); ?>

In CakePHP 3, shells all include the new app/config/bootstrap_cli.php , as well as the app/config/bootstrap.php , which makes cli-only changes like the above a breeze.

This event will:

Attach to the event Bake.beforeRender , which allows us to modify any data going into the template.

, which allows us to modify any data going into the template. Retrieve the name of the template (baked tests do not currently populate this variable).

of the template (baked tests do not currently populate this variable). If the filename ends with Bake/Controller/controller.ctp - the template used for controllers - and we are baking “issues”, it will force the actions to be just ['index', 'view', 'add'] .

ends with - the template used for controllers - and we are baking “issues”, it will force the actions to be just . We also only allow add for the Comments controller

To test this, lets run bake:

# ssh onto the vm vagrant ssh cd /vagrant/app bin/cake bake controller comments --force bin/cake bake controller issues --force

Bake will force-overwrite (using the --force argument) your existing Controller and it’s test. If you open them in your editor, you’ll see we only have our desired three actions! The overide for our Comments controller is also in effect :)

One thing we’ll want to do is exclude GET requests to the /comments/add endpoint. Users should only post to it from the form that will be embedded on the /issues/view page, and it should also redirect back to the issue. After the line setting actions for the Comments controller, add the following:

$view->set('redirect', '["controller" => "Issues", "action" => "view", $comment->issue_id]'); $view->set('requirePost', true);

The above two variables will be used in our custom src/Template/Bake/Element/Controller/add.ctp . Controllers use elements to bake each action - meaning we can create custom actions as elements in the aforementioned directory - and the add action is no different. While you can copy the core one to that location, I’ll just show you the updated version we’ll be using:

<% $compact = ["'" . $singularName . "'"]; if (empty($redirect)) { $redirect = "['action' => 'index']"; } %> /** * Add method * * @return void */ public function add() { <% if (!empty($requirePost)) : %> if (!$this->request->is('post')) { $this->Flash->error('This action requires a post request'); $this->redirect($this->request->referer()); } <% endif; %> $<%= $singularName %> = $this-><%= $currentModelName %>->newEntity($this->request->data); if ($this->request->is('post')) { if ($this-><%= $currentModelName; %>->save($<%= $singularName %>)) { $this->Flash->success('The <%= strtolower($singularHumanName) %> has been saved.'); return $this->redirect(<%= $redirect %>); } else { $this->Flash->error('The <%= strtolower($singularHumanName) %> could not be saved. Please, try again.'); } } <% $associations = array_merge( $this->Bake->aliasExtractor($modelObj, 'BelongsTo'), $this->Bake->aliasExtractor($modelObj, 'BelongsToMany') ); foreach ($associations as $assoc): $association = $modelObj->association($assoc); $otherName = $association->target()->alias(); $otherPlural = $this->_variableName($otherName); %> $<%= $otherPlural %> = $this-><%= $currentModelName %>-><%= $otherName %>->find('list'); <% $compact[] = "'$otherPlural'"; endforeach; %> $this->set(compact(<%= join(', ', $compact) %>)); }

There are two small changes here. One is that we default the redirect to a string containing the “index” action. This is a custom variable we added - and are overriding just for the Comments controller. The $requirePost variable is also a custom one, and we inserted a bit of logic to require that the request is a post, otherwise we redirect to the referring page :)

We’ll now modify the view.ctp template to include a post form on the issues controller. You can copy the existing one to something we can modify with the following commands:

TEMPLATE_DIR="src/Template/Bake/" BAKE_TEMPLATE_DIR="vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Template/Bake/" cd /vagrant/app mkdir -p $TEMPLATE_DIR cp $BAKE_TEMPLATE_DIR/Template/view.ctp $TEMPLATE_DIR/Template/view.ctp ## Copy over the form.ctp element file so we can do some light editing cp $BAKE_TEMPLATE_DIR/Element/form.ctp $TEMPLATE_DIR/Element/form.ctp ## Also copy over the controller's view.ctp action file cp $BAKE_TEMPLATE_DIR/Element/Controller/view.ctp $TEMPLATE_DIR/Element/Controller/view.ctp ## Create a stub element for later use: touch $TEMPLATE_DIR/Element/add_related.ctp

We need to modify the form.ctp to allow us to set a custom action for the POST request. The following bit of code should replace the line containing $this->Form->create :

<?= $this->Form->create($<%= $singularVar %>, <% if (empty($formOptions)) : %>[]<% else : %><%= var_export($formOptions) %><% endif;%>); ?>

I order to show the related form, we’ll need to modify the Bake/Template/view.ctp we copied over. It’s rather long and complicated, but we’ll simply add the following line to the end:

<% if (!empty($relatedForm)) { $this->element('add_related', $relatedForm); } %>

Next, set the following contents in your add_related.ctp file:

<%= $this->element('form', $relatedForm) %>

Now that the initial setup is done, we need to populate this new $relatedForm variable in our Bake.beforeRender event. The following event will do just that:

use Cake\ORM\TableRegistry; EventManager::instance()->attach(function (Event $event) { $view = $event->subject; $name = Hash::get($view->viewVars, 'pluralHumanName'); $isAddView = strpos($event->data[0], 'Bake/Template/view.ctp') !== false; if ($isAddView && $name == 'Issues') { $modelObj = TableRegistry::get('Comments'); $view->set('relatedForm', [ 'action' => 'Add', 'schema' => $modelObj->schema(), 'primaryKey' => (array)$modelObj->primaryKey(), 'displayField' => $modelObj->displayField(), 'singularVar' => 'comment', 'pluralVar' => 'comments', 'singularHumanName' => 'Comment', 'pluralHumanName' => 'Comments', 'fields' => $modelObj->schema()->columns(), 'associations' => [], 'keyFields' => [], 'formOptions' => [ 'url' => [ 'controller' => 'Comments', 'action' => 'add', ], ], ]); } }, 'Bake.beforeRender');

You can always bind more than one listener to the event, so this is fine. If you want, you can also combine the two events, but this is easier to keep track of for me.

If the above seems like a lot, that’s because it is. Those variables are necessary for the form.ctp element to do it’s magic. Unfortunately, there isn’t a good way to generically call this for a template from the core, but a solution may come soon. In any case, a couple notes if you bake now:

There will be another actions list right above the form. This is currently not optional in the core form.ctp we copied, though you are welcome to make it optional in your own :)

list right above the form. This is currently not optional in the core we copied, though you are welcome to make it optional in your own :) The issue_id field isn’t hidden. We cannot arbitrarily pass in options for fields in the core form.ctp we copied. Again, you can implement this feature in your own custom element, but we’ll try and make this easier before a final release :)

field isn’t hidden. We cannot arbitrarily pass in options for fields in the core we copied. Again, you can implement this feature in your own custom element, but we’ll try and make this easier before a final release :) The form will break because we are missing a $comment entity.

To add the $comment entity, lets modify the src/Template/Bake/Element/Controller/view.ctp we previously copied over. Add the following before the last brace:

<% if (!empty($addRelatedEntity)) : %> $<%= $addRelatedEntity['entityName'] %> = $this-><%= $currentModelName %>-><%= $addRelatedEntity['modelName'] %>->newEntity(); $this->set('<%= $addRelatedEntity['entityName'] %>', $<%= $addRelatedEntity['entityName'] %>); $this->set('<%= $pluralName %>', [ $<%= $singularName %>-><%= $modelObj->primaryKey() %> => $<%= $singularName %>-><%= $modelObj->displayField() %>, ]); <% endif %>

This will:

Create a new entity for the related model

Set that empty entity for the view

Set a dummy list for the form containing just the current issue.

To populate the view.ctp Controller template properly, we’ll need to add one more event to our app/config/bootstrap_cli.php :

EventManager::instance()->attach(function (Event $event) { $view = $event->subject; $name = Hash::get($view->viewVars, 'name'); $isController = strpos($event->data[0], 'Bake/Controller/controller.ctp') !== false; if ($isController !== false && $name == 'Issues') { $view->viewVars['addRelatedEntity'] = [ 'modelName' => 'Comments', 'entityName' => 'comment', ]; } }, 'Bake.beforeRender');

Now lets run bake:

cd /vagrant/app bin/cake bake controller issues --force bin/cake bake view issues --force

And we’ll have a working form on our view page!

Homework Time

I won’t write all the code, but hopefully the above gives you a good idea as to how to modify bake templates. Your homework is:

Make the form actions optional - and turn them off for embedded forms.

Create a nicer comment list than the current version.

Hide the issue_id field on the form without removing it completely

Tomorrow’s CakeAdvent entry will contain a solution, but this should be a good way for you to start creating your own custom bake templates :) Until then!