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Plugin Tutorial » History » Revision 7

Revision 6 (Jean-Philippe Lang, 2008-08-10 18:39) → Revision 7/119 (Jean-Philippe Lang, 2008-08-10 18:41)

{{>toc}} 

 h1. Plugin Tutorial 

 h2. Creating a new Plugin 

 Open up a command prompt and "cd" to your redmine directory, then execute the following command: 

   % ruby script/generate redmine_plugin Pools 

 The plugin structure is created in @vendor/plugins/redmine_pools@: 

 <pre> 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/app/controllers 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/app/helpers 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/app/models 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/app/views 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/db/migrate 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/lib/tasks 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/assets/images 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/assets/javascripts 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/assets/stylesheets 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/lang 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/README 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/init.rb 
       create    vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/lang/en.yml 
 </pre> 

 Edit @vendor/plugins/redmine_pools/init.rb@ too adjust plugin information (name, author, description and version): 

 <pre><code class="ruby"> 
 require 'redmine' 

 Redmine::Plugin.register :redmine_pools do 
   name 'Pools plugin' 
   author 'John Smith' 
   description 'A plugin for managing pools' 
   version '0.0.1' 
 end 
 </code></pre> 

 Then restart the application and point your browser to http://localhost:3000/admin/info. 
 After logging in, you should see your new plugin in the plugins list: 

 p=. !plugins_list1.png! 

 h2. Generating a controller 

 For now, the plugin doesn't do anything. So let's create a controller for our plugin. 
 Go back to the command prompt and run: 

 <pre> 
 % ruby script/generate redmine_plugin_controller Pools pools index vote 
       exists    app/controllers/ 
       exists    app/helpers/ 
       create    app/views/pools 
       create    test/functional/ 
       create    app/controllers/pools_controller.rb 
       create    test/functional/pools_controller_test.rb 
       create    app/helpers/pools_helper.rb 
       create    app/views/pools/index.html.erb 
       create    app/views/pools/vote.html.erb 
 </pre> 

 A controller @PoolsController@ with 2 actions (@#index@ and @#vote@) is created. 

 Edit @app/controllers/pools_controller.rb@ in @redmine_pools@ directory to implement these 2 actions. 

 <pre><code class="ruby"> 
 class PoolsController < ApplicationController 
   unloadable 
  
   @@pools = [ {:id => 1, :title => 'First pool', :question => 'This is the first pool question', :yes => 0, :no => 0}, 
               {:id => 2, :title => 'Second pool', :question => 'This is the second pool question', :yes => 0, :no => 0} ] 

   def index 
     @pools = @@pools # Pool.find(:all) 
   end 

   def vote 
     pool = @@pools.find {|p| p[:id].to_s == params[:id]} # Pool.find(params[:id]) 
     # saves the vote 
     pool[params[:answer].to_sym] += 1 
     flash[:notice] = 'Vote saved.' 
     redirect_to :action => 'index' 
   end 
 end 
 </code></pre> 

 For the sake of this example, we simulate a pool model in our @@@pools@ class variable. 
 We could of course use a ActiveRecord model just like we do it in a regular Rails app. 

 Then edit @app/views/pools/index.html.erb@ that will display existing pools: 


 <pre> 
 <h2>Pools</h2> 

 <% @pools.each do |pool| %> 
   <p> 
   <%= pool[:question] %>? 
   <%= link_to 'Yes', {:action => 'vote', :id => pool[:id], :answer => 'yes'}, :method => :post %> (<%= pool[:yes] %>) / 
   <%= link_to 'No', {:action => 'vote', :id => pool[:id], :answer => 'no'}, :method => :post %> (<%= pool[:no] %>) 
   </p> 
 <% end %> 
 </pre> 

 You can remove @vote.html.erb@ since no rendering is done by the corresponding action. 

 Now, restart the application and point your browser to http://localhost:3000/pools. 
 You should see the 2 pools and you should be able to vote for them: 

 p=. !pools1.png! 

 Note that pool results are reset on each request if you don't run the application in production mode, since our pool "model" is stored in a class variable in this example. 

 h2. Extending menus 

 Our controller works fine but users have to know the url to see the pools. Using the Redmine plugin API, you can extend standard menus. 
 So let's add a new item to the application menu. 

 h3. Extending the application menu 

 Edit @init.rb@ at the root of your plugin directory to add the following line at the end of the plugin registration block: 

 <pre><code class="ruby"> 
 Redmine::Plugin.register :redmine_pools do 
   [...] 
  
   menu :application_menu, :pools, { :controller => 'pools', :action => 'index' }, :caption => 'Pools' 
 end 
 </code></pre> 

 Syntax is: 

   menu(menu_name, item_name, url, options={}) 

 There are 4 menus that you can extend: 

 * @:top_menu@ - the top left menu 
 * @:account_menu@ - the top right menu with sign in/sign out links 
 * @:application_menu@ - the main menu displayed when the user is not inside a project 
 * @:project_menu@ - the main menu displayed when the user is inside a project 

 Available options are: 

 * @:param@ - the parameter key that is used for the project id (default is @:id@) 
 * @:if@ - a Proc that is called before rendering the item, the item is displayed only if it returns true 
 * @:caption@ - the menu caption that can be: 

   * a localized string Symbol 
   * a String 
   * a Proc that can take the project as argument 

 * @:before@, @:after@ - specify where the menu item should be inserted (eg. @:after => :activity@) 
 * @:last@ - if set to true, the item will stay at the end of the menu (eg. @:last => true@) 
 * @:html_options@ - a hash of html options that are passed to @link_to@ when rendering the menu item 

 In our example, we've added an item to the application menu which is emtpy by default. 
 Restart the application and go to http://localhost:3000: 

 p=. !application_menu.png! 

 Now you can access the pools by clicking the Pools tab from the welcome screen. 

 h3. Extending the project menu 

 Now, let's consider that the pools are defined at project level (even if it's not the case in our example pool model). So we would like to add the Pools tab to the project menu instead. 
 Open @init.rb@ and replace the line that was added just before with these 2 lines: 

 <pre><code class="ruby"> 
 Redmine::Plugin.register :redmine_pools do 
   [...] 

   permission :pools, {:pools => [:index, :vote]}, :public => true 
   menu :project_menu, :pools, { :controller => 'pools', :action => 'index' }, :caption => 'Pools', :after => :activity, :param => :project_id 
 end 
 </code></pre> 

 The second line adds our Pools tab to the project menu, just after the activity tab. 
 The first line is required and declares that our 2 actions from @PoolsController@ are public. We'll come back later to explain this with more details. 

 Restart the application again and go to one of your projects: 

 p=. !project_menu.png! 

 If you click the Pools tab, you should notice that the project menu is no longer displayed. 
 To make the project menu visible, you have to initialize the controller's instance variable @@project@. 

 Edit your PoolsController to do so: 

 <pre><code class="ruby"> 
 def index 
   @project = Project.find(params[:project_id]) 
   @pools = @@pools # @project.pools 
 end 
 </code></pre> 

 The project id is available in the @:project_id@ param because of the @:param => :project_id@ option in the menu item declaration above. 

 Now, you should see the project menu when viewing the pools: 

 p=. !project_menu_pools.png! 

 h2. Adding new permissions 

 TODO 

 h2. Creating a project module 

 TODO