Cadmus is an embeddable content management system for Rails applications. It's based on Liquid and is designed to be small and unobtrusive.
Cadmus doesn't define controllers or models itself, but rather, provides mixins to add CMS-like functionality to controllers and models you create. This allows a great deal of customization. For example, Cadmus doesn't provide any user authentication or authorization functionality, but because it hooks into controllers in your app, you can add virtually any authorization system you want.
Similarly, Cadmus doesn't provide a Page model, but rather, a mixin for creating page-like models. This theoretically allows you to add functionality to your Page objects, include multiple different page-like models, or use any ActiveModel-compatible ORM you want instead of ActiveRecord.
One additional feature is the ability for pages to have parents. A parent can be any model object. Page parent objects allow you to create separate "sections" of your site - for example, if you have a project-hosting application that includes multiple projects, each of which has its own separate space of CMS pages. (Page parents aren't intended for creating sub-pages - instead, just use forward-slash characters in the page slug to simulate folders, and Cadmus will handle it.)
First, add Cadmus to your Gemfile:
gem 'cadmus'
gem 'redcarpet' # (required only if you intend to use Cadmus' Markdown support)
The next step is to create a Page model. Your app can have multiple Page models if you like, but for this example, we'll just create one.
rails generate model Page name:text slug:string content:text parent_id:integer parent_type:string
You'll need to tweak the generated migration and model slightly. In the migration, after the create_pages
block, add a
unique index on the parent and slug columns:
add_index :pages, [:parent_type, :parent_id, :slug], :unique => true
And in the model, include Cadmus::Page
and add a cadmus_page
declaration:
class Page < ActiveRecord::Base
include Cadmus::Page
cadmus_page
end
You'll need a controller to deal with your pages. Here's a minimal example of one:
class PagesController < ApplicationController
include Cadmus::PagesController
end
Cadmus::PagesController
automatically adds the seven RESTful resource methods to your controller. It requires that you
define a page_class
method that returns the class for pages it's dealing with. (This could potentially return different
classes depending on request parameters, if you need it to - or, you could also set up different controllers for different
types of page.)
You'll also want to set up an initializer (probably in config/initializers/cadmus.rb
) that will tell Cadmus how to generate URLs for pages. This might look like this:
Cadmus::Tags::PageUrl.define_page_path_method do |page_name, parent|
page_path(page_name, parent_id: parent)
end
Doing this will enable markup like this in page templates: <a href="{% page_url my-other-page %}">My other page</a>
. The {% page_url my-other-page %}
will be replaced with the actual URL for the page called my-other-page
.
Finally, you'll need to create routes for this controller. Cadmus provides a built-in helper for that:
MyApp::Application.routes.draw do
cadmus_pages
end
This will create the following routes:
- GET /pages => PagesController#index
- GET /pages/new => PagesController#new
- POST /pages => PagesController#create
- GET /pages/slug => PagesController#show
- PATCH /pages/slug => PagesController#update
- PUT /pages/slug => PagesController#update
- DELETE /pages/slug => PagesController#destroy
The pages controller is where you'll need to hook into any authorization or authentication system your app might use. We use CanCan, so here's an example of how we do that:
class PagesController < ApplicationController
include Cadmus::PagesController
authorize_resource :page
protected
def page_class
Page
end
end
class Ability
def initialize(user)
can :read, Page
return unless user
# in this example, we've added an owner_id column to our Page model
can :manage, Page, :owner_id => user.id
end
end
Easy-peasy. You can use other authorization plugins in a similar way - with Cadmus, you control the CMS models, controllers and routes, so you can add whatever code is appropriate for your app.
Suppose you've got an app that hosts web sites for local baseball teams. Your app lets the teams manage their own sites, and do stuff like add their team logo, uniform colors, roster, etc. Now you'd like to let them add custom content pages as well.
You already have the following routes set up in your routes.rb file:
DugoutCoach::Application.routes.draw do
resources :teams do
resources :players
resources :schedule
end
cadmus_pages # for global pages on your site
end
So, for example, the URL for the Cambridge Cosmonauts might be http://dugoutcoach.net/teams/cosmonauts. They also have http://dugoutcoach.net/teams/cosmonauts/players and http://dugoutcoach.net/teams/cosmonauts/schedule.
You can add a "pages" namespace pretty easily:
DugoutCoach::Application.routes.draw do
resources :teams do
resources :players
resources :schedule
cadmus_pages :controller => :team_pages
end
cadmus_pages
end
Now you have a way of separating team-specific pages from global pages on the site. The URLs for these pages might be, for example, http://dugoutcoach.net/teams/cosmonauts/directions, or http://dugoutcoach.net/teams/cosmonauts/promotions/free-hat-day (remember, Cadmus slugs can contain slashes). We'll now need a TeamPages controller to handle these:
class TeamPagesController < ApplicationController
include Cadmus::PagesController
self.page_parent_class = Team # page's parent is a Team
self.page_parent_name = "team" # parent ID is in params[:team_id]
self.find_parent_by = "slug" # parent ID is the Team's "slug" field rather than "id"
authorize_resource :page
protected
def page_class
Page
end
end
Note that for this example, we've kept the same Page
class for both controllers. We could have also created a
separate TeamPage
model, but that's not required.
The Cambridge Cosmonauts are unhappy! Their URLs are too long. Why should the pages in their team site have a "/pages/" in them just because they created them themselves?
Chill out, Cosmonauts. Cadmus makes it easy:
DugoutCoach::Application.routes.draw do
resources :teams do
resources :players
resources :schedule
cadmus_pages :controller => :team_pages, :shallow => true
end
cadmus_pages
end
Now the PagesController's show
, edit
, update
, and destroy
actions don't use the "/pages/" part of the URL. The
URLs now look like this:
- GET /teams/cosmonauts/pages => PagesController#index
- GET /teams/cosmonauts/pages/new => PagesController#new
- POST /teams/cosmonauts/pages => PagesController#create
- GET /teams/cosmonauts/page-slug => PagesController#show
- GET /teams/cosmonauts/page-slug/edit => PagesController#edit
- PUT /teams/cosmonauts/page-slug => PagesController#update
- DELETE /teams/cosmonauts/page-slug => PagesController#destroy
When you use shallow page URLs, it's important to put the cadmus_pages
declaration as the last one in the block,
because it's going to put a path-globbing wildcard in the scope from which it's called. Thus, it should be the
lowest-priority route in its context.
The Cambridge Cosmonauts have a policy of changing their uniform color on a weekly basis. Why? I don't know. Go Cosmonauts!
Needless to say, they don't want to go editing every single page where they mention that. Fortunately, you can help them by providing them with a Liquid template variable they can use like so:
<h1>We're the Cosmonauts!</h1>
<p>Our uniform color this week is {{ team.uniform_color }}!</p>
To do this, you'll need to expose team
as a Liquid assign variable:
class TeamPagesController < ApplicationController
include Cadmus::PagesController
self.page_parent_class = Team # page's parent is a Team
self.page_parent_name = "team" # parent ID is in params[:team_id]
self.find_parent_by = "slug" # parent ID is the Team's "slug" field rather than "id"
authorize_resource :page
protected
def page_class
Page
end
def liquid_assigns
{ :team => @page.parent }
end
end
Defining a liquid_assigns
method will cause Cadmus to use the return value of that method as the Liquid assigns hash.
(Similarly, you can define liquid_filters
and liquid_registers
methods that do what they say on the tin.)
You'll also need to make your Team model usable from Liquid. The simplest way to do that is using liquid_methods
:
class Team < ActiveRecord::Base
liquid_methods :name, :uniform_color
# everything else in your model...
end
You could also define a to_liquid
method that returns a Liquid::Drop
subclass for Teams, if you need to do things
more complicated than just return data values.
Let's say you have another model in your app that you'd like to put a Liquid template on. For example, perhaps the baseball teams would like to send out a welcome email to their fans. You might create a WelcomeEmail
model with a content
field.
Cadmus provides a convenience mixin to let you make that field a Liquid template. You can use it like so:
class WelcomeEmail < ActiveRecord::Base
include Cadmus::Concerns::LiquidTemplateField
liquid_template_field :content_liquid_template, :content
belongs_to :team
end
Now if you call my_welcome_email.content_liquid_template
, you'll get a parsed Liquid::Template
generated from the value of my_welcome_email.content
. You could further make the WelcomeEmail into a Cadmus::Renderable
to make it render the template:
class WelcomeEmail < ActiveRecord::Base
include Cadmus::Concerns::LiquidTemplateField
include Cadmus::Renderable
liquid_template_field :content_liquid_template, :content
belongs_to :team
def rendered_content
cadmus_renderer.render(content_liquid_template, :html)
end
end
Presto! Now you can call my_welcome_email.rendered_content
. Since WelcomeEmail
includes Cadmus::Renderable
, you can also define liquid_assigns
to expose variables to the template, for example:
class WelcomeEmail < ActiveRecord::Base
include Cadmus::Concerns::LiquidTemplateField
include Cadmus::Renderable
liquid_template_field :content_liquid_template, :content
belongs_to :team
def rendered_content
cadmus_renderer.render(content_liquid_template, :html)
end
def liquid_assigns
{ 'team' => team }
end
end
And now the welcome email templates can include {{ team.name }}
and any other things derived from the Team model they want.
Copyright © Gively, Inc. Cadmus is released under the MIT license. For more information, see the LICENSE file.