You are viewing revision #2 of this wiki article.
This is the latest version of this article.
You may want to see the changes made in this revision.
Note: this tutorial requires Yii 1.0.8 or later.
While yiic shell
tool is very convenient at generating skeleton code in our application, the generated code is not always what we want. For example, we may want the generated code to carry specific copyright information; we may want to use our own coding style; we may want to add more features; and so on. All these can be accomplished easily in Yii.
In the following, we explain how to extend the model
and crud
commands, which are the two most powerful yiic shell
commands.
Extending model
Command ¶
When we create our initial application code using yiic webapp
command, we may find there is a directory called protected/commands/shell
. This is the place where we shall store the extended shell command classes.
In order to extend the model
command, we would write a class named MymodelCommand
and save it as the file MymodelCommand.php
under protected/commands/shell
:
Yii::import('system.cli.commands.shell.ModelCommand');
defined('MY_MODEL_TEMPLATE') or
define('MY_MODEL_TEMPLATE',dirname(__FILE__).'/templates/model');
class MymodelCommand extends ModelCommand
{
public $templatePath=MY_MODEL_TEMPLATE;
}
Our new command class extends from ModelCommand
which implements the default behavior of the model
command. The new command mainly overrides the templatePath
property which specifies where the template for generating new model class files should be located. Here, we declare it to be the constant MY_MODEL_TEMPLATE
which represents the directory protected/commands/shell/templates/model
.
Next, we would like to provide our own version of the template. A template is a PHP script that is executed by a shell command. The rendering result of this PHP script is the code generated by the corresponding shell command.
The easiest way to create a new template is to modify the one used by the default model
command which is located at framework/cli/views/shell/model/model.php
. We should copy this file to protected/commands/shell/templates/model
and then modify it according to our needs.
If we edit the template file, we should see the following comments at the beginning. Read carefull since they list variables that can be used in the template.
<?php
/**
* This is the template for generating a model class file.
* The following variables are available in this template:
* - $className: the class name
* - $tableName: the table name
* - $columns: a list of table column schema objects
* - $rules: a list of validation rules (string)
* - $labels: a list of labels (column name => label)
* - $relations: a list of relations (string)
*/
......
?>
We should be able to use our newly created model command now. Enter the yiic shell
and type help
. We should see a list of available shell commands which now include a new command called mymodel
. Try using this command the same way as using the original model
command (e.g. mymodel Post
). We should see that the generated model class is using the template we just wrote.
Extending crud
Command ¶
Extending the crud
command is only a bit more complex than extending the model
command. We create a file named protected/commands/shell/MycrudCommand.php
as follows,
Yii::import('system.cli.commands.shell.CrudCommand');
defined('MY_CRUD_TEMPLATE') or
define('MY_CRUD_TEMPLATE',dirname(__FILE__).'/templates/crud');
class MycrudCommand extends CrudCommand
{
public $templatePath=MY_CRUD_TEMPLATE;
public $actions=array('insert','update','list','view','_form');
}
In the above, we state that the new template directory should be protected/commands/shell/templates/crud
and we want to generate five CRUD views: insert
, update
, list
, view
and _form
. Note that the default crud
command generates six views: create
, update
, list
, view
, admin
and _form
.
Next, we generate the needed templates for our new CRUD command. Like before, we would copy the existing templates from framework/cli/views/shell/crud
to protected/commands/shell/templates/crud
and then modify them. According to our new actions
property, we need to delete admin.php
and rename create.php
to be insert.php
.
After all these are completed, we may enter yiic shell
and execute mycrud Post
to generate our customized CRUD code for the Post
model class.
bash script
I beg to support the master yii, I have a case with combining bash script with php. approximately bash script that I wake I'll put it in the folder where the yii framework is right, if the case is like that. thanks for the previous
If you have any questions, please ask in the forum instead.
Signup or Login in order to comment.