ACF how to write: Difference between revisions
m (→Step 1) |
m (→Step 2) |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
* ACF uses lua as programming language. Have a look at lua.org [http://www.lua.org/] before starting. | * ACF uses lua as programming language. Have a look at lua.org [http://www.lua.org/] before starting. | ||
===Step 2=== | ===Step 2 - The Development Environment=== | ||
* Setup an ACF Development Environment: [[Getting_started_with_ACF_development]] | * Setup an ACF Development Environment: [[Getting_started_with_ACF_development]] | ||
Revision as of 08:26, 17 November 2007
How to Write an ACF Under Construction
For some examples please see svn
svn co svn://svn.alpinelinux.org/acf
- shorewall
- dhcp
From <nil> to a running ACF example application Under Construction
Step 1 - The Programming Language
- ACF uses lua as programming language. Have a look at lua.org [1] before starting.
Step 2 - The Development Environment
- Setup an ACF Development Environment: Getting_started_with_ACF_development
Step 3
Once you entered the ACF Development Environment as described in step 2:
- in your user home create a directory for your application (e.g. mkdir ~/myapp)
- and cd into it (e.g. cd ~/myapp)
Step 4
ACF is an MVC based framework. What does this mean to you? Your application is separated into three layers: Model, View, Controller - each of which has one or more files.
- Model: In Model the 'real work' is done (e.g. modifying config files, starting/stopping services etc.)
- View: This is where you define what your application will look like. You can have one or more files, each presenting a dynamic html page which only as much code as neccessary to format the data you retrieve from Model.
- Controller: The event dispatcher. In controller you place one function per event. If the user calls the respective 'event page' (web), acf will fire an action - the same-named function in controller will be called. This function then retrieves neccessary data from Model and passes it to View to be displayed to the user.
Step 5
Now let us have a look at the files we need to place into our application directory:
- Makefile
- config.mk
- myapp-model.lua
- myapp-view-html.lsp
- myapp-controller.lua
- myapp.menu
Makefile:
The Makefile once called does install our acf application so that we can look at it working.
APP_NAME=myapp
PACKAGE=acf-$(APP_NAME)
VERSION=1.0_alpha1
APP_DIST=myapp-model.lua \
myapp-view-html.lsp \
myapp-controller.lua \
myapp.menu
EXTRA_DIST=README Makefile config.mk
DISTFILES=$(APP_DIST) $(EXTRA_DIST)
TAR=tar
P=$(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)
tarball=$(P).tar.bz2
install_dir=$(DESTDIR)/$(appdir)/$(APP_NAME)
all:
clean:
rm -rf $(tarball) $(P)
dist: $(tarball)
install:
mkdir -p "$(install_dir)"
cp -a $(APP_DIST) "$(install_dir)"
$(tarball): $(DISTFILES)
rm -rf $(P)
mkdir -p $(P)
cp $(DISTFILES) $(P)
$(TAR) -jcf $@ $(P)
rm -rf $(P)
# target that creates a tar package, unpacks is and install from package
dist-install: $(tarball)
$(TAR) -jxf $(tarball)
$(MAKE) -C $(P) install DESTDIR=$(DESTDIR)
rm -rf $(P)
include config.mk
.PHONY: all clean dist install dist-install
Remark: Should you create additional view files for example, don't forget to place their names in Makefile under APP_DIST otherwise they will not be installed later on and your application will fail with an error message.
config.mk:
For use with the Makefile. Just copy/paste it. We will look at it later.
prefix=/usr
datadir=${prefix}/share
sysconfdir=${prefix}/etc
localstatedir=${prefix}/var
acfdir=${datadir}/acf
wwwdir=${acfdir}/www
cgibindir=${acfdir}/cgi-bin
appdir=${acfdir}/app
acflibdir=${acfdir}/lib
sessionsdir=${localstatedir}/lib/acf/sessions