Create plugins
How to create a Kimai plugin
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A Kimai plugin is from a technical perspective only a Symfony bundle, with some minor modifications.
Within the external communication it is called plugin instead of bundle, as this is the wording most users know.
Kimai plugins are stored in var/plugins/
, for example var/plugins/YourBundle/
.
The contents in var/plugins/*
are listed in the .gitignore file to prevent update problems.
Plugin management (install, uninstall & deactivate)
Read the chapter Plugin management.
Kimai plugins vs. pure Symfony bundles
The reason for using a slightly different approach than the proposed Symfony way is the recommended way to install and update Kimai with Git and Composer.
If you would install a bundle using composer, you would end up with a “dirty git status” and run
into problems when performing the next update (with changes in: bundles.php
, composer.json
, composer.lock
, symfony.lock
).
The application Kernel was slightly modified to allow dynamic plugin and route loading, to prevent this from happening.
There are some differences to Symfony bundles, which were added to prevent problems during core updates:
- Kimai plugins are stored in
var/plugins/
instead ofvendor/
- Kimai plugins are loaded automatically in each environment (no need to modify
config/bundles.php
) - Routes are automatically loaded with the search pattern:
var/plugins/YourBundle/Resources/config/routes.{php,xml,yaml,yml}
- Your Bundle class needs to be namespaced with the vendor segment
KimaiPlugin
- Your Bundle must implement
App\Plugin\PluginInterface
The namespace is pre-registered in composer with the vendor segment locked to KimaiPlugin
,
pointing to var/plugins/
to prevent that users have to dump a new autoloader after installing a plugin.
Directory structure
The minimal directory structure must look like this:
var/plugins/YourBundle
├── DependencyInjection
│ └── YourExtension.php
├── Resources
│ └── config
│ └── services.yaml
├── YourBundle.php
├── composer.json
└ ... more files and directories follow here ...
Even though its called plugin in Kimai, the namespace and classes still need to follow the official Symfony bundle naming conventions.
YourBundle.php
namespace KimaiPlugin\YourBundle;
use App\Plugin\PluginInterface;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Bundle\Bundle;
class YourBundle extends Bundle implements PluginInterface
{
}
DependencyInjection/YourExtension.php
namespace KimaiPlugin\YourBundle\DependencyInjection;
use Symfony\Component\Config\FileLocator;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader;
use Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\DependencyInjection\Extension;
class YourExtension extends Extension
{
public function load(array $configs, ContainerBuilder $container)
{
$loader = new Loader\YamlFileLoader(
$container,
new FileLocator(__DIR__ . '/../Resources/config')
);
$loader->load('services.yaml');
}
}
Resources/config/services.yaml
services:
_defaults:
autowire: true
autoconfigure: true
public: false
bind:
KimaiPlugin\YourBundle\:
resource: '../../*'
exclude: '../../{Resources}'
composer.json
Your plugin needs to ship a composer.json, even if it is not used for installation. Kimai will read values from it for extended information in the plugins admin panel.
A minimal composer.json
could look like this:
{
"name": "foo/your-bundle",
"description": "A Kimai 2 demo plugin which does nothing",
"homepage": "https://www.kimai.org/",
"type": "kimai-plugin",
"version": "0.1",
"license": "MIT",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kevin Papst",
"email": "kpapst@gmx.net",
"homepage": "https://www.kimai.org"
}
],
"extra": {
"kimai": {
"require": "1.3",
"name": "YourBundle"
}
}
}
The type
(kimai-plugin)is required for proper installation if composer is used.
The homepage
will be used for a backlink in the plugin admin panel.
The version
will be shown in the plugin admin panel.
The values in the extra.kimai
section are used for:
require
- the required (minimal) Kimai which is needed for this pluginname
- the name of the plugin, used as target directory name of your bundle
Data storage
When your plugin wants to store files, don’t use your plugin directory or concat the directory yourself, but
use the ServiceContainer parameter %kimai.data_dir%
. This is currently pointing to var/data/
and also protected
from the above-mentioned update problems via .gitignore.
As this could change in the future, always inject the data directory instead of finding a place yourself:
services:
KimaiPlugin\YourBundle\MyController:
arguments:
$dataDirectory: "%kimai.data_dir%"
There is another parameter called %kimai.plugin_dir%
, which is pointing to the base directory of all plugins.
Example plugin
There is an official demo bundle which has many code examples for extension points.
You can also have a look at the CustomCSSBundle which serves as bundle demo:
- A bundle with an extension to load service definitions
- Additional routes
- An admin controller with form usage, flash messages and an additional view
- EventSubscriber to extend the navigation
- Translations
- Data storage in
%kimai.data_dir%
List your plugin
If you created a plugin or any other kind of software around Kimai which you want to see listed in the Store, head over to the documentation to find out how.
Links
- Check out the Store to find out more free plugins for code demonstrations
- Read the Symfony bundle documentation if this is your first time writing a Symfony bundle