ℹ️ This project is a fork of the official and abandoned CKFinder Symfony Bundle.
This bundle is fully compatible with Symfony 6.0 and more (Symfony 3 and 4 have been removed, see branch
1.x
for Symfony 5.4 support), compatible with PHP 8.1+, Flysystem 3+, and use many tools to ensure the code quality (PHPUnit, Easy Coding Standard and Rector) with a functional CI.
-
Add Composer dependency and install the bundle.
composer require kocal/ckfinder-symfony-bundle
-
Run the command to download the CKFinder distribution package.
After installing the bundle you need to download CKFinder distribution package. It is not shipped with the bundle due to different license terms. To install it, run the following Symfony command:
php bin/console ckfinder:download
It will download the code and place it in the
Resource/public
directory of the bundle. After that you may also want to install assets, so the public directory will be updated with CKFinder code.php bin/console assets:install
-
Enable bundle routing.
Create
config/routes/ckfinder.yaml
with following contents:# config/routes/ckfinder.yaml ckfinder_connector: resource: "@CKSourceCKFinderBundle/Resources/config/routing.yaml" prefix: /
-
Create a directory for CKFinder files and allow for write access to it. By default CKFinder expects it to be placed in
<public folder>/userfiles
(this can be altered in configuration).mkdir -m 777 public/userfiles
NOTE: Since usually setting permissions to 0777 is insecure, it is advisable to change the group ownership of the directory to the same user as Apache and add group write permissions instead. Please contact your system administrator in case of any doubts.
At this point you should see the connector JSON response after navigating to the /ckfinder/connector?command=Init
route.
Authentication for CKFinder is not configured yet, so you will see an error response saying that CKFinder is not enabled.
CKFinder connector authentication is managed by the ckfinder.connector.auth
service, which by default is defined in
the CKSourceCKFinderBundle\Authentication\Authentication
class. It contains the authenticate
method that should return a Boolean value to decide if the user should have access to CKFinder.
As you can see the default service implementation is not complete and simply returns false
inside the authenticate
method,
but you can find it useful as a starting stub code.
To configure authentication for the CKFinder connector you need to create a class that implements CKSource\Bundle\CKFinderBundle\Authentication\AuthenticationInterface
,
and point the CKFinder connector to use it.
A basic implementation that returns true
from the authenticate
method (which is obviously not secure) can look like below:
Symfony 5+
// src/CustomCKFinderAuth/CustomCKFinderAuth.php
namespace App\CustomCKFinderAuth;
use CKSource\Bundle\CKFinderBundle\Authentication\Authentication as AuthenticationBase;
class CustomCKFinderAuth extends AuthenticationBase
{
public function authenticate()
{
return true;
}
}
You may have noticed that AuthenticationInterface
extends ContainerAwareInterface
, so you have access to the service
container from the authentication class scope.
When your custom authentication is ready, you need to tell the CKFinder connector to start using it. To do that add the following option to your configuration:
Symfony 5+
Create config/packages/ckfinder.yaml
file:
# config/packages/ckfinder.yaml
ckfinder:
connector:
authenticationClass: App\CustomCKFinderAuth\CustomCKFinderAuth
The default CKFinder connector configuration is taken from the @CKSourceCKFinder/Resources/config/ckfinder_config.php
file.
Thanks to the Symfony configuration merging mechanism there are multiple ways you can overwrite it. The default configuration
is provided in form of a regular PHP file, but you can use the format you prefer (YAML, XML) as long as the structure is valid.
The simplest way to overwrite the default configuration is copying the ckfinder_config.php
file to your application config
directory, and then importing it in the main configuration file:
Symfony 5+
# config/packages/ckfinder.yaml
imports:
- { resource: ckfinder_config.php }
...
From now all connector configuration options will be taken from copied ckfinder_config.php
.
Another way to configure CKFinder is to include required options under the ckfinder
node, directly in your config file.
Symfony 5+
# config/packages/ckfinder.yaml
ckfinder:
connector:
licenseName: LICENSE-NAME
licenseKey: LICENSE-KEY
authenticationClass: AppBundle\CustomCKFinderAuth\CustomCKFinderAuth
resourceTypes:
MyResource:
name: MyResource
backend: default
directory: myResource
Note: All options that are not defined will be taken from the default configuration file.
To find out more about possible connector configuration options please refer to CKFinder 3 – PHP Connector Documentation.
The CKFinder bundle provides two extra options:
authenticationClass
– the name of the CKFinder authentication service class (defaults toCKSource\Bundle\CKFinderBundle\Authentication\Authentication
)connectorClass
– the name of the CKFinder connector service class (defaults toCKSource\CKFinder\CKFinder
)
The bundle code contains a few usage examples that you may find useful. To enable them uncomment the ckfinder_examples
route in @CKSourceCKFinder/Resources/config/routing.yaml
:
ckfinder_examples:
pattern: /ckfinder/examples/{example}
defaults: { _controller: CKSource\Bundle\CKFinderBundle\Controller::examplesAction, example: null }
After that you can navigate to the /ckfinder/examples
path and have a look at the list of available examples. To find out about the code behind them, check the CKFinderController
class (CKSourceCKFinderBundle::Controller/CKFinderController.php
).
The preferred way to include ckfinder.js
in a template is including the CKFinder setup template, like presented below:
{% include "@CKSourceCKFinder/setup.html.twig" %}
The included template renders the required script
tags and configures a valid connector path.
<script type="text/javascript" src="/bundles/cksourceckfinder/ckfinder/ckfinder.js"></script>
<script>CKFinder.config( { connectorPath: '/ckfinder/connector' } );</script>
The bundle registers a form field type — CKFinderFileChooserType
— that allows for easy integration of CKFinder as a file chooser in your forms.
After choosing the file in CKFinder the corresponding input field is automaticaly filled with the file URL. You can see a working example under the /ckfinder/examples/filechooser
path.
The file chooser field is built on top of the regular text
type, so it inherits all configuration options. It also provides a few custom options:
Name | Type | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
mode |
string |
popup |
Mode in which CKFinder will be opened after clicking the "Browse" button. Allowed values are modal and popup . |
button_text |
string |
Browse |
The text displayed in the button. |
button_attr |
array |
[] |
Attributes for the button element. |
A simple usage example may look like below:
$form = $this
->createFormBuilder()
->add('file_chooser1', CKFinderFileChooserType::class, [
'label' => 'Photo',
'button_text' => 'Browse photos',
'button_attr' => [
'class' => 'my-fancy-class'
]
])
->getForm();
Note: To use CKFinder file chooser in your forms you still need to include the main CKFinder JavaScript file in your template (see Including the main CKFinder JavaScript file in templates).