Skip to content

An open source frontend Framework for building admin applications running in the browser on top of REST, using ES6 and Vue.js

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Cambalab/vue-admin

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 

Repository files navigation

Vue-Admin logo

Vue-Admin is designed to let developers build frontend administration applications that run in the browser in a very easy way using Vue, Javascript and REST services.

Build Status Build Status Version License License

Introduction

We've been working a lot with other libraries that generate administration dashboards, routes, resources in other javascript frameworks, but did not find any Vue library capable of performing this kind of solution, except of many really impressive Vue libraries that provide UI components for admin dashboards. We are pretty convinced Vue's learning curve is gentle, so we thought we could try and build our own tool.

demo of the app running

About the library

Given a simple configuration to Vue-Admin components, this library connects your backend and interprets your services as frontend resources from which CRUD views are automatically created and associated with a route.
Vue-Admin also lets you create custom views to provide other kind of information to the site (measures, landings, etc).

Vue-Admin provides:

  • create, read, update and delete views for each declared resource.
  • customizable homepage.
  • navigation between views.
  • an authentication view
  • vuetify2 support

Dependencies and third party libraries

We assume your project ships the following dependencies:

  • vue-router: used to dynamically create routes and bind components to them. We also take advantage of some of the route hooks.
  • vuex: lets us globally share information between the core application and component customizations of a library user.
  • vuetify: we basically don't want to implement UI components from scratch, plus their widgets are awesome. The drawer, buttons, cards and CRUD views are implemented with Vuetify, but you could use any other UI framework if you want to build your own CRUD views. Take the magazines view as example.

Core Libaries vue-admin-js depends on:

  • vuex-crud: this lightweight tool creates the resources crud store state, mutations and getters for us.

Installation

# using npm
npm i --save vue-admin-js

Configuration

Auth Provider

You will have to configure an adapter to communicate with your REST api.

We currently provide a simple example using an axios client in the demo app. Though we intend to keep developing other kind of adapters for different node backend frameworks, they will live in separate packages.

Anyways, we hope the axios example encourages you to write your own adapter until we release the adapters guide. The @va-auth module uses the vuex store and expects a user to make use of the action types it provides.

Usage

App.vue

<template>
  <Admin :authProvider="authProvider">
    <Resource
      name="articles"
      resourceIdName="id"
      userPermissionsField="permissions"
      apiUrl="http://localhost:8888/api/"
    >
      <View slot="list"   :component="ListArticles"   :permissions="['admin']" />
      <View slot="show"   :component="ShowArticles"   :permissions="['admin']" />
      <View slot="create" :component="CreateArticles" :permissions="['admin']" />
      <View slot="edit"   :component="EditArticles" :isPublic="true" />
    </Resource>
  </Admin>
</template>

<script>
  import { Admin, Resource } from 'vue-admin-js'
  // Your components
  import ListArticles from './components/articles/ListArticles'
  import ShowArticles from './components/articles/ShowArticles'
  import CreateArticles from './components/articles/CreateArticles'
  import EditArticles from './components/articles/EditArticles'
  import createAxiosAdapter from './va-auth-adapter/axios.adapter'
  import axios from 'axios'

  const authUrl = 'http://localhost:8888/api/auth'
  const client = axios

  const authProvider = createAxiosAdapter(client, { authUrl })

  export default {
    name: 'App',
    components: {
      Admin,
      Resource
    },
    data() {
      return {
        authProvider,
        // Your Components
        ListArticles,
        ShowArticles,
        CreateArticles,
        EditArticles,
      }
    }
  }
</script>

ListArticles.vue

<template>
  <List>
    <p source="id" :sortable="true" headerText="ID" alignHeader="left" alignContent="left" />
    <h3 source="title" :sortable="true" headerText="Title" alignHeader="center" alignContent="left" />
    <p source="content" :sortable="true" headerText="Content" alignHeader="center" alignContent="right" />
  </List>
</template>

<script>
import { List } from 'vue-admin-js'

export default {
  name: 'ListArticles',
  components: {
    List
  }
}
</script>

Using your own custom authentication component

By default Vue-Admin provides a default authentication view, but you may desire to use your own custom view to authenticate. In that case, you just need to pass it as a property in the Admin component like the following.

Example of custom authentication component usage

  ...
  <Admin :authProvider="authProvider" :authLayout="AuthCustomView">
  ...

In order to use the available authentication mechanism you have to declare a prop with a va object field which will contain the bounded login function.

Example of provided login mechanism usage in custom auth component

  ...
  props: {
    va: {
      type: Object,
      required: true
    }
  },
  ...
  methods: {
    login() {
      this.va.login(this.username, this.password)
    }
  }
  ...

Examples

For a complete example take a look at the demo files

Some of the custom components examples can be found in the magazines views

Starting a new project

Using the official Vue cli

# install the official vue cli
npm install -g @vue/cli-init
# initialise the project
vue init webpack my-project
cd my-project
# install required dependencies
npm install --save vue-admin-js vue-router vuex vuex-crud vuetify
# run the project
npm run dev

...and start customizing your App.vue

Getting it running

To get vue-admin-js up and running we'll need two terminals: one for the frontend and another one simulating a backend.

Clone a vue-admin-js repository and open two terminals in the repository root.

git clone https://github.com/Cambalab/vue-admin.git
cd vue-admin

In the first terminal get the node development server running

# install the test server dependencies
cd utils/server-test && npm install
# run the server (we prefer to use the same port as Cypress server)
PORT=8888 node server

In the second terminal get the frontend application running

# make sure you're in the root of the project
npm install
npm run serve

Demo app credentials

User with admin permissions

username: dev@camba.coop
password: 123456

User with guest permissions

username: user@camba.coop
password: 123456

Scripts: tests, lint, build

We use the vue-cli-service to run tests, lint checking and the library build.

All of the above are used by the travis continuous integration.

unit tests

# in the root of the project run the unit tests script
npm run test:unit

end to end tests

# go to the root of the project to run the e2e tests script
# there's no need to run the test server, we use the Cypress server
npm run test:e2e

lint service

# zero tolerance for errors and warnings
npm run lint

build service

# the build is targeted as a library
npm run build

Contribution

Please make sure to read the Contributing Guide before making a pull request.

License

GNU General Public License version 3

๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ’ป with ๐Ÿ’š ๐Ÿ’œ โค๏ธ by cambรก.coop ๐ŸŒŽ Buenos Aires, Argentina