Development best practices
Introduction
This document provides the best practices to keep in mind when developing Jahia modules on Jahia. These tips will help developers minimize errors, optimize performance, and improve code reusability.
Templates
A template is a specific type of Jahia module, which provides pages and content templates to a Jahia site. Templates can be used to do the following:
- Create specific areas to allow editors/contributors to add content
- Load resources needed by a page (CSS, Javascript)
- Define common reusable elements on a page (example : navigation menu)
During page rendering, the content (which are nodes under a page) and the elements defined on the templates, are merged to provide the page.
Modules
A module is a package which contains resources (JSP, CSS, Javascript, Drools rules, Java code, …) and components. Modules are the primary way of adding new functionalities to Digital Experience manager. Modules are like Jahia "plugins" that provide a way to add new features and functionalities.
Components
A component (functional equivalent to "node type") is a content which can be instantiate within a template or a site.
Components can be associated to view(s) in order to be displayed (example : news component, navigation menu component, rich text component). They can have properties or even complex data structure, and they can be associated to Jahia advanced mechanisms (filters, actions, rules, …)
Development best practices
Naming conventions
Namespaces
The "Compact Namespace and Node type Definition" (CND
) gives us a simple syntax for defining node types and declare namespaces regrouping them.
Declaration of a namespace and a node type example :
/* An example node type definition */
// The namespace declaration
<ns = 'http://namespace.com/ns'>
// Node type name [ns:nodeType]
As the name of a node type is unique, namespaces protect against name conflicts which could occurs if you have several modules installed on your Jahia. We suggest to reproduce Jahia’s schema by having two namespaces by project :
- One related to primary node types (example :
<jnt=’http://www.jahia.org/jahia/nt/1.0’>
) - One related to mixin node types (example :
<jmix=’http://www.jahia.org/jahia/mix/1.0’>
)
But you could also multiply namespaces for categorizing components or for avoiding conflicts between two developers team working on a same Jahia instance.
Modules
It is impossible to deploy two modules having the same name. To avoid this kind of conflict, we recommend to prefix all modules of a project by a common key referring to the project (example : "aelb-intranet-template, aelb-intranet-components").
Module versioning
Modules are usually created as Maven projects. Maven is more flexible and permissive w.r.t. to the format of the version (major version number, minor version number, incremental version number, build number and qualifier) compared to OGSi container (a Maven project for a module produces an OSGi bundle, which is deployed to Jahia). The OSGi version scheme is more restrictive. Details can be found in the section "3.2.5 Version" of the OSGi Core Release 6 Specification or in the JavaDocs of the Version class.
An OSGi bundle version is following the rule:
version ::= major( '.' minor ( '.' micro ( '.' qualifier )? )? )?
major ::= number
minor ::= number
micro ::= number
qualifier ::= ( alphanum | '_' | '-' )+
Thus, a Maven project versions will look in OSGi as follows
1.2 -> 1.2.0 (version is automatically extended to 3-digit version)
1.2.0-SNAPSHOT -> 1.2.0.SNAPSHOT (here, the 'SNAPSHOT' becomes a qualifier)
1.2-b1 -> 1.2.0.b1 (version is automatically extended to 3-digit version and 'b1' becomes a qualifier)
7.2.3.0-SNAPSHOT -> 7.2.3.0-SNAPSHOT (here, the version is automatically reduced to 3-digit (7.2.3) and the '0-SNAPSHOT' becomes a qualifier)
Jahia includes REST API endpoints and scripts to perform module deployment and management operations, including retrieving module/bundle state information. Those endpoints operate on an OSGi-version of a corresponding module.
This means, if you have a moduleA, which has a Maven project version 1.0-SNAPSHOT (and thus the 1.0.0.SNAPSHOT version in OSGi "world"), then an operation to start such a module using REST API would be:
curl -s --user root:root1234 --data --request POST http://localhost:8080/modules/api/bundles/org.jahia.modules/moduleA/1.0.0.SNAPSHOT/_start
Please, consider this versioning aspects when planning and organizing your module project development and deployment.
Components
Regarding components droppable/usable by contributors, Jahia provides a set of categories for classifying them (example : "Basic content", "Advanced content", "Form content", …).
You can use existing categories or add new ones for your project. To do so, create a mixin inheriting of "jmix:droppableContent
" :
[namespace:nomDeLaCategorie] > jmix:droppableContent mixin
Creating components
Properties manipulation
Displaying a property
When you want to display a property which is not mandatory, it is usually recommended to first check if this property has a value, for avoiding to open empty HTML elements :
<c:set var="textProp" value="${currentNode.properties.text}"/>
<c:if test="${not empty textProp}">
<div>${textProp.string}</div>
</c:if>
Displaying properties from another node
When the view of a component should display properties from another node (example : list displaying children elements, display of a weakreference, …), the following code, displaying directly other node’s properties, should be avoid :
<h2>${currentNode.properties['jcr:title'].string}</h2>
<h3>Company</h3>
${currentNode.properties.AnotherNode.node.properties['jcr:title'].st ring}
A direct manipulation of another node property will lead to cache issue.
In this case, the view should delegate the rendering of these properties directly to the other node. If the other node has no view, we should add one. Then in our first view, instead of displaying directly these properties, we ask the other node to display itself :
<h2>${currentNode.properties['jcr:title'].string}</h2>
<h3>Company</h3>
<template:module node="${currentNode.properties.AnotherNode.node}" view="hidden.nameOfTheView" />
Where the view "hidden.nameOfTheView" is defined like this :
${currentNode.properties['jcr:title'].string}
Another possibility is to continue displaying directly the other node’s property, but you then need to add a cache dependency toward this node. In many cases this solution is more costly than delegating the rendering. If the other node is modified, you will have to render entirely the view of your component, instead of just the part related to the other node.
Title property
Several editorial components need a property title. Instead of defining a new string property, the best practice is to inherit the mixin "mix:title", which directly provide a property named "jcr:title" :
[nt:editorialComponent] > jnt:content, mix:title
- image (weakreference, picker[type='image'])
This way, a reference will be created between your component’s title and the system-name of its instantiation. The system-name will then have more meaning, while exploring the repository (or creating weakreferences), giving the editor a better experience than the default system-names.
If you wish to display the title coming from "mix:title" mixin, you could do it this way :
<h2>${currentNode.properties['jcr:title'].string}</h2>
Display an image child node
When a component has a weakreference property of type image, instead of directly displaying the image, it is possible to use the native Jahia view (imageReference.jsp) this way :
<c:if test="${not empty imageProperty}">
<template:module node="${imageProperty.node}" editable="false"/>
</c:if>
It will :
- Be faster for the developer
- Handle automatically "alt" attribute of the image with the description field of this node (if editor/contributor filled it)
- Automatically add width and height attributes, using the size of the image, for saving space for the image in the page (which will avoid resizing of the page during page loading)
- Handle correctly cache for the image, without having to add a cache dependency
Drawback :
- If new attributes have to be handled (CSS class for instance), you will not be able to use the native view. In this case, you have to handle manually the display, or you can add a new view to imageReference
Handling URLs
When handling URL (example : displaying an internal link toward another node or a resource), it is important to use the taglib c:url. This mechanism allows Jahia to perform rewriting rules for preview/live mode, and it also enable Vanity URLs.
<%@ taglib prefix="c" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core" %>
<c:url value="/images/image.png context="${url.currentModule}"/>
Externalizing properties
Every module natively provides a file ".properties", you can find in src/main/resources/resources, and initialy named "nameOfTheModule.properties
".
These properties files are used to save key/value parameters.
Key unicity
When resolving a value contained in a properties file, Jahia search for the key in all the properties files contained in deployed modules. It is important to ensure unicity for your keys.
To do so, you can prefix your key by the name of the component using it :
nt_nameOfTheComponent.label.key = Bla bla
Property/component name
By default, the name of your component and properties is not really "friendly" for editors/contributors. We recommend providing a label for your properties, to be displayed in the back-office while creating/modifying content.
In order to do so, you have to follow a naming convention for your labels :
- For component, the key is :
namespace_nameOfTheComponent
- For a property, the key is :
namespace_nameOfTheComponent.nameOfTheProperty
Example, for the following component :
[nt:editorialComponent] > jnt:content, mix:title
- image (weakreference, picker[type='image'])
Here are the keys to define for having friendlier labels :
nt_editorialComponent = Editorial component
nt_editorialComponent.image = Visual content
Labels in views (JSP)
Hardcoded labels should be avoided in JSP for several reasons (no possible internationalization, no reutilisation, …). In this case, properties files could be used to provide labels.
To do so, first you need to declare a new entry in your properties file, example :
nt_editorialComponent.label.author = Author
Then, inside your JSP, you can retrieve the value behind the key, using the taglib fmt :
<%@ taglib prefix="fmt" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/fmt"%>
...
<fmt:message key="nt_editorialComponent.label.author" />
Internationalization
You can add as many .properties files as you wish/need, as you can have a .properties file for every needed locale.
Create a new .properties file, in the same folder, for every handled locale, by naming it this way :
nameOfTheModule.properties
: default file used as a fallback or when the user has no locale specifiednameOfTheModule_de.properties
: file used for German usersnameOfTheModule_en.properties
: file used for English usersnameOfTheModule_fr.properties
: file used for French users- …
Cache
General rules
When a cache issue is raised on a component or a view, developers tend to deactivate cache on this component. This could be legitimate in a very few cases, but normally the cache should never be totally deactivate. Only a few cases could lead to deactivation :
- Displaying data from an external source (Webapp, RSS, external API, …) with a strong constraint on having no out-dated data
- Displaying data on which you cannot add a cache dependency, with a strong constraint on having no out-dated data
Even in such cases, we strongly recommend not to deactivate cache, but instead, having a lower time to live cache configuration (a few minutes for instance).
If you have no other choice, and you have to deactivate the cache for a component, you may consider having to deactivate it on only a small part of the JSP. To do so, you have to provide two views for your component :
- A view displaying only the not cacheable data : this view will have no cache
- A view displaying the rest of the component, and performing a template:include of the first view
Example : given a component having a title, a description and displaying data coming from an external Webapp, we will create two views :
- viewA : performs the call to the Webapp, and displays its data
- viewB : display title and description, and include the viewA
View B :
<c:set var="title" value="${currentNode.properties['jcr:title']}"/>
<c:set var="description" value="${currentNode.properties['description']}"/>
<c:if test="${not empty title}">
<h2>${title.string}</h2>
</c:if>
<c:if test="${not empty description}">
<span class="description">${description.string}</span>
</c:if>
<%-- Including the view fetching and displaying external data --%>
<template:include view="viewA"/>
Testing in live mode
In preview mode and editing interfaces, cache is not being handled. One common mistake is to test your components only in preview mode, avoiding cache issues.
It is imperative to test the rendering of your components directly in live mode.
Permissions
When using "root" user, permissions are never being checked. If the rendering of one your views is based on a permission check, you must test it with a non root user.
Loggers
Jahia uses log4j logging framework via slf4j. It is recommended to use logger inside your Java classes (and eventually your Drools rules and Groovy scripts), logging at least information which could be used for debugging.
By example, if you expose a REST action requiring input POST parameters, it could be interesting to log at least :
- In debug level, input values
- If a mandatory parameter is missing, in warning level, a message specifying the missing parameter
Using a logger in a Java class
How-to define a logger in your Java class :
import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
...
private static final Logger LOG = LoggerFactory.getLogger(NomDeVotreClasseJava.class);
Using the logger :
// Will display a log if log level is set to info or superior LOG.info(This is a info level log);
// Will display a log if log level is set to warning or superior LOG.warn(This is a warning level log);
// Will display a log if log level is set to debug or superior LOG.debug(This is a debug level log);
// Will display a log if log level is set to error or superior LOG.error(This is an error level log);
Using a logger in a Drools rule
When defining a new Drools rule in a .drl file, it is possible to directly use Java for creating and using a logger.
A logger set to info level is provided by default, a Drools consequence is provided by Jahia for this purpose :
[consequence][]Log {message}= logger.info({message});
Using this logger could then be done this way :
rule "Import file" salience 50
when
A new node is created The node has a parent
- it has the extension type jnt:importDropBox
then
Import the node
Log "Import file fired for node " + node.getPath()
end
Using a logger in a Groovy script
It is possible to execute Groovy scripts from different ways :
- Directly in the Groovy Console :
/tools/jcrConsole.jsp
- By putting the script directly in the folder
/digital-factory-data/patches/groovy
. By doing so, scripts could be executed at the startup of Jahia, when the JCR is ready but before allowing users to perform modifications on it, or directly when the script is dropped in the folder
When executing groovy scripts, a logger is automatically instantiated and can be used this way :
...
log.info(Will be logged when executing my groovy script)
...
Modifying log levels for debugging
For debug purposes, sometimes it is interesting to change log levels for a class or a package. Instead of modifying the log4j2.xml (/WEB-INF/etc/config/log4j2.xml
) it is possible to override the configuration directly from the tools administration.
This overriding is temporary, the configuration from the log4j2.xml file will be reapplied at the next Jahia startup.
To modify loggers configuration from the tools, go on this page : /tools/log4jAdmin.jsp
Code mutualization
As much as possible it is important to mutualize code, for various reasons (time saving, improved maintainability, …).
This mutualization could and must be done on several levels.
Mutualization between modules
When components are being used by different projects (for instance, two different sites of a customer, such as an intranet and an extranet), we recommend creating a new "transversal" module defining these components.
It is especially true when exposing Actions, Java API or taglibs.
This way, two sites could use this module, without having to have the other project’s components.
NB : if this need is identified lately in a project, moving components from a module to another one could be difficult and costly, especially if these components have already been instantiated on a site
Node type definitions
If your module uses node types or mixins from another module (say from a module-with-common-definitions
), it is recommended to include an explicit dependency to that module using Jahia-Depends
manifest header, which could be done by including the following property into your module's pom.xml
file:
<properties>
<jahia-depends>module-with-common-definitions</jahia-depends>
...
</properties>
Java resources
If you have Java classes/packages being mutualized, two manipulations have to be performed for allowing theses classes to be used in another module :
- An export package of these classes in the pom.xml of the transversal module
- In the other module, add a dependency toward the transversal module in its pom.xml
Example of an export package in the pom.xml of the module exposing Java classes :
<build>
<plugins>
...
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.felix</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-bundle-plugin</artifactId>
<extensions>true</extensions>
<configuration>
<instructions>
<Jahia-Module-Type>module</Jahia-Module-Type>
<Jahia-Depends>default</Jahia-Depends>
<Export-Package>org.jahia....tag</Export-Package>
</instructions>
</configuration>
</plugin>
...
</plugins>
</build>
Example of dependency in the pom.xml of the other module :
<dependencies>
...
<dependency>
<groupId>groupIDOfTransversalModule</groupId>
<artifactId>artifactIDOfTransversalModule</artifactId>
<version>2.5.0</version>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
...
</dependencies>
...
<build>
<plugins>
...
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.felix</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-bundle-plugin</artifactId>
<extensions>true</extensions>
<configuration>
<instructions>
<Jahia-Module-Type>module</Jahia-Module-Type>
<Jahia-Depends>default,artifactIDOfTransversalModule </Jahia-Depends>
</instructions>
</configuration>
</plugin>
...
</plugins>
</build>
Mutualization between JSP
When you have common code across several JSP, it is recommended to sort this common code in a transverse JSP. Regarding the context, it could be done differently.
Common code across views of a component
When you have common code across several views of a same component, the easiest way to proceed is to create a new view hidden.
Then you just have to perform a template:include where the code is needed, eventually sending to the view some parameters :
Example of a view using an include :
...
<%-- Including the hidden view --%>
<template:include view="hidden.nameOfMyView">
<%-- We could send parameters to the view --%>
<template:param name="parameter1" value="${variable}"/>
</template:include>
...
Where the view "hidden.nameOfMyView
" will display the code to be mutualized. If needed, you can get parameters this way :
${currentResource.moduleParams.parameter1}
Common code across several components
When several components have common code, you could mutualize this code by creating a mixin having a view with this code.
After this, you have to modify your components, adding them inheritance with this mixin. Then you can include the view directly.
Definitions example :
[mix:commonBehavior] mixin
[nt:componentA] > jnt:content, mix: commonBehavior
- field1 (string, richtext) i18n mandatory
- field2 (weakreference, picker[type='image'])
- ...
[nt:componentB] > jnt:content, mix: commonBehavior
- field1 (string) i18n mandatory
Include of the view example :
<template:include view=nameOfTheViewOfCommonBehaviorMixin />