This document discusses customizing the admin interface generated by Broadleaf Commerce's Open Admin platform using Java annotations. It provides examples of annotations that configure fields, collections, lookups, enumerations, validation, and security permissions. The annotations can customize labels, ordering, field types, validation rules, collection behaviors, and security at both the entity and row level. The document also describes mechanisms for overriding annotations through XML or by extending entity classes.
3. 3
Customizing the Broadleaf Admin …
Overview
Annotations
– Basics
– Supported Field Types
– Broadleaf Enumerations
– Lookup Fields
– Collection Types
– Help, Tooltips
– Validation Support
– Overriding Annotations
Other Topics
• Security Model
• Persistence API View Layer
4. 4
Broadleaf Open Admin
• Why?
– Broadleaf Commerce
broadleaf-admin-module vs broadleaf-open-admin-platform
– Extensible and generic at every level (frontend, backend, controller)
• Open Admin frontend history
– Open Admin v1 – Adobe Flex (~2010)
– Open Admin v2 – GWT (~2011)
– Open Admin v3 (current) – Spring MVC + Thymeleaf (~2013)
5. 5
Admin Customizations … Overview …
Open Admin Benefits
• Quickly build and modify CRUD screens using metadata
• Rich, extensible security model
• Easy customizations are easy
– Hide / show fields
– Change labels, field ordering, and grouping
– Adding new managed fields and managed entities
– Add new actions, menu items, validations
7. 7
Admin Customizations … Annotation Basics …
Let’s start by looking at some basic annotations …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
No annotations on
firstName field …
Results in no input field
on the customer form.
8. 8
Admin Customizations … Annotation Basics …
Next, let’s add in an empty “AdminPresentation”
annotation …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation()
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
Added @AdminPresentation
annotation
Field was added to the
form using the property
name in the default
“group” on the default
“tab”
9. 9
Admin Customizations … Annotation Basics …
Add a “friendlyName” to fix the label …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(friendlyName = “First Name”)
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
Added friendlyName …
Label is now “First
Name”
Note:
Broadleaf attempts to resolve
the friendlyName from a messages
file to allow for i18n labels.
10. 10
Admin Customizations … Annotation Basics …
Finally, let’s position the field just before the Last
Name field on the form …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(
friendlyName = “First Name”,
order = 2000,
group = “Customer”
) protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
That’s what we want!
Why 2,000 for the order?
We looked at the emailAddress and
lastName properties in
CustomerImpl.java whose orders were
set to 1,000 and 3,000 and chose a
number in between the two.
We could have used 1,001 or 2,999.
Added “order” and
“group”
11. 11
Admin Customizations … Annotation Basics …
You can also annotate fields to show up on the
Admin list grids …
List Grid Before
And After …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(
friendlyName = “First Name”,
prominent = true,
gridOrder = “2000”
) protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
“prominent=true” means show
on list grids
13. 13
Admin Customizations … Supported Field Types …
The admin has support for common field types …
Related Entity LookupsMoney Fields
Radio Selectors
Drop Down Selectors
Date Fields
Media LookupsBoolean Fields
14. 14
Admin Customizations … Supported Field Types …
Supported Field Types (cont.)
• For simple types, the supported field type is derived from the property
type (String, Integer, Date, etc.)
• Other field types require configuration and additional annotations.
We’ll cover some of those on the upcoming slides …
• For a complete list of supported field types, see
SupportedFieldType.java
16. public class OfferDiscountType implements BroadleafEnumerationType {
private static final Map<String, OfferDiscountType> TYPES =
new LinkedHashMap<String, OfferDiscountType>();
public static final OfferDiscountType PERCENT_OFF =
new OfferDiscountType("PERCENT_OFF", "Percent Off");
public static final OfferDiscountType AMOUNT_OFF =
new OfferDiscountType("AMOUNT_OFF", "Amount Off");
public static final OfferDiscountType FIX_PRICE =
new OfferDiscountType("FIX_PRICE", "Fixed Price");
public static OfferDiscountType getInstance(final String type) {
return TYPES.get(type);
}
16
Admin Customizations … Broadleaf Enumerations …
Broadleaf provides support for extensible
enumerations
A Broadleaf Enumeration
– Is used for many of the radio and drop-down selection lists in the admin
– Allows the framework to provide enum like functionality in a way that can
be extended by custom implementations
Example
17. 17
Admin Customizations … Broadleaf Enumerations …
You can use an enumeration for String types
@Column(name = "OFFER_DISCOUNT_TYPE")
@AdminPresentation(
friendlyName = ”Discount Type”,
fieldType=SupportedFieldType.BROADLEAF_ENUMERATION,
broadleafEnumeration=”org...OfferDiscountType")
protected String type;
public OfferDiscountType getDiscountType() {
return OfferDiscountType.getInstance(type);
}
public void setDiscountType(OfferDiscountType type) {
this.type = type.getType();
}
Example from OfferImpl.java
Getters and setters return
the enumeration type
Specify the enumeration
type and the class
Produces This …
By default, if less than 5
options, a radio is displayed.
Otherwise the system shows a
dropdown selector.
18. 18
Admin Customizations … Broadleaf Enumerations …
Broadleaf also provides support for “data-driven”
enumerations
• Allow selection values in the admin to come from a database table
• Allows system to add new values without a deployment
• Used with the @AdminPresentationDataDrivenEnumeration
annotation
• Values are stored in BLC_DATA_DRVN_ENUM and
BLC_DATA_DRVN_ENUM_VALUE tables
@Column(name = ”TAX_CODE")
@AdminPresentation(friendlyName = ”Tax Code”)
@AdminPresentationDataDrivenEnumeration(
optionFilterParams = {
@OptionFilterParam(
param = "type.key", value = "TAX_CODE",
paramType = OptionFilterParamType.STRING) })
Example from SkuImpl.java
20. Admin Customizations … Lookup Fields …
Adding a lookup to a JPA ManyToOne related fields
can be done with a simple annotation
@ManyToOne(targetEntity=CategoryImpl.class)
Column(name = ”DEFAULT_CATEGORY_ID”)
@AdminPresentation(friendlyName=‘Default Category’)
@AdminPresentationToOneLookup()
protected Category defaultCategory;
ProductImpl.java
Products have a category lookup
to set the default category.
Produces This Field … Click
lookup
Click here to show a popup with
a read view of the entity detail
21. 21
Admin Customizations … Lookup Fields …
Lookup fields can also show up on list grids …
When a lookup field (like defaultCategory) is marked as “prominent”,
additional features surface …
List grids can be filtered by the
corresponding related entity.
23. 23
Admin Customizations … Collections …
The admin supports a wide variety of grid
interactions with annotations …
Most @OneToMany and @ManyToMany JPA relationships can be
modeled as functional list grids in the admin with annotations …
Examples (we’ll cover each of these)
• Add items to a list
• Create items and then add to a list
• Add items to a “Map” collection where a key must also be provided
• Add items to a list with additional mapping attributes
24. 24
Admin Customizations … Collections … Product Options …
Adding product options to a product, shows an
example of choosing from a list of existing items
@ManyToMany(targetEntity = ProductOptionImpl.class)
@JoinTable(name=“BLC_PRODUCT_OPTION_XREF …)
@AdminPresentationCollection(
friendlyName = ”Product Options",
manyToField = "products”,
addType = AddMethodType.LOOKUP,
operationTypes = @AdminPresentationOperationTypes(
removeType = OperationType.NONDESTRUCTIVEREMOVE)
)
protected List<ProductOption> productOptions;
ProductImpl.java
Indicates that we will be
looking up existing values
instead of creating new ones
If the option is deleted from
the product, it will not also
attempt to delete the option
Hit
Add
25. 25
Admin Customizations … Collections … Product Options …
When adding offer codes to an offer, we want to
create the code first and then add it …
@OneToMany(targetEntity = OfferCodeImpl.class)
@AdminPresentationCollection(
friendlyName = ”Offer Codes”,
addType = AddMethodType.PERSIST)
protected List<OfferCode> offerCodes;
OfferImpl.java
Indicates that we will be
creating new “Offer Codes”
Hit
Add
26. 26
Admin Customizations … Collections … Product Attributes …
For Map collections like Product Attributes, we
need to also provide a key when adding the item …
@ManyToMany(targetEntity = ProductAttributeImpl.class)
@MapKey(name=“name”)
@AdminPresentationMap(
friendlyName = ”Product Attributes”,
deleteEntityOnRemove = true,
forceFreeFormKeys = true,
keyPropertyFriendlyName = “Key”
addType = AddMethodType.PERSIST)
protected Map<String, ProductAttribute>;
ProductImpl.java
Map properties introduce a few new
properties to control delete
behavior and how keys are
managed.
Hit
Add
27. 27
Admin Customizations … Collections … Category Media Map …
The Map used for Category Media uses a bit more
of the “Map” functionality …
@ManyToMany(targetEntity = MediaImpl.class)
@JoinTable(…)
@MapKeyColumn(name=“MAP_KEY”)
@AdminPresentationMap(
friendlyName = ”Media”,
deleteEntityOnRemove = true,
keyPropertyFriendlyName = “Key” ,
mediaField = “url”,
keys = {
@AdminPresentationMapKey(
keyName = “primary”),
@AdminPresentationMapKey(
keyName = “alt1”),
... })
protected Map<String, Media> categoryMedia;
CategorytImpl.java
Category media, shows an example
of explicitly defined Map keys.
Media
fields
Key
28. 28
Admin Customizations … Collections … Adorned Collections …
Some collections need additional properties as part
of the join … referred to as “adorned” collections
@OneToMany(targetEntity = FeaturedProductImpl.class)
@AdminPresentationAdornedTargetCollection (
friendlyName = ”Featured Products”,
targetObjectProperty = product,
maintainedAdornedTargetFields = {
“promotionMessage”})
protected List<FeaturedProduct> featuredProducts;
CategoryImpl.java
To add a featured product, we are
looking up the product and
providing values to additional fields
on the FeaturedProduct class.
Hit
Add
Select
Product
30. 30
Admin Customizations … Help and Tooltips …
You can add contextual help to fields in the admin …
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(
friendlyName = “First Name”,
helpText = "This is help text",
hint = "This is a hint.",
tooltip = "This is a tooltip.”
)
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
32. 32
Admin Customizations … Validation …
There are several approaches to adding validation
to fields managed in the admin …
Via @ValidationConfiguration Annotations
Broadleaf provides an admin annotation to add validations along with
several out-of-box implementations
Using JSR 303 Style Validations
Broadleaf can leverage Spring MVC JSR-303 validations
By adding validation logic in a Custom Persistence Handler
More on Custom Persistence Handlers later
33. 33
Admin Customizations … Validation … Required Fields …
A field can be marked as required via annotation
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(
requiredOverride = RequiredOverride.REQUIRED)
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
Result
Required fields are noted in the
admin with an asterisk.
Normally, required or not-required
is derived based on the database
column (e.g. non-null = required).
You can override this as shown.
34. 34
Admin Customizations … Validation … Example Annotation …
Example : Add a RegEx validator to customer
name
@Column(name = "FIRST_NAME")
@AdminPresentation(
validationConfigurations = {
@ValidationConfiguration(
validationImplementation=“blRegExPropertyValidator”,
configurationItems={
@ConfigurationItem(itemName="regularExpression", itemValue = "w+"),
@ConfigurationItem(itemName=ConfigurationItem.ERROR_MESSAGE,
itemValue = ”Only word chars are allowed.”)
}
)
protected String firstName;
CustomerImpl.java
Result
In this example, first name
must be valid for this Regular
Expression
35. 35
Admin Customizations … Validation … Custom Validators …
You can create custom admin validators …
To create a custom property validator, implement the PropertyValidator
interface …
public PropertyValidationResult validate(
Entity entity,
Serializable instance,
Map<String, FieldMetadata> entityFieldMetadata,
Map<String, String> validationConfiguration,
BasicFieldMetadata propertyMetadata,
String propertyName,
String value);
This interface looks a bit daunting but is easy to implement. See the
JavaDocs or just go straight to an out of box implementation like …
org.broadleafcommerce.openadmin.server.
service.persistence.validation.RegexPropertyValidator
36. 36
Admin Customizations … Validation … JSR 303 …
You can add support for JSR-303 validation by
modifying your application context
• Allows for @Email, @URL etc. from hibernate-validator
– Same structure as Spring MVC @Valid annotation
• Add two lines to applicationContext.xml to enable support for JSR-303
<bean id="blEntityValidatorService"
class="org.broadleafcommerce.openadmin.server.service.persistence.
validation.BeanValidationEntityValidatorServiceImpl" />
<bean class="org.springframework.validation.beanvalidation.
LocalValidatorFactoryBean" />
applicationContext.xml
37. Admin Customizations ... View Layer
Frontend Validation
BLCAdmin.addPreValidationSubmitHandler(function($form) {
// modify the form data prior to sending to the server
});
BLCAdmin.addValidationSubmitHandler(function($form) {
// return false to stop the form from submitting
});
BLCAdmin.addPostValidationSubmitHandler(function($form) {
// do work after receiving a response from the server
});
39. 39
Admin Customizations … Annotation Overrides …
Broadleaf provides two methods for overriding
annotations
• In the examples so far, the annotations changes were directly made as part
of the @AdminPresentation
• Since you cannot modify Broadleaf classes, additional mechanisms are
provided to allow you to override (or add to) the out of box annotations
• Method 1 : Override Using XML
- Add overrides to adminApplicationContext.xml
- Use the mo schema (see mo-3.0.xsd for info)
• Method 2 : Use the class level annotation
“@AdminPresentationMergeOverride”
- Convenient when extending a Broadleaf class
40. 40
Admin Customizations … Annotation Overrides … Using XML …
Override Using XML …
The example below makes the Customer firstName property required
and adds help text.
<mo:override id="blMetadataOverrides">
<mo:overrideItem ceilingEntity = "org.broadleafcommerce…Customer">
<mo:field name=“firstName”>
<mo:property name="requiredOverride” value="true"/>
<mo:property name="helpText" value="This is help text"/>
</mo:field>
</mo:overrideItem>
</mo:override>
applicationContext.xml
Get IDE auto-completion by updating your applicationContext-admin.xml file beans tag
to include …
• Update schemaLocations with
http://schema.broadleafcommerce.org/mo and
http://schema.broadleafcommerce.org/mo/mo-3.0.xsd
• Add the namespace … xmlns:mo="http://schema.broadleafcommerce.org/mo
41. 41
Admin Customizations … Annotation Overrides … Using Extended Class Annotation …
Override using Extended Class Annotation …
The example below makes the Customer firstName property required
and adds help text using annotations on a derived class
@AdminPresentationMergeOverrides(
{
@AdminPresentationMergeOverride(name = ”firstName", mergeEntries =
{
@AdminPresentationMergeEntry(
propertyType=PropertyType.AdminPresentation.REQUIREDOVERRIDE,
booleanOverrideValue = true)
@AdminPresentationMergeEntry(
propertyType=PropertyType.AdminPresentation.HELPTEXT,
overrideValue = “This is help text”)
}
}
)
public class MyCustomerImpl extends CustomerImpl {
MyCustomer.java
44. 44
Admin Customizations ... Admin Security
Security Model
• Entity-based permissions – permission to perform a CRUD operation
• If the admin user has no permissions in a particular section, that
section is not shown
• All permissions are rolled up into the Spring Security Principal’s
GrantedAuthorities
47. 47
Admin Customizations ... Admin Security
Row-level Security
• Finer-grained control over security on a particular row vs an entity type
as a whole
• Additional fetch criteria, readonly rows, prevent deletions of rows
• Javadocs for RowLevelSecurityProvider
@Component
public class ProductStoreRowSecurityProvider {
public void addFetchRestrictions(AdminUser currentUser,
String ceilingEntity,
List<Predicate> restrictions,
Root root,
CriteriaQuery criteria,
CriteriaBuilder criteriaBuilder) {
Store adminStore = ((MyAdminuser) currentUser).getStore();
Predicate storeRestriction = criteriaBuilder.equal(root.get("store"),
adminStore);
restrictions.add(storeRestriction);
}
48. 48
Admin Customizations ... Admin Security
Other security features
• CSRF protection
– Token automatically generated and checked
• XSS protection
– Turned off by default for CMS functionality
– OWASP AntiSamy
Example Broadleaf Myspace AntiSamy configuration file
<bean id="blExploitProtectionService"
class="org.broadleafcommerce.common.security.service.ExploitProtectionServiceImpl
">
<property name="xsrfProtectionEnabled”
value="true" />
<property name="xssProtectionEnabled”
value="false" />
<property name="antiSamyPolicyFileLocation”
value="the_location_of_your_file" />
</bean>
51. 51
Admin Customizations ... View Layer
Spring MVC
• AdminBasicEntityController
– Provides facilities for all CRUD operations
– Generic request mapping using path parameters
@RequestMapping("/{sectionKey:.+}")
– Custom controllers can override the request mapping with a specific URL
Generic Broadleaf admin controller
Specific customer controller (intercepts all methods to “/customer/”)…
@Controller("blAdminBasicEntityController")
@RequestMapping("/{sectionKey:.+}”)
public class AdminBasicEntityController extends AdminAbstractController {
...
}
@Controller
@RequestMapping("/customer”)
public class AdminCustomerController extends AdminBasicEntityController {
...
}
52. 52
Admin Customizations ... View Layer
Admin Template Overrides
• Thymeleaf template resolution (TemplateResolver)
– Create custom templates in /WEB-INF/templates/admin
– Add custom resolvers to the blAdminWebTemplateResolvers list bean
– Example – override all strings entity fields to always load an HTML editor
/WEB-INF/templates/admin/fields/string.html
classpath:open_admin_style/templates/fields/string.html
classpath:/common_style/templates/fields/string.html
<div th:include=“fields/string.html” th:remove=“tag” />
locate fields/string.html
could not find
could not find
53. 53
Admin Customizations ... View Layer
ListGrid
• Relationships (subgrids) as well as main grids
• Toolbar buttons
• ListGrid.Type
54. 54
Admin Customizations ... View Layer
HTML Fields
• WYSIWYG editor by Redactor
• Redactor has its own extensible plugin API
• Additional extensions and/or customizations should add an
initialization handler
All of the framework jars are versioned together
Your site includes the framework jars as well as 3rd-party addon modules
Addon modules utilize different framework functionalities