The menu management module is for creating custom menu structures when the site tree hierarchy just won't do.
Menu Manager is licensed under an MIT license
composer require heyday/silverstripe-menumanager
After completing this step, navigate in Terminal or similar to the SilverStripe
root directory and run composer install
or composer update
depending on
whether or not you have composer already in use.
There are 2 main steps to creating a menu using menu management.
- Create a new MenuSet
- Add MenuItems to that MenuSet
This is pretty straight forward. You just give the MenuSet a Name (which is what you reference in the templates when controlling the menu).
As it is common to reference MenuSets by name in templates, you can configure sets to be created automatically during the /dev/build task. These sets cannot be deleted through the CMS.
Heyday\MenuManager\MenuSet:
default_sets:
- Main
- Footer
Once you have saved your MenuSet you can add MenuItems.
MenuItems have 4 important fields:
- Page
- MenuTitle
- Link
- IsNewWindow
A page to associate your MenuItem with.
This field can be left blank if you link the menu item with a page. If not fill with the title you want to display in the template.
This field can be left blank unless you want to link to an external website. When left blank using $Link in templates will automatically pull the link from the MenuItems associated Page. If you enter a link in this field and then pick a Page as well the link will be overwritten by the Page you chose.
Can be used as a check to see if 'target="_blank"' should be added to links.
Sometimes the defined default_sets
are all the menu's a project needs. You can
disable the ability to create new Menu Sets in the CMS:
Heyday\MenuManager\MenuAdmin:
enable_cms_create: false
Note: Non-default Menu Sets can still be deleted, to help tidy unwanted CMS content.
<% loop $MenuSet('YourMenuName').MenuItems %>
<a href="{$Link}" class="{$LinkingMode}">{$MenuTitle}</a>
<% end_loop %>
To loop through all MenuSets and their items:
<% loop $MenuSets %>
<% loop $MenuItems %>
<a href="$Link" class="$LinkingMode">$MenuTitle</a>
<% end_loop %>
<% end_loop %>
Optionally you can also limit the number of MenuSets and MenuItems that are looped through.
The example below will fetch the top 4 MenuSets (as seen in Menu Management), and the top 5 MenuItems for each:
<% loop $MenuSets.Limit(4) %>
<% loop $MenuItems.Limit(5) %>
<a href="$Link" class="$LinkingMode">$MenuTitle</a>
<% end_loop %>
<% end_loop %>
Partial caching can be enabled with your menu to speed up rendering of your templates.
<% with $MenuSet('YourMenuName') %> <% cached 'YourMenuNameCacheKey',
$LastEdited, $MenuItems.max('LastEdited'), $MenuItems.count %> <% if $MenuItems
%>
<nav>
<% loop $MenuItems %>
<a href="{$Link}" class="{$LinkingMode}"> $MenuTitle.XML </a>
<% end_loop %>
</nav>
<% end_if %> <% end_cached %> <% end_with %>
By default menu sets cannot be sorted, however, you can set your configuration to allow it.
Heyday\MenuManager\MenuSet:
allow_sorting: true
If you're using SilverStripe Subsites, you can make MenuManager subsite aware via applying an extension to the MenuSet.
app/_config/menus.yml
Heyday\MenuManager\MenuSet:
create_menu_sets_per_subsite: true
extensions:
- Heyday\MenuManager\Extensions\MenuSubsiteExtension
Heyday\MenuManager\MenuItem:
extensions:
- Heyday\MenuManager\Extensions\MenuSubsiteExtension
This project follows the standards defined in: