Support tools to ease local frontend development using the built-in php webserver.
The main goal of this repository is to allow user interface development without the need for an actual OPNsense deployment, which eases the process of designing frontend modules.
Debugging (using xdebug) is supported, although keep in mind that this will slow down all requests as the static pages are also delivered using the php interpreter.
Make sure you have the same php (http://www.php.net/) and phalcon (https://phalconphp.com/) versions installed on the target to which you would like to deploy the test server.
As of this writing OPNsense uses php 8.2.x and Phalcon 5.6.x.
In theory this approach should function on both unix like machines and Windows.
When using homebrew (https://brew.sh/) on OSX, the easiest option to get you started is by executing the following commands:
brew install [email protected]
brew tap phalcon/extension https://github.com/opnsense/homebrew-tap
brew install phalcon
Clone this repository and copy config/config.local.php.sample
to
config/config.local.php
then fill in the required parameters as noted in the
configuration sample.
Normally the only relevant configuration section is the environment
section, which needs
absolute paths to both the OPNsense core files and the plugins you wish to expose.
For example, using the default build directories:
$ui_core_dir = '/usr/core';
require_once rtrim($ui_core_dir,'/') . '/src/opnsense/mvc/app/config/AppConfig.php';
'environment' => [
/* packages to include in setup */
'packages' => [
'/usr/plugins/security/tinc'
],
/* location of OPNsense core package */
'coreDir' => $ui_core_dir,
]
All working directories are pointed to the local directory where this repository is checked out, to minimize the dependencies.
Startup the local server, which listens to port 8000 on localhost
php run_server.php
Finally point your browser to http://localhost:8000/ and test your ui software.
To test drive template generation and command execution, it can be practical to have a configd instance running as well on your local machine.
In most cases paths will differ on a development machine, but being able to generate templates and execute commands may help the development process.
The documentation for configd itself can be found here
First step is to copy all the files in our service directory to your development location (the example below assumes current working directory):
rsync -avz /<path_to_core>/src/opnsense/service/* configd
cd configd
mkdir tmp
Next edit conf/configd.conf and change pid and socket location to something writeable from the current user.
To control where the templates are generated and which config it will use, you can edit the template configuration and change the config and root attributes in all sections
In conf/actions.d/actions_template.conf change:
- config --> to our config to use
- root --> where to write our template output
Finally let's spin up the configd process in a console (install missing python plugins using pip, when you are unable to start the process):
python configd.py console
Symlink the socket to the expected location (which OPNsense uses) so both our UI and command line tools can reach it:
sudo ln -s /<install location>/configd/tmp/configd.socket /var/run/configd.socket
And check it's status in a new console, using:
python configd_ctl.py configd actions
Which should display a list of registered commands.
Finally make sure you disable simulate_mode in the config.local.php of your local server (restart to apply changes).