/laconia

🏺A modern MVC framework written in PHP without libraries or frameworks.

Primary LanguagePHPMIT LicenseMIT

Laconia License: MIT

A modern MVC framework written in PHP without libraries or frameworks.

Installation

View the live site or install a local copy with the instructions below.

Install Apache, MySQL, and PHP

It is assumed you already know how to install a LAMP stack. For macOS and Windows local development, I would recommend downloading MAMP for a sandboxed environment. You can set up virtual hosts as well.

If using MAMP, add MAMP to the PHP command line by adding this line to .bash_profile.

export PATH=/Applications/MAMP/bin/php/php7.2.1/bin:$PATH

Install Composer

Composer is the standard in PHP for dependency management, class autoloading, and much more.

curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
sudo mv composer.phar /usr/local/bin/composer

Set up server

Create a virtual host called laconia.server. The server should point to the /public directory. Your httpd-vhosts.conf will look like this:

<VirtualHost *:80>
    DocumentRoot "/Users/tania/hosts/laconia/public"
    ServerName laconia.server
</VirtualHost>

Run install script

  • Run php bin/install.php in the root directory to initialize the database.
  • Run composer install to autoload classes and configuration.
  • Run npm install to use Sass
  • To run Sass, use npm run sass.

Laconia is all set up and ready to use!

Motivation

Laconia is a personal project created by Tania Rascia to learn the fundamentals of programming and modern web development from scratch. The main goals of the project are to learn MVC (Model View Controller) architecture, the OOP (Object-Oriented Programming) paradigm, routing, authentication, security, modern development practices, and how to tie it all together to make a functional web app.

Laconia runs on PHP 7.2 and MySQL. It uses Composer to autoload classes, configuration and utility files, as well as future tests through PHPUnit. Node.js is used to compile Sass to CSS via npm scripts. The CSS framework Primitive was used for the design.

Here are some of the concepts I learned while writing this program:

  • Authentication – logging in, logging out, resetting a password, having private content/dashboard hidden from anonymous users
  • Security and validation – encrypted passwords and hashing, parameter binding with SQL, making sure users cannot be overridden, making sure no spam or empty content can go through, making sure passwords and usernames have the proper characters
  • Routing – Redirecting to URLs based on incoming request method and URI path, creating public user profiles in the root directory, creating dynamic pages based on GET requests
  • Object-oriented programming – I had never used a class in a working application before writing this app, so I learned a lot about constructors, inheritance, and abstract classes
  • Composer – I had no prior experience using Composer, so I wanted to find out why it was the standard in modern PHP development. I used it for autoloading classes and configuration.
  • Database schema – how to structure a database to relate information easily between the tables, i.e. linking lists and list items, users and user comments, etc. Sessions and Users – how to easily deal with sessions, users, and authentication.

Project Structure

The entire program flows through /public/index.php, and the rest of the project is a directory above public.

laconia/        
  .git             # Git source directory
  assets/          # Uncompiled raw SCSS, JavaScript
  bin/             # Command line scripts
  config/          # Database credentials, utility helpers, and other configuration
  data/            # SQL database files
  node_modules/    # Node.js front end dependencies
  public/          # Publicly accessible files
      css/         # Compiled, ready-to-use styles
      js/          # Compiled, ready-to-use scripts
      index.php    # Main entry point for the entire application
  src/             # PHP source code
      controllers/ # Controller classes
      models/      # Model classes
      views/       # Views
  tests/           # Unit tests
  vendor/          # Composer files and 3rd party packages
  .gitignore       # Files to be ignored in the repository
  composer.json    # Composer dependency file
  install.php      # Database installation script
  LICENSE          # MIT License file
  package.json     # npm dependency file
  README.md        # Brief documentation

Usage

Laconia is a simple list-making website. You can register an account, log in, log out, reset your password, create and edit lists, and view public profiles.

  • / - Index
  • /register - Register a new user
  • /login - Login to user account
  • /home - Logged in home screen
  • /logout - Logout of user session
  • /forgot-password - Get a password reset link
  • /create-password - Create a new password
  • /view-users - View all users
  • /settings - Edit user settings
  • /create - Create a new list
  • /edit/:list_id - Edit an existing list
  • /:username - View public profile
  • /404 - Any not found redirects to 404.

Testing

Laconia uses PHPUnit for unit testing. Tests will go in the /tests directory. For now, here is how to run a Hello, World! script.

./vendor/bin/phpunit ./tests/HelloWorldTest

Acknowledgements

I've used a combination of many tutorials and StackOverflow posts to create this project. These have been the most important.

Contributing

Please feel free to fork, comment, critique, or submit a pull request.

Author

License

This project is open source and available under the MIT License.