ProcessMaker is an open source, workflow management software suite, which includes tools to automate your workflow, design forms, create documents, assign roles and users, create routing rules, and map an individual process quickly and easily. It's relatively lightweight and doesn't require any kind of installation on the client computer. This file describes the requirements and installation steps for the server.
The online documentation for usage of ProcessMaker 4 can be found by clicking the link below.
https://processmaker.gitbook.io/processmaker/
You can develop ProcessMaker as well as ProcessMaker packages locally. In order to do so, you must have the following:
- Virtualbox 5.2 or above
- Vagrant 2.2.0 or above
- PHP 7.2.0 or above
- Windows users can install XAMPP
- Composer
- Node.js 10.13.0 or above
Steps for Development Installation
- Clone the repository into a directory
- Perform
composer install
to install required libraries. If you are on windows, you may need to runcomposer install --ignore-platform-reqs
due to Horizon requiring the pcntl extension. You can safely ignore this as the application runs in the virtual machine which has the appropriate extensions installed. - Perform
npm install
in the project directory - Perform
npm run dev
to build the front-end assets - Modify your local
/etc/hosts
add192.168.10.10 processmaker.local.processmaker.com
. On Windows, this file is located atC:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts
.- If you need to change the ip address to something else to avoid conflicts on your network, modify the
Homestead.yaml
file accordingly. Do not commit this change to the repository.
- If you need to change the ip address to something else to avoid conflicts on your network, modify the
- Execute
vagrant up
in the project directory to bring up the laravel homestead virtual machine - Execute
vagrant ssh
to ssh into the newly created virtual machine - Execute
php artisan processmaker:install
in/home/vagrant/processmaker
to start the ProcessMaker Installation- Specify
localhost
as your local database server - Specify
3306
as your local database port - Specify
processmaker
as your local database name - Specify
homestead
as your local database username - Specify
secret
as your local database password - Specify
https://processmaker.local.processmaker.com
as your application url
- Specify
- Visit
https://processmaker.local.processmaker.com
in your browser to access the application- Login with the username of
admin
and password ofadmin
- Login with the username of
When developing, make sure to turn on debugging in your .env
so you can see the actual error instead of the Whoops page.
APP_DEBUG=TRUE
Optionally, trust the self-signed certificate on your host machine so you don't get the "Not Secure" warnings in chrome and postman.
For macOS: 1. In your-repository-root/storage/ssl, double-click on processmaker.local.processmaker.com.crt 2. Click on "Add" to add it to your login keychain 3. In the Keychain Access window click on the Certificates category on the bottom left. 4. Double-click on the processmaker certificate 5. Open the Trust section. For "When using this certificate", select "always trust" 6. Close the window. You will be asked for your password. Close and reopen the processmaker tab in chrome.
If you choose not to install the certificate, you should access the socket.io js file in your browser to allow unsafe connections from it. Otherwise, real-time notifications may not work in your development environment.
- Add images to resources/img/
- Add The following variables to the .env file
MAIN_LOGO_PATH={{EXPANDED LOGO PATH HERE}}
ICON_PATH_PATH={{ICON LOGO PATH HERE}}
LOGIN_LOGO_PATH={{LOGIN PAGE LOGO PATH HERE}}
- Run npm run dev
To run time based BPMN events like Timer Start Events or Intermediate Timer Events, the laravel scheduler should be enabled. To do this open a console and: 1. Execute crontab -e 2. Add to the cron tab the following line (replacing the upper cased text with the directory where your proyecto is located ):
* * * * * cd YOUR_BPM_PROJECT && php artisan schedule:run >> /dev/null 2>&1
The ProcessMaker API is documented using OpenAPI 3.0 documentation and can be viewed at /api/documentation
. The documention is generated by adding annotations to Models and Controllers.
You should add annotations to all models and controllers that you create or modify because it's how we generate the SDKs that are used when running scripts.
When developing, make sure to add this to your .env
file so that any changes you make to the annotations are automatically turned into documentation when you reload the /api/documentation
page:
L5_SWAGGER_GENERATE_ALWAYS=TRUE
At the comment block at the top of the model, add an @OA annotation to describe the schema. See ProcessMaker/Models/Process.php
for an example.
To keep things dry, you can define 2 schemas. One that inherits the other.
/**
* ...existing comments above...
*
* @OA\Schema(
* schema="ProcessEditable",
* @OA\Property(property="process_category_uuid", type="string", format="uuid"),
* @OA\Property(property="name", type="string"),
* @OA\Property(property="description", type="string"),
* @OA\Property(property="status", type="string", enum={"ACTIVE", "INACTIVE"}),
* ),
* @OA\Schema(
* schema="Process",
* allOf={
* @OA\Schema(ref="#/components/schemas/ProcessEditable")
* @OA\Schema(
* type="object",
* @OA\Property(property="user_uuid", type="string", format="uuid"),
* @OA\Property(property="uuid", type="string", format="uuid"),
* @OA\Property(property="created_at", type="string", format="date-time"),
* @OA\Property(property="updated_at", type="string", format="date-time"),
* ),
* },
*
* )
*/
class Process extends Model implements HasMedia
{
...
Now you can use the reference to the schema when annotating the controllers. See ProcessMaker/Http/Controllers/Api/ProcessController.php
for an example.
/**
* @OA\Get(
* path="/processes",
* summary="Returns all processes that the user has access to",
* operationId="getProcesses",
* tags={"Process"},
* @OA\Parameter(ref="#/components/parameters/filter"),
* @OA\Parameter(ref="#/components/parameters/order_by"),
* @OA\Parameter(ref="#/components/parameters/order_direction"),
* @OA\Parameter(ref="#/components/parameters/per_page"),
* @OA\Parameter(ref="#/components/parameters/"),
*
* @OA\Response(
* response=200,
* description="list of processes",
* @OA\JsonContent(
* type="object",
* @OA\Property(
* property="data",
* type="array",
* @OA\Items(ref="#/components/schemas/Process"),
* ),
* @OA\Property(
* property="meta",
* type="object",
* allOf={@OA\Schema(ref="#/components/schemas/metadata")},
* ),
* ),
* ),
* )
*/
public function index(Request $request)
{
...
And for a show method
/**
* @OA\Get(
* path="/processes/{processUuid}",
* summary="Get single process by ID",
* operationId="getProcessByUuid",
* tags={"Process"},
* @OA\Parameter(
* description="ID of process to return",
* in="path",
* name="processUuid",
* required=true,
* @OA\Schema(
* type="string",
* )
* ),
* @OA\Response(
* response=200,
* description="Successfully found the process",
* @OA\JsonContent(ref="#/components/schemas/Process")
* ),
*/
public function show(Request $request, Process $process)
{
...
Notes
operationId
will be the method name of the generated code. It can be anything camel cased but should be named some intuitive.
Testing with Swagger UI
Reload the swagger UI at api/documentation
page in your browser to see the results and debug any errors with the annotations.
By default, Swagger UI will use your processmaker app auth. So as long as you're logged into the app you should be able to run API Commands from Swagger UI as your logged in user.
You can also create a personal access token to see the API results as a specific user would.
$user->createToken('Name it here')->accessToken;
Copy the token. In api/documentation, click on the Authenticate button on the top right and enter it in the pm_api_bearer
value field.
More Info
Detailed examples can be found at https://github.com/zircote/swagger-php/tree/master/Examples/petstore.swagger.io
Full OpenAPI 3.0 specification at https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/blob/master/versions/3.0.1.md
Testing with Laravel Dusk
When testing in Laravel Dusk, make sure to turn off debugging mode in your .env
so you can use the whole page and screens executing functional tests. Then, change app_env value to develop
in the same file:
APP_DEBUG=FALSE
APP_ENV=develop
Execute vagrant ssh
to ssh into the newly created virtual machine.
Execute php artisan dusk
in /home/vagrant/processmaker
to execute Laravel dusk test cases.
Execute php artisan dusk:make newTest
to generate a new Dusk test. The generated test will be placed in the tests/Browser
directory.
More Info
Detailed installation can be found at https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/dusk#installation
To interact with web elements https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/dusk#interacting-with-elements
List of available assertions https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/dusk#available-assertions
Distributed under the AGPL Version 3
ProcessMaker (C) 2002 - 2019 ProcessMaker Inc.
For further information visit: http://www.processmaker.com/