Skip to content
cristiano-dev edited this page May 9, 2024 · 10 revisions

HowTo: Write Modules

Note: If you plan to integrate your module into LuCI, you should read the Module Reference in advance.

This tutorial describes how to write your own modules for the LuCI WebUI. For this tutorial we refer to your LuCI installation directory as lucidir (/usr/lib/lua/luci on your OpenWRT device) and assume your LuCI installation is reachable through your webserver via http://192.168.1.1/cgi-bin/luci.

The recommended way to set up development environment:

Install OpenWRT on your router/device (You could use a QEMU or VirtualBox image instead)

Install SSHFS on your host

Mount your routers' root (/) someplace on your development host (eg. /mnt/router)

Then open /mnt/router/(lucidir) in your favorite development studio

Extra: Add configurations to your dev studio which will delete the luci cache (detailed below) and then open a browser window to your routers' configuration page in order to see your module/application.

When testing, if you have edited index files, be sure to remove the folder /tmp/luci-modulecache/* and the file(s) /tmp/luci-indexcache*, then refresh the LUCI page to see your edits.

Show me the way (The dispatching process)

To write a module you need to understand the basics of the dispatching process in LuCI. LuCI uses a dispatching tree that will be built by executing the index-Function of every available controller. The CGI-environment variable PATH_INFO will be used as the path in this dispatching tree, e.g.: /cgi-bin/luci/foo/bar/baz will be resolved to foo.bar.baz

To register a function in the dispatching tree, you can use the entry-function of luci.dispatcher. It takes 4 arguments (2 are optional):

entry(path, target, title=nil, order=nil)
  • path is a table that describes the position in the dispatching tree: For example a path of {"foo", "bar", "baz"} would insert your node in foo.bar.baz.
  • target describes the action that will be taken when a user requests the node. There are several predefined ones of which the 3 most important (call, template, cbi) are described later on this page
  • title defines the title that will be visible to the user in the menu (optional)
  • order is a number with which nodes on the same level will be sorted in the menu (optional)

You can assign more attributes by manipulating the node table returned by the entry-function. A few example attributes:

  • i18n defines which translation file should be automatically loaded when the page gets requested
  • dependent protects plugins to be called out of their context if a parent node is missing
  • leaf stops parsing the request at this node and goes no further in the dispatching tree
  • sysauth requires the user to authenticate with a given system user account

It's all about names (Naming and the module file)

Now that you know the basics about dispatching, we can start writing modules. Now, choose the category and name of your new digital child.

Let's assume you want to create a new application myapp with a module mymodule.

So you have to create a new sub-directory lucidir/controller/myapp with a file mymodule.lua with the following content:

module("luci.controller.myapp.mymodule", package.seeall)

function index()

end
Clone this wiki locally