luci

HowTo: Write Lua based Modules (deprecated for client side modules)

See online wiki for latest version.

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 a development environment:

Extra:

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.

The dispatching process

LuCI uses a dispatching tree that is 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 resolves to foo.bar.baz.

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

entry(path, target, title=nil, order=nil)

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

Naming and the module file

Now we can start writing modules. 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

The first line is required for Lua to correctly identify the module and create its scope. The index-Function will be used to register actions in the dispatching tree.

Teaching your new child (Actions)

So it has a name, but no actions.

We assume you want to reuse your module myapp.mymodule that you began in the last step.

Actions

Reopen lucidir/controller/myapp/mymodule.lua and just add a function to it with:

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

function index()
    entry({"click", "here", "now"}, call("action_tryme"), "Click here", 10).dependent=false
end
 
function action_tryme()
    luci.http.prepare_content("text/plain")
    luci.http.write("Haha, rebooting now...")
    luci.sys.reboot()
end

And now visit the path /cgi-bin/luci/click/here/now (http://192.168.1.1/luci/click/here/now if you are using the development environment) in your browser.

These action functions simply have to be added to a dispatching entry.

As you may or may not know: CGI specification requires you to send a Content-Type header before you can send your content. You will find several shortcuts (like the one used above) as well as redirecting functions in the module luci.http

Views

If you only want to show the user text or some interesting family photos, it may be enough to use an HTML-template. These templates can also include some Lua code but be aware that writing whole office-suites by only using these templates might be considered “dirty” by other developers.

Now let’s create a little template lucidir/view/myapp-mymodule/helloworld.htm with the content:

<%+header%>
<h1><%:Hello World%></h1> 
<%+footer%>

and add the following line to the index-Function of your module file.

entry({"my", "new", "template"}, template("myapp-mymodule/helloworld"), "Hello world", 20).dependent=false

Now visit the path /cgi-bin/luci/my/new/template (http://192.168.1.1/luci/my/new/template) in your browser.

You may notice those special <% %>-Tags, these are template markups used by the LuCI template processor. It is always good to include header and footer at the beginning and end of a template as those create the default design and menu.

CBI models

The CBI is one of the coolest features of LuCI. It creates a formulae based user interface and saves its contents to a specific UCI config file. You only have to describe the structure of the configuration file in a CBI model file and Luci does the rest of the work. This includes generating, parsing and validating an XHTML form and reading and writing the UCI file.

So let’s be serious at least for this paragraph and create a practical example lucidir/model/cbi/myapp-mymodule/netifaces.lua with the following contents:

m = Map("network", "Network") -- We want to edit the uci config file /etc/config/network

s = m:section(TypedSection, "interface", "Interfaces") -- Especially the "interface"-sections
s.addremove = true -- Allow the user to create and remove the interfaces
function s:filter(value)
   return value ~= "loopback" and value -- Don't touch loopback
end 
s:depends("proto", "static") -- Only show those with "static"
s:depends("proto", "dhcp") -- or "dhcp" as protocol and leave PPPoE and PPTP alone

p = s:option(ListValue, "proto", "Protocol") -- Creates an element list (select box)
p:value("static", "static") -- Key and value pairs
p:value("dhcp", "DHCP")
p.default = "static"

s:option(Value, "ifname", "interface", "the physical interface to be used") -- This will give a simple textbox

s:option(Value, "ipaddr", translate("ip", "IP Address")) -- Yes, this is an i18n function ;-)

s:option(Value, "netmask", "Netmask"):depends("proto", "static") -- You may remember this "depends" function from above

mtu = s:option(Value, "mtu", "MTU")
mtu.optional = true -- This one is very optional

dns = s:option(Value, "dns", "DNS-Server")
dns:depends("proto", "static")
dns.optional = true
function dns:validate(value) -- Now, that's nifty, eh?
    return value:match("[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") -- Returns nil if it doesn't match otherwise returns match
end

gw = s:option(Value, "gateway", "Gateway")
gw:depends("proto", "static")
gw.rmempty = true -- Remove entry if it is empty

return m -- Returns the map

and of course remember to add something like this to your module’s index-Function.

entry({"admin", "network", "interfaces"}, cbi("myapp-mymodule/netifaces"), "Network interfaces", 30).dependent=false

There are many more features. See the CBI reference and the modules shipped with LuCI.