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Cranium

A minimal, brainless WordPress theme for modern frontends. Inspired by Express.

As frontends started becoming more dynamic and detached from the backends that powered them, headless CMS services like Prismic and Contentful started gaining popularity. Those services are fantastic, but I wanted to continue using a familiar, open source and self-hosted solution.

Table of Contents

Install

  1. Download this repo, or clone it and run rm -fr .git
  2. Temporarily move the theme to the root directory mv wp-content/themes/cranium ./
  3. Download the latest version of WordPress curl -O https://wordpress.org/latest.zip and unzip it unzip latest.zip
  4. Copy the unzipped files into the parent directory cp -r wordpress/ ./ on OSX or cp -RT wordpress/ ./ on Linux
  5. Move the theme back mv cranium/ wp-content/themes/
  6. Remove the zip rm latest.zip and the unzipped folder rm -fr wordpress/
  7. Edit wp-config.php including security salts and default DB credentials. For added security, new installs should set $table_prefix to something other than 'wp_'

Configure

Cranium uses a modified wp-config.php file that allows for setting environment-specific core and theme constants. If a wp-config-local.php file exists, it will be imported after the default settings have loaded. All core and theme constants are set using an associate array, where keys become PHP constants:

$env['WP_DEBUG'] = true;
$env['DB_HOST'] = 'localhost';
$env['MY_CONSTANT'] = 808;

// examples above would automatically translate to:
define('WP_DEBUG', true);
define('DB_HOST', 'localhost');
define('MY_CONSTANT', 808);

Production settings sould be set in wp-config.php and overriden as needed in wp-config-local.php, which is part of the default gitignore. If sensitive information needs to be kept out of repositories (API keys etc), a wp-config-local.php file can also be used in a production environment.

Usage

More examples coming soon! Using Cranium as theme vs a separate API etc...

require 'app/autoload.php';

$app->init([
    'base' => '/api'
]);

$app->get('/page/@slug:[a-zA-Z0-9-]+', function($req, $res) {

    $slug = $req->param('slug');
    $page = get_page_by_path($slug);

    if ($page === null) {
        $res->status(404)->send(['error' => 'Not Found']);
    }

    $res->json([
        'id' => $page->ID,
        'url' => get_permalink($page),
        'slug' => $page->post_name,
        'title' => get_the_title($page),
        'content' => apply_filters('the_content', $page->post_content)
    ]);
});

$app->post('/contact', function($req, $res) {

    $message  = $req->body('name').PHP_EOL;
    $message .= $req->body('email').PHP_EOL;
    $message .= $req->body('message');
    wp_mail('hello@example.com', 'New Message!', $message);

    $res->send(['status' => 'ok']);
});

Gotchas

Links from post content or get_permalink() calls when using Cranium as a standalone api.

// functions/filters.php
function replace_home_url($str) {
    return str_replace(home_url(), '', $str);
}

add_filter('page_link', 'replace_home_url');
add_filter('post_link', 'replace_home_url');
add_filter('the_content', 'replace_home_url');

API

Application

The $app instance is your router. It exposes methods for get, post, put, patch, delete, options and all (matches all HTTP verbs).

$app->METHOD($path, $callback)

  • path: a string pattern to match
  • callback: a closure function to call when path matches the url

Request

All request methods accept an optional second argument to use as a fallback value. The array corresponding to each method is available directly as params, headers, query and body along with additional public properties listed below.

$req->param($key[, $fallback = null])

Retrieves a captured url parameter by key.

$req->header($key[, $fallback = null])

Retrieves the given header from the request.

$req->query($key[, $fallback = null])

Retrieves the given parameter from the query string.

$req->body($key[, $fallback = null])

Retrieves the given parameter from the body.

Property Description
method Request method via $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD']
url Request url via $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
xhr True if X-Requested-With header is xmlhttprequest
ip IP address via $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR']
ua User agent string via $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']

Response

Both header() and status() return $this for chaining.

$res->header($headers[, $value = null])

$res->status($http_status)

$res->send($data = null)

$res->json($data)

$res->render($template[, $data = []])

$res->redirect($url[, $status = 302])

Cache

  • Cache::get
  • Cache::set
  • Cache::clear

Files

Method of organizing files that works wells for most WordPress projects.
The advantage to this is always knowing where to look or where to add a new hook if needed. More info coming soon...

  • actions
  • admin
  • filters
  • helpers

Questions

Why not just use the official REST API?

Good question. Cranium removes the "brains" of WordPress by hijacking all requests via the do_parse_request filter, effectively trimming the fat and starting from a blank slate. This means that all request parsing, queries and responses are up to you. Unless interecepted by a custom route handler, Cranium will load the theme's index.php file. This file could be empty (useful if using Cranium at api.example.com), or could contain your bundled assets and any bootstrapped data you want to pass along to your scripts. Here are some reasons I opted for a custom API like this:

  • Potential speed increase, avoiding uneccessary overhead
  • Simplified interface for working with requests and responses
  • Flexible and customized. If your front-end is expecting id, title and content, you can return just that and easily omit many properties like post_mime_type and post_modified_gmt.
  • Less verbose. Ever wonder why people loath working with WordPress but love frameworks like Laravel and Lumen?
// how does this make you feel?
add_action('rest_api_init', function() {
    register_rest_route('my-namespace', '/hello/(?P<slug>[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)', [
        'methods' => 'GET',
        'callback' => function($req) {
            return new WP_REST_Response(['slug' => $req->get_param('slug')]);
        }
    ]);
});

// compared to this?
$app->get('/hello/@slug:[a-zA-Z0-9-]+', function($req, $res) {
    $res->json(['slug' => $req->param('slug')]);
});

Why not a plugin?

The whole point is to not be a typical theme and to approach WordPress differently. In fact, many plugins won't work as expected given how Craniun hijacks request parsing and leaves all responses and rendering up to you.

Why not use WordPress without a theme?

WP_USE_THEMES is a handy constant indeed, but by using WordPress outside of a theme, you loose access to many useful lifecycle hooks, including init actions, ACF filters etc.

Why is your screenshot.png so lame?

I don't know.