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authorFabio Bas <ctrlaltca@gmail.com>2015-12-07 15:57:51 +0100
committerFabio Bas <ctrlaltca@gmail.com>2015-12-07 15:57:51 +0100
commit654a9cae43358c7eecf3b522e9876aa7815e2453 (patch)
tree545f2e42fdc6e824b247924adf083ad3fe51e61d /demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/ja/Applications.page
parente99e35819d53dc48ae4e9a8491528a6b6011469f (diff)
Move urls from pradosoft.com to github's project page; drop unmaintained quickstart tutorial translations
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-<com:TContent ID="body" >
-
-<h1 id="1201">Applications</h1>
-<p id="160157" class="block-content">
-An application is an instance of <tt>TApplication</tt> or its derived class. It manages modules that provide different functionalities and are loaded when needed. It provides services to end-users. It is the central place to store various parameters used in an application. In a PRADO application, the application instance is the only object that is globally accessible via <tt>Prado::getApplication()</tt> function call.
-</p>
-<p id="160158" class="block-content">
-Applications are configured via <a href="?page=Configurations.AppConfig">application configurations</a>. They are usually created in entry scripts like the following,
-<com:TTextHighlighter CssClass="source block-content" id="code_160071">
-require_once('/path/to/prado.php');
-$application = new TApplication;
-$application->run();
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-where the method <tt>run()</tt> starts the application to handle user requests.
-</p>
-
-<h2 id="1202">Directory Organization</h2>
-<p id="160159" class="block-content">
-A minimal PRADO application contains two files: an entry file and a page template file. They must be organized as follows,
-<img src="<%~directory.gif%>" class="figure"/>
-</p>
-<ul id="u2" class="block-content">
-<li><tt>wwwroot</tt> - Web document root or sub-directory.</li>
-<li><tt>index.php</tt> - entry script of the PRADO application.</li>
-<li><tt>assets</tt> - directory storing published private files. See <a href="?page=Advanced.Assets">assets</a> section.</li>
-<li><tt>protected</tt> - application base path storing application data and private script files. This directory should be configured inaccessible to Web-inaccessible, or it may be located outside of Web directories.</li>
-<li><tt>runtime</tt> - application runtime storage path. This directory is used by PRADO to store application runtime information, such as application state, cached data, etc.</li>
-<li><tt>pages</tt> - base path storing all PRADO pages. See <a href="?page=Fundamentals.Services">services</a> section.</li>
-<li><tt>Home.page</tt> - default page returned when users do not explicitly specify the page requested. This is a page template file. The file name without suffix is the page name. The page class is <tt>TPage</tt>. If there is also a class file <tt>Home.php</tt>, the page class becomes <tt>Home</tt>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p id="160160" class="block-content">
-A product PRADO application usually needs more files. It may include an application configuration file named <tt>application.xml</tt> under the application base path <tt>protected</tt>. The pages may be organized in directories, some of which may contain page configuration files named <tt>config.xml</tt>. Fore more details, please see <a href="?page=Configurations.Overview">configurations</a> section.
-</p>
-
-<h2 id="1203">Application Deployment</h2>
-<p id="160161" class="block-content">
-Deploying a PRADO application mainly involves copying directories. For example, to deploy the above minimal application to another server, follow the following steps,
-</p>
-<ol>
-<li>Copy the content under <tt>wwwroot</tt> to a Web-accessible directory on the new server.</li>
-<li>Modify the entry script file <tt>index.php</tt> so that it includes correctly the <tt>prado.php</tt> file.</li>
-<li>Remove all content under <tt>assets</tt> and <tt>runtime</tt> directories and make sure both directories are writable by the Web server process.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<h2 id="1204">Application Lifecycles</h2>
-<p id="160162" class="block-content">
-Like page lifecycles, an application also has lifecycles. Application modules can register for the lifecycle events. When the application reaches a particular lifecycle and raises the corresponding event, the registered module methods are invoked automatically. Modules included in the PRADO release, such as <tt>TAuthManager</tt>, are using this way to accomplish their goals.
-</p>
-<p id="160163" class="block-content">
-The application lifecycles can be depicted as follows,
-</p>
-<img src="<%~applifecycles.gif%>" />
-
-</com:TContent>