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Modernizing Enterprise CMS Using Pimcore

You're reading from   Modernizing Enterprise CMS Using Pimcore Discover techniques and best practices for creating custom websites with rich digital experiences

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801075404
Length 412 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Authors (3):
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Francesco Minà Francesco Minà
Author Profile Icon Francesco Minà
Francesco Minà
Marco Guiducci Marco Guiducci
Author Profile Icon Marco Guiducci
Marco Guiducci
Daniele Fontani Daniele Fontani
Author Profile Icon Daniele Fontani
Daniele Fontani
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introducing Pimcore 2. Chapter 2: Setting Up Your Pimcore Development Environment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Getting Started with Pimcore Admin UI 4. Chapter 4: Creating Documents in Pimcore 5. Chapter 5: Exploring Objects and Classes 6. Chapter 6: Using Digital Asset Management 7. Chapter 7: Administrating Pimcore Sites 8. Chapter 8: Creating Custom CMS Pages 9. Chapter 9: Configuring Entities and Rendering Data 10. Chapter 10: Creating Pimcore Bricks 11. Chapter 11: Finalizing the Website 12. Chapter 12: Implementing Product Information Management 13. Chapter 13: Implementing Master Data Management 14. Chapter 14: Data Integration 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Why use Docker?

If you use Docker, all the additional requirements (Apache, the necessary libraries, PHP, and so on) will be managed automatically. Moreover, using Docker removes any friction between development and the production environments, offering a virtual environment that's the same at all stages. That is why, nowadays, using Docker is the recommended approach for developing applications, an approach that we adopt in this book. And that is why we based this book's examples on this technology. For those of you who are not familiar with Docker, it is a system that can download (pull) a ready-to-go environment (container) and run it on your local PC. All the samples we will provide are wrapped in a docker-compose file (a file that lists and configures the container for you), so all you need to do is to activate the environment and Docker will download all the assets required and will start it transparently. So, even if you are not well-versed with Docker, all you need to know for the purpose of this book is the following:

  • Start your environment: Inside the folder where the docker-compose.yml file is contained, run docker-compose up.
  • Stop your environment: Press Ctrl+C on the terminal where Docker Compose was launched; this will stop everything.
  • Interact with the Pimcore container: You can just run docker-compose exec php <command> for running a command inside the container named php (in our setup, this is the Pimcore one), or just enter the container with bash and launch whatever you want by means of docker-compose exec php bash.

For install Docker, which is available on Windows, Mac, and Linux, just navigate to the official documentation: https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/.

For manual installation

If you want to install Pimcore manually, you will have to configure your local machine (or server) and all its dependencies by hand. This is only if you're not using Docker, so if you want to use Docker, you can skip this section.

The only part of the book where we use this manual approach is in the following section, Installing Pimcore with Composer (without Docker), where we will explain how to carry out a Pimcore installation from scratch.

For a manual installation, you need to install all the dependencies manually, including Composer, Apache, MySQL, PHP, and the PHP libraries. The prerequisites may change with the arrival of new Pimcore versions and technology updates. So, instead of adding a copy of the official system requirements of Pimcore, we have instead provided a link to the official page with the exact specifications: https://pimcore.com/docs/pimcore/current/Development_Documentation/Installation_and_Upgrade/System_Requirements.html.

Note

Pimcore supports MySQL and the MariaDB database engine, which is, in fact, a fork of MySQL. In this chapter, we refer to MySQL because it is the most common option. We used the official docker-compose file based on MariaDB. To avoid confusion, please consider MySQL and MariaDB as one and the same in this chapter.

All the source code is contained in the official GitHub repository for this book, which you can find at this URL: https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Modernizing-Enterprise-CMS-using-Pimcore. In this repository, you will find a folder for each chapter. Inside each folder, there will be a Readme file with all the instructions for running the code.

For those of you who are using Docker as the environment, there are no restrictions for you regarding the operating system. For Docker compatibility and system requirements, you can check the Download section of the official Docker website.

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Modernizing Enterprise CMS Using Pimcore
Published in: Aug 2021
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781801075404
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