Kirby's Query Language API combines the flexibility of Kirby's data structures, the power of GraphQL and the simplicity of REST.
The Kirby QL API takes POST requests with standard JSON objects and returns highly customized results that fit your application.
You can play in our KQL sandbox. The sandbox is based on the Kirby starterkit.
ℹ️ Source code of the playground is available on GitHub.
Given a POST request to: /api/query
{
"query": "page('photography').children",
"select": {
"url": true,
"title": true,
"text": "page.text.markdown",
"images": {
"query": "page.images",
"select": {
"url": true
}
}
},
"pagination": {
"limit": 10
}
}
🆗 Response
{
"code": 200,
"result": {
"data": [
{
"url": "https://example.com/photography/trees",
"title": "Trees",
"text": "Lorem <strong>ipsum</strong> …",
"images": [
{
"url": "https://example.com/media/pages/photography/trees/1353177920-1579007734/cheesy-autumn.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://example.com/media/pages/photography/trees/1940579124-1579007734/last-tree-standing.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://example.com/media/pages/photography/trees/3506294441-1579007734/monster-trees-in-the-fog.jpg"
}
]
},
{
"url": "https://example.com/photography/sky",
"title": "Sky",
"text": "<h1>Dolor sit amet</h1> …",
"images": [
{
"url": "https://example.com/media/pages/photography/sky/183363500-1579007734/blood-moon.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://example.com/media/pages/photography/sky/3904851178-1579007734/coconut-milkyway.jpg"
}
]
}
],
"pagination": {
"page": 1,
"pages": 1,
"offset": 0,
"limit": 10,
"total": 2
}
},
"status": "ok"
}
Download and copy this repository to /site/plugins/kql
of your Kirby installation.
composer require getkirby/kql
KQL adds a new query
API endpoint to your Kirby API (i.e. yoursite.com/api/query
). This endpoint requires authentication.
You can switch off authentication in your config at your own risk:
return [
'kql' => [
'auth' => false
]
];
You can use any HTTP request library in your language of choice to make regular POST requests to your /api/query
endpoint. In this example, we are using the fetch
API and JavaScript to retrieve data from our Kirby installation.
const api = "https://yoursite.com/api/query";
const username = "apiuser";
const password = "strong-secret-api-password";
const headers = {
Authorization: "Basic " + Buffer.from(`${username}:${password}`).toString("base64"),
"Content-Type": "application/json",
Accept: "application/json",
};
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('notes').children",
select: {
title: true,
text: "page.text.kirbytext",
slug: true,
date: "page.date.toDate('d.m.Y')",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
With the query, you can fetch data from anywhere in your Kirby site. You can query fields, pages, files, users, languages, roles and more.
When you don't pass the select option, Kirby will try to come up with the most useful result set for you. This is great for simple queries.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.title",
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: "Kirby Starterkit",
status: "ok"
}
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.children",
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: [
"photography",
"notes",
"about",
"error",
"home"
],
status: "ok"
}
Queries can even execute field methods.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.title.upper",
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: "KIRBY STARTERKIT",
status: "ok"
}
KQL becomes really powerful by its flexible way to control the result set with the select option.
To include a property or field in your results, list them as an array. Check out our reference for available properties for pages, users, files, etc.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.children",
select: ["title", "url"],
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Photography",
url: "/photography"
},
{
title: "Notes",
url: "/notes"
},
{
title: "About us",
url: "/about"
},
{
title: "Error",
url: "/error"
},
{
title: "Home",
url: "/"
}
],
pagination: {
page: 1,
pages: 1,
offset: 0,
limit: 100,
total: 5
}
},
status: "ok"
}
You can also use the object notation and pass true for each key/property you want to include.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.children",
select: {
title: true,
url: true,
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Photography",
url: "/photography"
},
{
title: "Notes",
url: "/notes"
},
{
title: "About us",
url: "/about"
},
{
title: "Error",
url: "/error"
},
{
title: "Home",
url: "/"
}
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
Instead of passing true, you can also pass a string query to specify what you want to return for each key in your select object.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.children",
select: {
title: "page.title",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Photography",
},
{
title: "Notes",
},
...
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site.children",
select: {
title: "page.title.upper",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "PHOTOGRAPHY",
},
{
title: "NOTES",
},
...
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
String queries are a perfect way to create aliases or return variations of the same field or property multiple times.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('notes').children",
select: {
title: "page.title",
upperCaseTitle: "page.title.upper",
lowerCaseTitle: "page.title.lower",
guid: "page.id",
date: "page.date.toDate('d.m.Y')",
timestamp: "page.date.toTimestamp",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Explore the universe",
upperCaseTitle: "EXPLORE THE UNIVERSE",
lowerCaseTitle: "explore the universe",
guid: "notes/explore-the-universe",
date: "21.04.2018",
timestamp: 1524316200
},
{ ... },
{ ... },
...
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
With such string queries you can of course also include nested data
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('photography').children",
select: {
title: "page.title",
images: "page.images",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Trees",
images: [
"photography/trees/cheesy-autumn.jpg",
"photography/trees/last-tree-standing.jpg",
"photography/trees/monster-trees-in-the-fog.jpg",
"photography/trees/sharewood-forest.jpg",
"photography/trees/stay-in-the-car.jpg"
]
},
{ ... },
{ ... },
...
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
You can also pass an object with a query
and a select
option
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('photography').children",
select: {
title: "page.title",
images: {
query: "page.images",
select: {
filename: true,
},
},
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Trees",
images: {
{
filename: "cheesy-autumn.jpg"
},
{
filename: "last-tree-standing.jpg"
},
{
filename: "monster-trees-in-the-fog.jpg"
},
{
filename: "sharewood-forest.jpg"
},
{
filename: "stay-in-the-car.jpg"
}
}
},
{ ... },
{ ... },
...
],
pagination: { ... }
},
status: "ok"
}
Whenever you query a collection (pages, files, users, roles, languages) you can limit the resultset and also paginate through entries. You've probably already seen the pagination object in the results above. It is included in all results for collections, even if you didn't specify any pagination settings.
You can specify a custom limit with the limit option. The default limit for collections is 100 entries.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('notes').children",
pagination: {
limit: 5,
},
select: {
title: "page.title",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Across the ocean"
},
{
title: "A night in the forest"
},
{
title: "In the jungle of Sumatra"
},
{
title: "Through the desert"
},
{
title: "Himalaya and back"
}
],
pagination: {
page: 1,
pages: 2,
offset: 0,
limit: 5,
total: 7
}
},
status: "ok"
}
You can jump to any page in the resultset with the page
option.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('notes').children",
pagination: {
page: 2,
limit: 5,
},
select: {
title: "page.title",
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
🆗 Response
{
code: 200,
result: {
data: [
{
title: "Chasing waterfalls"
},
{
title: "Exploring the universe"
}
],
pagination: {
page: 2,
pages: 2,
offset: 5,
limit: 5,
total: 7
}
},
status: "ok"
}
Pagination settings also work for subqueries.
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "page('photography').children",
select: {
title: "page.title",
images: {
query: "page.images",
pagination: {
page: 2,
limit: 5,
},
select: {
filename: true,
},
},
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
With the power of selects and subqueries you can basically query the entire site in a single request
const response = await fetch(api, {
method: "post",
body: JSON.stringify({
query: "site",
select: {
title: "site.title",
url: "site.url",
notes: {
query: "page('notes').children.listed",
select: {
title: true,
url: true,
date: "page.date.toDate('d.m.Y')",
text: "page.text.kirbytext",
},
},
photography: {
query: "page('photography').children.listed",
select: {
title: true,
images: {
query: "page.images",
select: {
url: true,
alt: true,
caption: "file.caption.kirbytext",
},
},
},
},
about: {
text: "page.text.kirbytext",
},
},
}),
headers,
});
console.log(await response.json());
KQL is very strict with allowed methods by default. Custom page methods, file methods or model methods are not allowed to make sure you don't miss an important security issue by accident. You can allow additional methods though.
The most straight forward way is to define allowed methods in your config.
return [
'kql' => [
'methods' => [
'allowed' => [
'MyCustomPage::cover'
]
]
]
];
You can also add a comment to your methods' doc blocks to allow them:
class MyCustomPage extends Page
{
/**
* @kql-allowed
*/
public function cover()
{
return $this->images()->findBy('name', 'cover') ?? $this->image();
}
}
This works for model methods as well as for custom page methods, file methods or other methods defined in plugins.
Kirby::plugin('your-name/your-plugin', [
'pageMethods' => [
/**
* @kql-allowed
*/
'cover' => function () {
return $this->images()->findBy('name', 'cover') ?? $this->image();
}
]
]);
You can block individual class methods that would normally be accessible by listing them in your config:
return [
'kql' => [
'methods' => [
'blocked' => [
'Kirby\Cms\Page::url'
]
]
]
];
Sometimes you might want to reduce access to various parts of the system. This can be done by blocking individual methods (see above) or by blocking entire classes.
return [
'kql' => [
'classes' => [
'blocked' => [
'Kirby\Cms\User'
]
]
]
];
Now, access to any user is blocked.
If you want to add support for a custom class or a class in Kirby's source that is not supported yet, you can list your own interceptors in your config
return [
'kql' => [
'interceptors' => [
'Kirby\Cms\System' => 'SystemInterceptor'
]
]
];
You can put the class for such a custom interceptor in a plugin for example.
class SystemInterceptor extends Kirby\Kql\Interceptors\Interceptor
{
public const CLASS_ALIAS = 'system';
protected $toArray = [
'isInstallable',
];
public function allowedMethods(): array
{
return [
'isInstallable',
];
}
}
Interceptor classes are pretty straight forward. With the CLASS_ALIAS
you can give objects with that class a short name for KQL queries. The $toArray
property lists all methods that should be rendered if you don't run a subquery. I.e. in this case kirby.system
would render an array with the isInstallable
value.
The allowedMethods
method must return an array of all methods that can be access for this object. In addition to that you can also create your own custom methods in an interceptor that will then become available in KQL.
class SystemInterceptor extends Kirby\Kql\Interceptors\Interceptor
{
...
public function isReady()
{
return 'yes it is!';
}
}
This custom method can now be used with kirby.system.isReady
in KQL and will return yes it is!
If you want to fully allow access to an entire class without putting an interceptor in between, you can add the class to the allow list in your config:
return [
'kql' => [
'classes' => [
'allowed' => [
'Kirby\Cms\System'
]
]
]
];
This will introduce full access to all public class methods. This can be very risky though and you should avoid this if possible.
KQL only offers access to data in your site. It does not support any mutations. All destructive methods are blocked and cannot be accessed in queries.
- getkirby.com – Get to know the CMS.
- Try it – Take a test ride with our online demo. Or download one of our kits to get started.
- Documentation – Read the official guide, reference and cookbook recipes.
- Issues – Report bugs and other problems.
- Feedback – You have an idea for Kirby? Share it.
- Forum – Whenever you get stuck, don't hesitate to reach out for questions and support.
- Discord – Hang out and meet the community.
- Mastodon – Spread the word.
- Instagram – Share your creations: #madewithkirby.
MIT License © 2020-2023 Bastian Allgeier