How can you integrate a custom file browser/uploader with CKEditor?

Start by registering your custom browser/uploader when you instantiate CKEditor. You can designate different URLs for an image browser vs. a general file browser.

<script type="text/javascript">
CKEDITOR.replace('content', {
    filebrowserBrowseUrl : '/browser/browse/type/all',
    filebrowserUploadUrl : '/browser/upload/type/all',
    filebrowserImageBrowseUrl : '/browser/browse/type/image',
filebrowserImageUploadUrl : '/browser/upload/type/image',
    filebrowserWindowWidth  : 800,
    filebrowserWindowHeight : 500
});
</script>

Your custom code will receive a GET parameter called CKEditorFuncNum. Save it – that’s your callback function. Let’s say you put it into $callback.

When someone selects a file, run this JavaScript to inform CKEditor which file was selected:

window.opener.CKEDITOR.tools.callFunction(<?php echo $callback; ?>,url)

Where “url” is the URL of the file they picked. An optional third parameter can be text that you want displayed in a standard alert dialog, such as “illegal file” or something. Set url to an empty string if the third parameter is an error message.

CKEditor’s “upload” tab will submit a file in the field “upload” – in PHP, that goes to $_FILES[‘upload’]. What CKEditor wants your server to output is a complete JavaScript block:

$output="<html><body><script type="text/javascript">window.parent.CKEDITOR.tools.callFunction(".$callback.', "'.$url.'","'.$msg.'");</script></body></html>';
echo $output;

Again, you need to give it that callback parameter, the URL of the file, and optionally a message. If the message is an empty string, nothing will display; if the message is an error, then url should be an empty string.

The official CKEditor documentation is incomplete on all this, but if you follow the above it’ll work like a champ.

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