Content Fragment Models content-fragment-models

Content Fragment Models in AEM define the structure of content for your content fragments, serving as a foundation of your headless content.

To use Content Fragment Models, you can:

Creating a Content Fragment Model creating-a-content-fragment-model

  1. Navigate to Tools, Assets, then open Content Fragment Models.

  2. Navigate to the folder appropriate to your configuration.

  3. Use Create to open the wizard.

    note caution
    CAUTION
    If the use of content fragment models have not been enabled, the Create option is not available.
  4. Specify the Model Title. You can also add Tags, a Description, and select Enable model to enable the model if necessary.

    title and description

  5. Use Create to save the empty model. A message indicates the success of the action, you can select Open to immediately edit the model, or Done to return to the console.

Defining your Content Fragment Model defining-your-content-fragment-model

The content fragment model effectively defines the structure of the resulting content fragments using a selection of Data Types. Using the model editor you can add instances of the data types, then configure them to create the required fields:

CAUTION
Editing an existing content fragment model can impact dependent fragments.
  1. Navigate to Tools, Assets, then open Content Fragment Models.

  2. Navigate to the folder holding your content fragment model.

  3. Open the required model for Edit; use either the quick action, or select the model and then the action from the toolbar.

    Once open the model editor shows:

    • left: fields already defined
    • right: Data Types available for creating fields (and Properties for use once fields have been created)
    note note
    NOTE
    When a field as Required, the Label indicated in the left pane is marked with an asterix (*).

    properties

  4. To Add a Field

    • Drag a required data type to the required location for a field:

      data type to field

    • Once a field has been added to the model, the right panel shows the Properties that can be defined for that particular data type. Here you can define what is required for that field.

      • Many properties are self-explanatory, for additional details see Properties.

      • Typing a Field Label auto-completes the Property Name - if empty, and it can be manually updated afterwards.

        note caution
        CAUTION
        When manually updating the property Property Name for a data type, names must contain only A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and the underscore “_” as a special character.
        If models created in earlier versions of AEM contain illegal characters, remove or update those characters.

      For example:

      field properties

  5. To Remove a Field

    Select the required field, then click the trash-can icon. You are asked to confirm the action.

    remove

  6. Add all the required fields, and define the related properties, as required. For example:

    save

  7. Select Save to persist the definition.

Data Types data-types

A selection of data types is available for defining your model:

  • Single line text

    • Add one, or more, fields of a single line of text; the maximum length can be defined
  • Multi line text

    • A text area that can be Rich Text, Plain Text, or Markdown
  • Number

    • Add one, or more, numerical fields
  • Boolean

    • Add a boolean checkbox
  • Date and time

    • Add a date and/or time
  • Enumeration

    • Add a set of checkboxes, radio buttons, or drop-down fields
  • Tags

    • Allows fragment authors to access and select areas of tags
  • Content Reference

    • References other content, of any type; can be used to create nested content
    • If an image is referenced, you can opt to show a thumbnail
  • Fragment Reference

    • References other content fragments; can be used to create nested content

    • The data type can be configured to allow fragment authors to:

      • Edit the referenced fragment directly.
      • Create a content fragment, based on the appropriate model
  • JSON Object

    • Allows the content fragment author to enter JSON syntax into the corresponding elements of a fragment.

      • To allow AEM to store direct JSON that you have copied and pasted from another service.
      • The JSON is passed through, and output as JSON in GraphQL.
      • Includes JSON syntax-highlighting, auto-complete, and error-highlighting in the content fragment editor.
  • Tab Placeholder

    • Allows the introduction of tabs for use when editing the Content Fragment content.
      This is shown as a divider in the model editor, separating sections of the list of content data types. Each instance represents the start of a new tab.
      In the fragment editor, each instance appears as a tab.

      note note
      NOTE
      This data type is purely used for formatting, it is ignored by the AEM GraphQL schema.

Properties properties

Many properties are self-explanatory, for certain properties additional details are below:

  • Property Name

    When manually updating this property for a data type, the names must contain only A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and the underscore “_” as a special character.

    note caution
    CAUTION
    If models created in earlier versions of AEM contain illegal characters, remove or update those characters.
  • Render As
    The various options for realizing/rendering the field in a fragment. Often, this lets you define whether the author sees a single instance of the field, or is allowed to create multiple instances.

  • Field Label
    Entering a Field Label autogenerates a Property Name, which can then be manually updated, if necessary.

  • Validation
    Basic validation is available by mechanisms such as the Required property. Some data types have additional validation fields. See Validation for further details.

  • For the data type Multi line text it is possible to define the Default Type as either:

    • Rich Text
    • Markdown
    • Plain Text

    If not specified, the default value Rich Text is used for this field.

    Changing the Default Type in a content fragment model only takes effect on an existing, related, content fragment after that fragment is opened in the editor and saved.

  • Unique
    Content (for the specific field) must be unique across all content fragments created from the current model.

    This is used to ensure that content authors cannot repeat content already added in another fragment of the same model.

    For example, a Single line text field called Country in the Content Fragment Model cannot have the value Japan in two dependent Content Fragments. A warning is issued when the second instance is attempted.

    note note
    NOTE
    Uniqueness is ensured per language root.
    note note
    NOTE
    Variations can have the same unique value as variations of the same fragment, but not the same value as used in any variation of other fragments.
  • See Content Reference for more details about that specific data type and its properties.

  • See Fragment Reference (Nested Fragments) for more details about that specific data type and its properties.

Validation validation

Various data types now include the possibility to define validation requirements for when content is entered in the resulting fragment:

  • Single line text

    • Compare against a predefined regex.
  • Number

    • Check for specific values.
  • Content Reference

    • Test for specific types of content.
    • Only assets of specified file size or smaller can be referenced.
    • Only images within a predefined range of width and/or height (in pixels) can be referenced.
  • Fragment Reference

    • Test for a specific content fragment model.

Using References to form Nested Content using-references-to-form-nested-content

Content Fragments can form nested content, using either of the following data types:

  • Content Reference

    • Provides a simple reference to other content; of any type.
    • It can be configured for one reference or multiple references (in the resulting fragment).
  • Fragment Reference (Nested Fragments)

    • References other fragments, dependent on the specific models specified.

    • Lets you include/retrieve structured data.

      note note
      NOTE
      This method is of particular interest with Headless Content Delivery using Content Fragments with GraphQL.

      * It can be configured for one reference or multiple references (in the resulting fragment).

NOTE
AEM has a recurrence protection for:
  • Content References
    This prevents the user from adding a reference to the current fragment. This may lead to an empty Fragment Reference picker dialog.

  • Fragment References in GraphQL
    If you create a deep query that returns multiple Content Fragments referenced by each other, it returns null at first occurrence.

Content Reference content-reference

The Content Reference lets you render content from another source; for example, an image or content fragment.

In addition to standard properties you can specify:

  • The Root Path for any referenced content

  • The content types that can be referenced

  • Limitations for file sizes

  • If an image is referenced:

    • Show Thumbnail
    • Image restraints of height and width

Content Reference

Fragment Reference (Nested Fragments) fragment-reference-nested-fragments

The Fragment Reference references one, or more, content fragments. This feature is of particular interest when retrieving content for use in your app, because it lets you retrieve structured data with multiple layers.

For example:

  • A model defining details for an employee; these include:
    • A reference to the model that defines the employer (company)
type EmployeeModel {
    name: String
    firstName: String
    company: CompanyModel
}

type CompanyModel {
    name: String
    street: String
    city: String
}
NOTE
This is of particular interest with Headless Content Delivery using Content Fragments with GraphQL.

In addition to standard properties you can define:

  • Render As:

    • multifield - the fragment author can create multiple, individual, references

    • fragmentreference - allows the fragment author to select a single reference to a fragment

  • Model Type
    Multiple models can be selected. When authoring the Content Fragment, any referenced fragments must have been created using these models.

  • Root Path
    This specifies a root path for any fragments referenced.

  • Allow Fragment Creation

    This allows the fragment author to create a fragment based on the appropriate model.

    • fragmentreferencecomposite - allows the fragment author to build a composite, by selecting multiple fragments

    Fragment Reference

NOTE
A recurrence protection mechanism is in place. It prohibits the user from selecting the current Content Fragment in the Fragment Reference. This may lead to an empty Fragment Reference picker dialog.
There is also a recurrence protection for Fragment References in GraphQL. If you create a deep query across two Content Fragments that reference each other, it returns null.

Enabling or Disabling a Content Fragment Model enabling-disabling-a-content-fragment-model

For full control over the use of your Content Fragment Models, they have a status that you can set.

Enabling a Content Fragment Model enabling-a-content-fragment-model

Once a model is created, it must be enabled so that:

  • It is available for selection when creating a Content Fragment.
  • It can be referenced from within a Content Fragment Model.
  • It is available to GraphQL; so the schema is generated.

To enable a Model that is flagged as either:

  • Draft : mew (never enabled).
  • Disabled : has been disabled.

You can use the Enable option from either:

  • The top toolbar, when the required Model is selected.
  • The corresponding Quick Action (mouse-over the required Model).

Enable a Draft or Disabled Model

Disabling a Content Fragment Model disabling-a-content-fragment-model

A model can also be disabled so that:

  • The model is no longer available as a basis for creating new Content Fragments.

  • However:

    • The GraphQL schema keeps being generated and is still queryable (to avoid impacting the JSON API).
    • Any Content Fragments based of the model can still be queried and returned from the GraphQL endpoint.
  • The model cannot be referenced anymore, but existing references are kept untouched, and can still be queried and returned from the GraphQL endpoint.

To disable a Model that is flagged as Enabled, you use the Disable option from either:

  • The top toolbar, when the required Model is selected.
  • The corresponding Quick Action (mouse-over the required Model).

Disable an Enabled Model

Allowing Content Fragment Models on your Assets Folder allowing-content-fragment-models-assets-folder

To implement content governance, you can configure Policies on an Assets folder to control which Content Fragment Models are allowed for Fragment creation in that folder.

NOTE
The mechanism is similar to allowing page templates for a page, and its children, in advanced properties of a page.

To configure the Policies for Allowed Content Fragment Models:

  1. Navigate and open Properties for the required Assets folder.

  2. Open the Policies tab, where you can configure:

    • Inherited from <folder>

      Policies are automatically inherited when creating child folders; the policy can be reconfigured (and the inheritance broken) if sub-folders need to allow models different to the parent folder.

    • Allowed Content Fragment Models by Path

      Multiple models can be allowed.

    • Allowed Content Fragment Models by Tag

      Multiple models can be allowed.

    Content Fragment Model Policy

  3. Save any changes.

The Content Fragment Models allowed for a folder are resolved as follows:

  • The Policies for Allowed Content Fragment Models.
  • If empty, then try to determine the policy using the inheritance rules.
  • If the inheritance chain does not deliver a result, then look at the Cloud Services configuration for that folder (also first directly and then via inheritance).
  • If none of the above deliver any results, then there are no allowed models for that folder.

Deleting a Content Fragment Model deleting-a-content-fragment-model

CAUTION
Deleting a content fragment model can impact dependent fragments.

To delete a content fragment model:

  1. Navigate to Tools, Assets, then open Content Fragment Models.

  2. Navigate to the folder holding your content fragment model.

  3. Select your model, followed by Delete from the toolbar.

    note note
    NOTE
    If the model is referenced, a warning is given. Take appropriate action.

Publishing a Content Fragment Model publishing-a-content-fragment-model

Content fragment models must be published when/before any dependent content fragments are published.

To publish a content fragment model:

  1. Navigate to Tools, Assets, then open Content Fragment Models.

  2. Navigate to the folder holding your content fragment model.

  3. Select your model, followed by Publish from the toolbar.
    The published status is indicated in the console.

    note note
    NOTE
    If you publish a content fragment for which the model has not yet been published, a selection list indicates this and the model is published with the fragment.

Unpublishing a Content Fragment Model unpublishing-a-content-fragment-model

Content fragment models can be unpublished if they are not referenced by any fragments.

To unpublish a content fragment model:

  1. Navigate to Tools, Assets, then open Content Fragment Models.

  2. Navigate to the folder holding your content fragment model.

  3. Select your model, followed by Unpublish from the toolbar.
    The published status is indicated in the console.

Content Fragment Model - Properties content-fragment-model-properties

You can edit the Properties of a Content Fragment Model:

  • Basic

    • Model Title
    • Tags
    • Description
    • Upload Image
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