{project_name} comes bundled with default themes in the JAR file `keycloak-themes-{project_versionMvn}.jar` inside the server distribution.
The server's root `themes` directory does not contain any themes by default, but it contains a README file with some additional details about the default themes.
To simplify upgrading, do not edit the bundled themes directly. Instead create your own theme that extends one of the bundled themes.
Unless you plan to replace every single page you should extend another theme. Most likely you will want to extend the {project_name} theme, but you could also
consider extending the base theme if you are significantly changing the look and feel of the pages. The base theme primarily consists of HTML templates and
When extending a theme you can override individual resources (templates, stylesheets, etc.). If you decide to override HTML templates bear in mind that you may
need to update your custom template when upgrading to a new release.
While creating a theme it's a good idea to disable caching as this makes it possible to edit theme resources directly from the `themes` directory without
. For each type create a file `theme.properties` which allows setting some configuration for the theme.
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For example, to configure the theme `themes/mytheme/login` to extend the base theme and import some common resources, create the file `themes/mytheme/login/theme.properties` with following contents:
If you want to manually delete the content of the themes cache, you can do so by deleting the `data/tmp/kc-gzip-cache` directory of the server distribution.
It can be useful for instance if you redeployed custom providers or custom themes without disabling themes caching in the previous server executions.
There are a list of properties that can be used to change the css class used for certain element types. For a list of these properties look at the theme.properties
file in the corresponding type of the keycloak theme (`themes/keycloak/<THEME TYPE>/theme.properties`).
When doing so, you can substitute system properties or environment variables by using these formats:
* `${some.system.property}` - for system properties
* `${env.ENV_VAR}` - for environment variables.
A default value can also be provided in case the system property or the environment variable is not found with `${foo:defaultValue}`.
NOTE: If no default value is provided and there's no corresponding system property or environment variable, then nothing is replaced and you end up with the format in your template.
Here's an example of what is possible:
[source,properties]
----
javaVersion=${java.version}
unixHome=${env.HOME:Unix home not found}
windowsHome=${env.HOMEPATH:Windows home not found}
To make images available to the theme add them to the `<THEME TYPE>/resources/img` directory of your theme. These can be used from within stylesheets or
Text in the templates is loaded from message bundles. A theme that extends another theme will inherit all messages from the parent's message bundle and you can
Within a message values like `{0}` and `{1}` are replaced with arguments when the message is used. For example {0} in `Log in to {0}` is replaced with the name
. Create the file `<THEME TYPE>/messages/messages_<LOCALE>.properties` in the directory of your theme.
. Add this file to the `locales` property in `<THEME TYPE>/theme.properties`.
For a language to be available to users the realms `login`, `account` and `email`, the theme has to support the language, so you need to add your language for those theme types.
By default message properties files should be encoded using ISO-8859-1. It's also possible to specify the encoding using a special header. For example to use UTF-8 encoding:
. Define icon classes in your login `theme.properties` file (for example, `themes/mytheme/login/theme.properties`) with key pattern `kcLogoIdP-<alias>`.
. For an Identity Provider with an alias `myProvider`, you may add a line to `theme.properties` file of your custom theme. For example:
All icons are available on the official website of PatternFly4.
Icons for social providers are already defined in base login theme properties (`themes/keycloak/login/theme.properties`), where you can inspire yourself.
{project_name} uses https://freemarker.apache.org/[Apache Freemarker] templates to generate HTML. You can override individual templates in your own theme by
For example, to create a custom login form for the `mytheme` theme, copy `themes/base/login/login.ftl` to `themes/mytheme/login` and open it in an editor.
. Back up the modified template. When upgrading to a new version of {project_name} you may need to update your custom templates to apply changes to the original template if applicable.
To edit the subject and contents for emails, for example password recovery email, add a message bundle to the `email` type of your theme. There are three messages for each email. One for the subject, one for the plain text body and one for the html body.
To see all emails available take a look at `themes/base/email/messages/messages_en.properties`.
For example to change the password recovery email for the `mytheme` theme create `themes/mytheme/email/messages/messages_en.properties` with the following
Themes can be deployed to {project_name} by copying the theme directory to `themes` or it can be deployed as an archive. During development you can copy the
theme to the `themes` directory, but in production you may want to consider using an `archive`. An `archive` makes it simpler to have a versioned copy of
* For the inspiration, see <<_default-themes,Default Themes>> bundled inside {project_name}.
* {quickstartRepo_link}[{quickstartRepo_name}] - Directory `extension` of the quickstarts repository contains some theme examples, which can be also used as an inspiration.