Here most ceilings are cast concrete. Wiring is done in flexible plastic pipes and plastic connection boxes network installed in the concrete forms before casting in the concrete. into them conductors are pulled with fish tape after the building is up
The way i consider proper for making the lamp termination in the ceiling is putting in there a connection box with just the 1 input wiring pipe entering it, so the lantern can be installed over the box. Or if the lighting circuit serves other lights too, continue the pipe to the next lanterns from the same box too
Sometimes (in the good setups usually) this is exactly how it is done
In this example a lantern is installed next to the box instead of on the box -
http://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/displayimage.php?album=2196&pos=28&pid=78485Sometimes the builders also route to the same box pipes serving unrelated stuff like receptacles. I dont like this because the box ends up stuffed with wiring unrelated to the lantern it is supposed to serve, and you have to pull down the lantern even when you want to inspect wiring for something else....
And sometimes the builders save 0.5$ on a proper box and just leave the end of the plastic pipe itself exiting from the concrete.... Now this is bad cause there is no recessed space to tuck the connections in and they can only be made inside the lantern, and that it is not possible to close it with a plain cover if the lantern is removed
This is from my home -
http://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/displayimage.php?album=2438&pos=25&pid=66903With those installation methods all whats required at the back of the lantern is to be able to cover the termination (box or end of pipe) and have a hole for the incoming wires - it dos not have to match perfectly the box shape, and it is usually not mounted to the box with screws either (except for some small basic incandescent sockets, not stuff like fluorescents) so does not have to match any screw holes of the box either. The box is just left as is without cover under the lantern, the lantern closing over it
If the lantern is too thin to cover the box, sometimes the electricians instal a blank cover on the box and cut a hole for the wiring in it, then install the lantern so that it covers the hole so you see a lantern with the edge of a blank connection box cover visible under its center
So the back of the lantern somply have some cutout for convenient entry of wires, nothing special -
http://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/displayimage.php?album=2158&pos=4&pid=83277The mounting of the lantern which holds th actual weight is by bolts placed elsewhere in the lantern - usually 2 bolts paced farther apart near the heaviest parts of the lantern where the ballasts are. When mounting the lantern
No special suggestions, just sharing