1 ===================
2 Customising Roundup
3 ===================
5 :Version: $Revision: 1.111 $
7 .. This document borrows from the ZopeBook section on ZPT. The original is at:
8 http://www.zope.org/Documentation/Books/ZopeBook/current/ZPT.stx
10 .. contents::
11 :depth: 1
13 What You Can Do
14 ===============
16 Before you get too far, it's probably worth having a quick read of the Roundup
17 `design documentation`_.
19 Customisation of Roundup can take one of six forms:
21 1. `tracker configuration`_ file changes
22 2. database, or `tracker schema`_ changes
23 3. "definition" class `database content`_ changes
24 4. behavioural changes, through detectors_
25 5. `security / access controls`_
26 6. change the `web interface`_
28 The third case is special because it takes two distinctly different forms
29 depending upon whether the tracker has been initialised or not. The other two
30 may be done at any time, before or after tracker initialisation. Yes, this
31 includes adding or removing properties from classes.
34 Trackers in a Nutshell
35 ======================
37 Trackers have the following structure:
39 =================== ========================================================
40 Tracker File Description
41 =================== ========================================================
42 config.py Holds the basic `tracker configuration`_
43 dbinit.py Holds the `tracker schema`_
44 interfaces.py Defines the Web and E-Mail interfaces for the tracker
45 select_db.py Selects the database back-end for the tracker
46 db/ Holds the tracker's database
47 db/files/ Holds the tracker's upload files and messages
48 detectors/ Auditors and reactors for this tracker
49 html/ Web interface templates, images and style sheets
50 =================== ========================================================
52 Tracker Configuration
53 =====================
55 The ``config.py`` located in your tracker home contains the basic
56 configuration for the web and e-mail components of roundup's interfaces.
57 As the name suggests, this file is a Python module. This means that any
58 valid python expression may be used in the file. Mostly though, you'll
59 be setting the configuration variables to string values. Python string
60 values must be quoted with either single or double quotes::
62 'this is a string'
63 "this is also a string - use it when the value has 'single quotes'"
64 this is not a string - it's not quoted
66 Python strings may use formatting that's almost identical to C string
67 formatting. The ``%`` operator is used to perform the formatting, like
68 so::
70 'roundup-admin@%s'%MAIL_DOMAIN
72 this will create a string ``'roundup-admin@tracker.domain.example'`` if
73 MAIL_DOMAIN is set to ``'tracker.domain.example'``.
75 You'll also note some values are set to::
77 os.path.join(TRACKER_HOME, 'db')
79 or similar. This creates a new string which holds the path to the
80 ``'db'`` directory in the TRACKER_HOME directory. This is just a
81 convenience so if the TRACKER_HOME changes you don't have to edit
82 multiple valoues.
84 The configuration variables available are:
86 **TRACKER_HOME** - ``os.path.split(__file__)[0]``
87 The tracker home directory. The above default code will automatically
88 determine the tracker home for you, so you can just leave it alone.
90 **MAILHOST** - ``'localhost'``
91 The SMTP mail host that roundup will use to send e-mail.
93 **MAILUSER** - ``()``
94 If your SMTP mail host requires a username and password for access, then
95 specify them here. eg. ``MAILUSER = ('username', 'password')``
97 **MAILHOST_TLS** - ``'no'``
98 If your SMTP mail host provides or requires TLS (Transport Layer
99 Security) then set ``MAILHOST_TLS = 'yes'``
101 **MAILHOST_TLS_KEYFILE** - ``''``
102 If you're using TLS, you may also set MAILHOST_TLS_KEYFILE to the name of
103 a PEM formatted file that contains your private key.
105 **MAILHOST_TLS_CERTFILE** - ``''``
106 If you're using TLS and have specified a MAILHOST_TLS_KEYFILE, you may
107 also set MAILHOST_TLS_CERTFILE to the name of a PEM formatted certificate
108 chain file.
110 **MAIL_DOMAIN** - ``'tracker.domain.example'``
111 The domain name used for email addresses.
113 **DATABASE** - ``os.path.join(TRACKER_HOME, 'db')``
114 This is the directory that the database is going to be stored in. By default
115 it is in the tracker home.
117 **TEMPLATES** - ``os.path.join(TRACKER_HOME, 'html')``
118 This is the directory that the HTML templates reside in. By default they are
119 in the tracker home.
121 **TRACKER_NAME** - ``'Roundup issue tracker'``
122 A descriptive name for your roundup tracker. This is sent out in e-mails and
123 appears in the heading of CGI pages.
125 **TRACKER_EMAIL** - ``'issue_tracker@%s'%MAIL_DOMAIN``
126 The email address that e-mail sent to roundup should go to. Think of it as the
127 tracker's personal e-mail address.
129 **TRACKER_WEB** - ``'http://tracker.example/cgi-bin/roundup.cgi/bugs/'``
130 The web address that the tracker is viewable at. This will be included in
131 information sent to users of the tracker. The URL **must** include the
132 cgi-bin part or anything else that is required to get to the home page of
133 the tracker. You **must** include a trailing '/' in the URL.
135 **ADMIN_EMAIL** - ``'roundup-admin@%s'%MAIL_DOMAIN``
136 The email address that roundup will complain to if it runs into trouble.
138 **EMAIL_FROM_TAG** - ``''``
139 Additional text to include in the "name" part of the ``From:`` address used
140 in nosy messages. If the sending user is "Foo Bar", the ``From:`` line is
141 usually::
143 "Foo Bar" <issue_tracker@tracker.example>
145 The EMAIL_FROM_TAG goes inside the "Foo Bar" quotes like so::
147 "Foo Bar EMAIL_FROM_TAG" <issue_tracker@tracker.example>
149 **MESSAGES_TO_AUTHOR** - ``'new'``, ``'yes'`` or``'no'``
150 Send nosy messages to the author of the message?
151 If 'new' is used, then the author will only be sent the message when the
152 message creates a new issue. If 'yes' then the author will always be sent
153 a copy of the message they wrote.
155 **ADD_AUTHOR_TO_NOSY** - ``'new'``, ``'yes'`` or ``'no'``
156 Does the author of a message get placed on the nosy list automatically?
157 If ``'new'`` is used, then the author will only be added when a message
158 creates a new issue. If ``'yes'``, then the author will be added on followups
159 too. If ``'no'``, they're never added to the nosy.
161 **ADD_RECIPIENTS_TO_NOSY** - ``'new'``, ``'yes'`` or ``'no'``
162 Do the recipients (To:, Cc:) of a message get placed on the nosy list?
163 If ``'new'`` is used, then the recipients will only be added when a message
164 creates a new issue. If ``'yes'``, then the recipients will be added on
165 followups too. If ``'no'``, they're never added to the nosy.
167 **EMAIL_SIGNATURE_POSITION** - ``'top'``, ``'bottom'`` or ``'none'``
168 Where to place the email signature in messages that Roundup generates.
170 **EMAIL_KEEP_QUOTED_TEXT** - ``'yes'`` or ``'no'``
171 Keep email citations. Citations are the part of e-mail which the sender has
172 quoted in their reply to previous e-mail with ``>`` or ``|`` characters at
173 the start of the line.
175 **EMAIL_LEAVE_BODY_UNCHANGED** - ``'no'``
176 Preserve the email body as is. Enabiling this will cause the entire message
177 body to be stored, including all citations, signatures and Outlook-quoted
178 sections (ie. "Original Message" blocks). It should be either ``'yes'``
179 or ``'no'``.
181 **MAIL_DEFAULT_CLASS** - ``'issue'`` or ``''``
182 Default class to use in the mailgw if one isn't supplied in email
183 subjects. To disable, comment out the variable below or leave it blank.
185 **HTML_VERSION** - ``'html4'`` or ``'xhtml'``
186 HTML version to generate. The templates are html4 by default. If you
187 wish to make them xhtml, then you'll need to change this var to 'xhtml'
188 too so all auto-generated HTML is compliant.
190 The default config.py is given below - as you
191 can see, the MAIL_DOMAIN must be edited before any interaction with the
192 tracker is attempted.::
194 # roundup home is this package's directory
195 TRACKER_HOME=os.path.split(__file__)[0]
197 # The SMTP mail host that roundup will use to send mail
198 MAILHOST = 'localhost'
200 # The domain name used for email addresses.
201 MAIL_DOMAIN = 'your.tracker.email.domain.example'
203 # This is the directory that the database is going to be stored in
204 DATABASE = os.path.join(TRACKER_HOME, 'db')
206 # This is the directory that the HTML templates reside in
207 TEMPLATES = os.path.join(TRACKER_HOME, 'html')
209 # A descriptive name for your roundup tracker
210 TRACKER_NAME = 'Roundup issue tracker'
212 # The email address that mail to roundup should go to
213 TRACKER_EMAIL = 'issue_tracker@%s'%MAIL_DOMAIN
215 # The web address that the tracker is viewable at. This will be
216 # included in information sent to users of the tracker. The URL MUST
217 # include the cgi-bin part or anything else that is required to get
218 # to the home page of the tracker. You MUST include a trailing '/'
219 # in the URL.
220 TRACKER_WEB = 'http://tracker.example/cgi-bin/roundup.cgi/bugs/'
222 # The email address that roundup will complain to if it runs into
223 # trouble
224 ADMIN_EMAIL = 'roundup-admin@%s'%MAIL_DOMAIN
226 # Additional text to include in the "name" part of the From: address
227 # used in nosy messages. If the sending user is "Foo Bar", the From:
228 # line is usually: "Foo Bar" <issue_tracker@tracker.example>
229 # the EMAIL_FROM_TAG goes inside the "Foo Bar" quotes like so:
230 # "Foo Bar EMAIL_FROM_TAG" <issue_tracker@tracker.example>
231 EMAIL_FROM_TAG = ""
233 # Send nosy messages to the author of the message
234 MESSAGES_TO_AUTHOR = 'no' # either 'yes' or 'no'
236 # Does the author of a message get placed on the nosy list
237 # automatically? If 'new' is used, then the author will only be
238 # added when a message creates a new issue. If 'yes', then the
239 # author will be added on followups too. If 'no', they're never
240 # added to the nosy.
241 ADD_AUTHOR_TO_NOSY = 'new' # one of 'yes', 'no', 'new'
243 # Do the recipients (To:, Cc:) of a message get placed on the nosy
244 # list? If 'new' is used, then the recipients will only be added
245 # when a message creates a new issue. If 'yes', then the recipients
246 # will be added on followups too. If 'no', they're never added to
247 # the nosy.
248 ADD_RECIPIENTS_TO_NOSY = 'new' # either 'yes', 'no', 'new'
250 # Where to place the email signature
251 EMAIL_SIGNATURE_POSITION = 'bottom' # one of 'top', 'bottom', 'none'
253 # Keep email citations
254 EMAIL_KEEP_QUOTED_TEXT = 'no' # either 'yes' or 'no'
256 # Preserve the email body as is
257 EMAIL_LEAVE_BODY_UNCHANGED = 'no' # either 'yes' or 'no'
259 # Default class to use in the mailgw if one isn't supplied in email
260 # subjects. To disable, comment out the variable below or leave it
261 # blank. Examples:
262 MAIL_DEFAULT_CLASS = 'issue' # use "issue" class by default
263 #MAIL_DEFAULT_CLASS = '' # disable (or just comment the var out)
265 # HTML version to generate. The templates are html4 by default. If you
266 # wish to make them xhtml, then you'll need to change this var to 'xhtml'
267 # too so all auto-generated HTML is compliant.
268 HTML_VERSION = 'html4' # either 'html4' or 'xhtml'
270 #
271 # SECURITY DEFINITIONS
272 #
273 # define the Roles that a user gets when they register with the
274 # tracker these are a comma-separated string of role names (e.g.
275 # 'Admin,User')
276 NEW_WEB_USER_ROLES = 'User'
277 NEW_EMAIL_USER_ROLES = 'User'
279 Tracker Schema
280 ==============
282 Note: if you modify the schema, you'll most likely need to edit the
283 `web interface`_ HTML template files and `detectors`_ to reflect
284 your changes.
286 A tracker schema defines what data is stored in the tracker's database.
287 Schemas are defined using Python code in the ``dbinit.py`` module of your
288 tracker. The "classic" schema looks like this (see below for the meaning
289 of ``'setkey'``)::
291 pri = Class(db, "priority", name=String(), order=String())
292 pri.setkey("name")
294 stat = Class(db, "status", name=String(), order=String())
295 stat.setkey("name")
297 keyword = Class(db, "keyword", name=String())
298 keyword.setkey("name")
300 user = Class(db, "user", username=String(), organisation=String(),
301 password=String(), address=String(), realname=String(),
302 phone=String())
303 user.setkey("username")
305 msg = FileClass(db, "msg", author=Link("user"), summary=String(),
306 date=Date(), recipients=Multilink("user"),
307 files=Multilink("file"))
309 file = FileClass(db, "file", name=String(), type=String())
311 issue = IssueClass(db, "issue", topic=Multilink("keyword"),
312 status=Link("status"), assignedto=Link("user"),
313 priority=Link("priority"))
314 issue.setkey('title')
317 What you can't do to the schema
318 -------------------------------
320 You must never:
322 **Remove the users class**
323 This class is the only *required* class in Roundup. Similarly, its
324 username, password and address properties must never be removed.
326 **Change the type of a property**
327 Property types must *never* be changed - the database simply doesn't take
328 this kind of action into account. Note that you can't just remove a
329 property and re-add it as a new type either. If you wanted to make the
330 assignedto property a Multilink, you'd need to create a new property
331 assignedto_list and remove the old assignedto property.
334 What you can do to the schema
335 -----------------------------
337 Your schema may be changed at any time before or after the tracker has been
338 initialised (or used). You may:
340 **Add new properties to classes, or add whole new classes**
341 This is painless and easy to do - there are generally no repurcussions
342 from adding new information to a tracker's schema.
344 **Remove properties**
345 Removing properties is a little more tricky - you need to make sure that
346 the property is no longer used in the `web interface`_ *or* by the
347 detectors_.
351 Classes and Properties - creating a new information store
352 ---------------------------------------------------------
354 In the tracker above, we've defined 7 classes of information:
356 priority
357 Defines the possible levels of urgency for issues.
359 status
360 Defines the possible states of processing the issue may be in.
362 keyword
363 Initially empty, will hold keywords useful for searching issues.
365 user
366 Initially holding the "admin" user, will eventually have an entry
367 for all users using roundup.
369 msg
370 Initially empty, will hold all e-mail messages sent to or
371 generated by roundup.
373 file
374 Initially empty, will hold all files attached to issues.
376 issue
377 Initially empty, this is where the issue information is stored.
379 We define the "priority" and "status" classes to allow two things:
380 reduction in the amount of information stored on the issue and more
381 powerful, accurate searching of issues by priority and status. By only
382 requiring a link on the issue (which is stored as a single number) we
383 reduce the chance that someone mis-types a priority or status - or
384 simply makes a new one up.
387 Class and Items
388 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
390 A Class defines a particular class (or type) of data that will be stored
391 in the database. A class comprises one or more properties, which gives
392 the information about the class items.
394 The actual data entered into the database, using ``class.create()``, are
395 called items. They have a special immutable property called ``'id'``. We
396 sometimes refer to this as the *itemid*.
399 Properties
400 ~~~~~~~~~~
402 A Class is comprised of one or more properties of the following types:
404 * String properties are for storing arbitrary-length strings.
405 * Password properties are for storing encoded arbitrary-length strings.
406 The default encoding is defined on the ``roundup.password.Password``
407 class.
408 * Date properties store date-and-time stamps. Their values are Timestamp
409 objects.
410 * Number properties store numeric values.
411 * Boolean properties store on/off, yes/no, true/false values.
412 * A Link property refers to a single other item selected from a
413 specified class. The class is part of the property; the value is an
414 integer, the id of the chosen item.
415 * A Multilink property refers to possibly many items in a specified
416 class. The value is a list of integers.
419 FileClass
420 ~~~~~~~~~
422 FileClasses save their "content" attribute off in a separate file from
423 the rest of the database. This reduces the number of large entries in
424 the database, which generally makes databases more efficient, and also
425 allows us to use command-line tools to operate on the files. They are
426 stored in the files sub-directory of the ``'db'`` directory in your
427 tracker.
430 IssueClass
431 ~~~~~~~~~~
433 IssueClasses automatically include the "messages", "files", "nosy", and
434 "superseder" properties.
436 The messages and files properties list the links to the messages and
437 files related to the issue. The nosy property is a list of links to
438 users who wish to be informed of changes to the issue - they get "CC'ed"
439 e-mails when messages are sent to or generated by the issue. The nosy
440 reactor (in the ``'detectors'`` directory) handles this action. The
441 superseder link indicates an issue which has superseded this one.
443 They also have the dynamically generated "creation", "activity" and
444 "creator" properties.
446 The value of the "creation" property is the date when an item was
447 created, and the value of the "activity" property is the date when any
448 property on the item was last edited (equivalently, these are the dates
449 on the first and last records in the item's journal). The "creator"
450 property holds a link to the user that created the issue.
453 setkey(property)
454 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
456 Select a String property of the class to be the key property. The key
457 property must be unique, and allows references to the items in the class
458 by the content of the key property. That is, we can refer to users by
459 their username: for example, let's say that there's an issue in roundup,
460 issue 23. There's also a user, richard, who happens to be user 2. To
461 assign an issue to him, we could do either of::
463 roundup-admin set issue23 assignedto=2
465 or::
467 roundup-admin set issue23 assignedto=richard
469 Note, the same thing can be done in the web and e-mail interfaces.
471 If a class does not have an "order" property, the key is also used to
472 sort instances of the class when it is rendered in the user interface.
473 (If a class has no "order" property, sorting is by the labelproperty of
474 the class. This is computed, in order of precedence, as the key, the
475 "name", the "title", or the first property alphabetically.)
478 create(information)
479 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
481 Create an item in the database. This is generally used to create items
482 in the "definitional" classes like "priority" and "status".
485 Examples of adding to your schema
486 ---------------------------------
488 TODO
491 Detectors - adding behaviour to your tracker
492 ============================================
493 .. _detectors:
495 Detectors are initialised every time you open your tracker database, so
496 you're free to add and remove them any time, even after the database is
497 initialised via the "roundup-admin initialise" command.
499 The detectors in your tracker fire *before* (**auditors**) and *after*
500 (**reactors**) changes to the contents of your database. They are Python
501 modules that sit in your tracker's ``detectors`` directory. You will
502 have some installed by default - have a look. You can write new
503 detectors or modify the existing ones. The existing detectors installed
504 for you are:
506 **nosyreaction.py**
507 This provides the automatic nosy list maintenance and email sending.
508 The nosy reactor (``nosyreaction``) fires when new messages are added
509 to issues. The nosy auditor (``updatenosy``) fires when issues are
510 changed, and figures out what changes need to be made to the nosy list
511 (such as adding new authors, etc.)
512 **statusauditor.py**
513 This provides the ``chatty`` auditor which changes the issue status
514 from ``unread`` or ``closed`` to ``chatting`` if new messages appear.
515 It also provides the ``presetunread`` auditor which pre-sets the
516 status to ``unread`` on new items if the status isn't explicitly
517 defined.
518 **messagesummary.py**
519 Generates the ``summary`` property for new messages based on the message
520 content.
521 **userauditor.py**
522 Verifies the content of some of the user fields (email addresses and
523 roles lists).
525 If you don't want this default behaviour, you're completely free to change
526 or remove these detectors.
528 See the detectors section in the `design document`__ for details of the
529 interface for detectors.
531 __ design.html
533 Sample additional detectors that have been found useful will appear in
534 the ``'detectors'`` directory of the Roundup distribution. If you want
535 to use one, copy it to the ``'detectors'`` of your tracker instance:
537 **newissuecopy.py**
538 This detector sends an email to a team address whenever a new issue is
539 created. The address is hard-coded into the detector, so edit it
540 before you use it (look for the text 'team@team.host') or you'll get
541 email errors!
543 The detector code::
545 from roundup import roundupdb
547 def newissuecopy(db, cl, nodeid, oldvalues):
548 ''' Copy a message about new issues to a team address.
549 '''
550 # so use all the messages in the create
551 change_note = cl.generateCreateNote(nodeid)
553 # send a copy to the nosy list
554 for msgid in cl.get(nodeid, 'messages'):
555 try:
556 # note: last arg must be a list
557 cl.send_message(nodeid, msgid, change_note,
558 ['team@team.host'])
559 except roundupdb.MessageSendError, message:
560 raise roundupdb.DetectorError, message
562 def init(db):
563 db.issue.react('create', newissuecopy)
566 Database Content
567 ================
569 Note: if you modify the content of definitional classes, you'll most
570 likely need to edit the tracker `detectors`_ to reflect your
571 changes.
573 Customisation of the special "definitional" classes (eg. status,
574 priority, resolution, ...) may be done either before or after the
575 tracker is initialised. The actual method of doing so is completely
576 different in each case though, so be careful to use the right one.
578 **Changing content before tracker initialisation**
579 Edit the dbinit module in your tracker to alter the items created in
580 using the ``create()`` methods.
582 **Changing content after tracker initialisation**
583 As the "admin" user, click on the "class list" link in the web
584 interface to bring up a list of all database classes. Click on the
585 name of the class you wish to change the content of.
587 You may also use the ``roundup-admin`` interface's create, set and
588 retire methods to add, alter or remove items from the classes in
589 question.
591 See "`adding a new field to the classic schema`_" for an example that
592 requires database content changes.
595 Security / Access Controls
596 ==========================
598 A set of Permissions is built into the security module by default:
600 - Edit (everything)
601 - View (everything)
603 The default interfaces define:
605 - Web Registration
606 - Web Access
607 - Web Roles
608 - Email Registration
609 - Email Access
611 These are hooked into the default Roles:
613 - Admin (Edit everything, View everything, Web Roles)
614 - User (Web Access, Email Access)
615 - Anonymous (Web Registration, Email Registration)
617 And finally, the "admin" user gets the "Admin" Role, and the "anonymous"
618 user gets "Anonymous" assigned when the database is initialised on
619 installation. The two default schemas then define:
621 - Edit issue, View issue (both)
622 - Edit file, View file (both)
623 - Edit msg, View msg (both)
624 - Edit support, View support (extended only)
626 and assign those Permissions to the "User" Role. Put together, these
627 settings appear in the ``open()`` function of the tracker ``dbinit.py``
628 (the following is taken from the "minimal" template's ``dbinit.py``)::
630 #
631 # SECURITY SETTINGS
632 #
633 # new permissions for this schema
634 for cl in ('user', ):
635 db.security.addPermission(name="Edit", klass=cl,
636 description="User is allowed to edit "+cl)
637 db.security.addPermission(name="View", klass=cl,
638 description="User is allowed to access "+cl)
640 # and give the regular users access to the web and email interface
641 p = db.security.getPermission('Web Access')
642 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
643 p = db.security.getPermission('Email Access')
644 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
646 # May users view other user information? Comment these lines out
647 # if you don't want them to
648 p = db.security.getPermission('View', 'user')
649 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
651 # Assign the appropriate permissions to the anonymous user's
652 # Anonymous role. Choices here are:
653 # - Allow anonymous users to register through the web
654 p = db.security.getPermission('Web Registration')
655 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', p)
656 # - Allow anonymous (new) users to register through the email
657 # gateway
658 p = db.security.getPermission('Email Registration')
659 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', p)
662 New User Roles
663 --------------
665 New users are assigned the Roles defined in the config file as:
667 - NEW_WEB_USER_ROLES
668 - NEW_EMAIL_USER_ROLES
671 Changing Access Controls
672 ------------------------
674 You may alter the configuration variables to change the Role that new
675 web or email users get, for example to not give them access to the web
676 interface if they register through email.
678 You may use the ``roundup-admin`` "``security``" command to display the
679 current Role and Permission configuration in your tracker.
682 Adding a new Permission
683 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
685 When adding a new Permission, you will need to:
687 1. add it to your tracker's dbinit so it is created
688 2. enable it for the Roles that should have it (verify with
689 "``roundup-admin security``")
690 3. add it to the relevant HTML interface templates
691 4. add it to the appropriate xxxPermission methods on in your tracker
692 interfaces module
695 Example Scenarios
696 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
698 **automatic registration of users in the e-mail gateway**
699 By giving the "anonymous" user the "Email Registration" Role, any
700 unidentified user will automatically be registered with the tracker
701 (with no password, so they won't be able to log in through the web
702 until an admin sets their password). Note: this is the default
703 behaviour in the tracker templates that ship with Roundup.
705 **anonymous access through the e-mail gateway**
706 Give the "anonymous" user the "Email Access" and ("Edit", "issue")
707 Roles but do not not give them the "Email Registration" Role. This
708 means that when an unknown user sends email into the tracker, they're
709 automatically logged in as "anonymous". Since they don't have the
710 "Email Registration" Role, they won't be automatically registered, but
711 since "anonymous" has permission to use the gateway, they'll still be
712 able to submit issues. Note that the Sender information - their email
713 address - will not be available - they're *anonymous*.
715 **only developers may be assigned issues**
716 Create a new Permission called "Fixer" for the "issue" class. Create a
717 new Role "Developer" which has that Permission, and assign that to the
718 appropriate users. Filter the list of users available in the assignedto
719 list to include only those users. Enforce the Permission with an
720 auditor. See the example
721 `restricting the list of users that are assignable to a task`_.
723 **only managers may sign off issues as complete**
724 Create a new Permission called "Closer" for the "issue" class. Create a
725 new Role "Manager" which has that Permission, and assign that to the
726 appropriate users. In your web interface, only display the "resolved"
727 issue state option when the user has the "Closer" Permissions. Enforce
728 the Permission with an auditor. This is very similar to the previous
729 example, except that the web interface check would look like::
731 <option tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('Closer')"
732 value="resolved">Resolved</option>
734 **don't give web access to users who register through email**
735 Create a new Role called "Email User" which has all the Permissions of
736 the normal "User" Role minus the "Web Access" Permission. This will
737 allow users to send in emails to the tracker, but not access the web
738 interface.
740 **let some users edit the details of all users**
741 Create a new Role called "User Admin" which has the Permission for
742 editing users::
744 db.security.addRole(name='User Admin', description='Managing users')
745 p = db.security.getPermission('Edit', 'user')
746 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User Admin', p)
748 and assign the Role to the users who need the permission.
751 Web Interface
752 =============
754 .. contents::
755 :local:
756 :depth: 1
758 The web interface is provided by the ``roundup.cgi.client`` module and
759 is used by ``roundup.cgi``, ``roundup-server`` and ``ZRoundup``
760 (``ZRoundup`` is broken, until further notice). In all cases, we
761 determine which tracker is being accessed (the first part of the URL
762 path inside the scope of the CGI handler) and pass control on to the
763 tracker ``interfaces.Client`` class - which uses the ``Client`` class
764 from ``roundup.cgi.client`` - which handles the rest of the access
765 through its ``main()`` method. This means that you can do pretty much
766 anything you want as a web interface to your tracker.
768 Repercussions of changing the tracker schema
769 ---------------------------------------------
771 If you choose to change the `tracker schema`_ you will need to ensure
772 the web interface knows about it:
774 1. Index, item and search pages for the relevant classes may need to
775 have properties added or removed,
776 2. The "page" template may require links to be changed, as might the
777 "home" page's content arguments.
779 How requests are processed
780 --------------------------
782 The basic processing of a web request proceeds as follows:
784 1. figure out who we are, defaulting to the "anonymous" user
785 2. figure out what the request is for - we call this the "context"
786 3. handle any requested action (item edit, search, ...)
787 4. render the template requested by the context, resulting in HTML
788 output
790 In some situations, exceptions occur:
792 - HTTP Redirect (generally raised by an action)
793 - SendFile (generally raised by ``determine_context``)
794 here we serve up a FileClass "content" property
795 - SendStaticFile (generally raised by ``determine_context``)
796 here we serve up a file from the tracker "html" directory
797 - Unauthorised (generally raised by an action)
798 here the action is cancelled, the request is rendered and an error
799 message is displayed indicating that permission was not granted for
800 the action to take place
801 - NotFound (raised wherever it needs to be)
802 this exception percolates up to the CGI interface that called the
803 client
805 Determining web context
806 -----------------------
808 To determine the "context" of a request, we look at the URL and the
809 special request variable ``@template``. The URL path after the tracker
810 identifier is examined. Typical URL paths look like:
812 1. ``/tracker/issue``
813 2. ``/tracker/issue1``
814 3. ``/tracker/_file/style.css``
815 4. ``/cgi-bin/roundup.cgi/tracker/file1``
816 5. ``/cgi-bin/roundup.cgi/tracker/file1/kitten.png``
818 where the "tracker identifier" is "tracker" in the above cases. That means
819 we're looking at "issue", "issue1", "_file/style.css", "file1" and
820 "file1/kitten.png" in the cases above. The path is generally only one
821 entry long - longer paths are handled differently.
823 a. if there is no path, then we are in the "home" context.
824 b. if the path starts with "_file" (as in example 3,
825 "/tracker/_file/style.css"), then the additional path entry,
826 "style.css" specifies the filename of a static file we're to serve up
827 from the tracker "html" directory. Raises a SendStaticFile exception.
828 c. if there is something in the path (as in example 1, "issue"), it
829 identifies the tracker class we're to display.
830 d. if the path is an item designator (as in examples 2 and 4, "issue1"
831 and "file1"), then we're to display a specific item.
832 e. if the path starts with an item designator and is longer than one
833 entry (as in example 5, "file1/kitten.png"), then we're assumed to be
834 handling an item of a ``FileClass``, and the extra path information
835 gives the filename that the client is going to label the download
836 with (i.e. "file1/kitten.png" is nicer to download than "file1").
837 This raises a ``SendFile`` exception.
839 Both b. and e. stop before we bother to determine the template we're
840 going to use. That's because they don't actually use templates.
842 The template used is specified by the ``@template`` CGI variable, which
843 defaults to:
845 - only classname suplied: "index"
846 - full item designator supplied: "item"
849 Performing actions in web requests
850 ----------------------------------
852 When a user requests a web page, they may optionally also request for an
853 action to take place. As described in `how requests are processed`_, the
854 action is performed before the requested page is generated. Actions are
855 triggered by using a ``@action`` CGI variable, where the value is one
856 of:
858 **login**
859 Attempt to log a user in.
861 **logout**
862 Log the user out - make them "anonymous".
864 **register**
865 Attempt to create a new user based on the contents of the form and then
866 log them in.
868 **edit**
869 Perform an edit of an item in the database. There are some `special form
870 variables`_ you may use.
872 **new**
873 Add a new item to the database. You may use the same `special form
874 variables`_ as in the "edit" action.
876 **retire**
877 Retire the item in the database.
879 **editCSV**
880 Performs an edit of all of a class' items in one go. See also the
881 *class*.csv templating method which generates the CSV data to be
882 edited, and the ``'_generic.index'`` template which uses both of these
883 features.
885 **search**
886 Mangle some of the form variables:
888 - Set the form ":filter" variable based on the values of the filter
889 variables - if they're set to anything other than "dontcare" then add
890 them to :filter.
892 - Also handle the ":queryname" variable and save off the query to the
893 user's query list.
895 Each of the actions is implemented by a corresponding ``*actionAction*``
896 (where "action" is the name of the action) method on the
897 ``roundup.cgi.Client`` class, which also happens to be available in your
898 tracker instance as ``interfaces.Client``. So if you need to define new
899 actions, you may add them there (see `defining new web actions`_).
901 Each action also has a corresponding ``*actionPermission*`` (where
902 "action" is the name of the action) method which determines whether the
903 action is permissible given the current user. The base permission checks
904 are:
906 **login**
907 Determine whether the user has permission to log in. Base behaviour is
908 to check the user has "Web Access".
909 **logout**
910 No permission checks are made.
911 **register**
912 Determine whether the user has permission to register. Base behaviour
913 is to check the user has the "Web Registration" Permission.
914 **edit**
915 Determine whether the user has permission to edit this item. Base
916 behaviour is to check whether the user can edit this class. If we're
917 editing the "user" class, users are allowed to edit their own details -
918 unless they try to edit the "roles" property, which requires the
919 special Permission "Web Roles".
920 **new**
921 Determine whether the user has permission to create (or edit) this
922 item. Base behaviour is to check the user can edit this class. No
923 additional property checks are made. Additionally, new user items may
924 be created if the user has the "Web Registration" Permission.
925 **editCSV**
926 Determine whether the user has permission to edit this class. Base
927 behaviour is to check whether the user may edit this class.
928 **search**
929 Determine whether the user has permission to search this class. Base
930 behaviour is to check whether the user may view this class.
933 Special form variables
934 ----------------------
936 Item properties and their values are edited with html FORM
937 variables and their values. You can:
939 - Change the value of some property of the current item.
940 - Create a new item of any class, and edit the new item's
941 properties,
942 - Attach newly created items to a multilink property of the
943 current item.
944 - Remove items from a multilink property of the current item.
945 - Specify that some properties are required for the edit
946 operation to be successful.
948 In the following, <bracketed> values are variable, "@" may be
949 either ":" or "@", and other text "required" is fixed.
951 Most properties are specified as form variables:
953 ``<propname>``
954 property on the current context item
956 ``<designator>"@"<propname>``
957 property on the indicated item (for editing related information)
959 Designators name a specific item of a class.
961 ``<classname><N>``
962 Name an existing item of class <classname>.
964 ``<classname>"-"<N>``
965 Name the <N>th new item of class <classname>. If the form
966 submission is successful, a new item of <classname> is
967 created. Within the submitted form, a particular
968 designator of this form always refers to the same new
969 item.
971 Once we have determined the "propname", we look at it to see
972 if it's special:
974 ``@required``
975 The associated form value is a comma-separated list of
976 property names that must be specified when the form is
977 submitted for the edit operation to succeed.
979 When the <designator> is missing, the properties are
980 for the current context item. When <designator> is
981 present, they are for the item specified by
982 <designator>.
984 The "@required" specifier must come before any of the
985 properties it refers to are assigned in the form.
987 ``@remove@<propname>=id(s)`` or ``@add@<propname>=id(s)``
988 The "@add@" and "@remove@" edit actions apply only to
989 Multilink properties. The form value must be a
990 comma-separate list of keys for the class specified by
991 the simple form variable. The listed items are added
992 to (respectively, removed from) the specified
993 property.
995 ``@link@<propname>=<designator>``
996 If the edit action is "@link@", the simple form
997 variable must specify a Link or Multilink property.
998 The form value is a comma-separated list of
999 designators. The item corresponding to each
1000 designator is linked to the property given by simple
1001 form variable.
1003 None of the above (ie. just a simple form value)
1004 The value of the form variable is converted
1005 appropriately, depending on the type of the property.
1007 For a Link('klass') property, the form value is a
1008 single key for 'klass', where the key field is
1009 specified in dbinit.py.
1011 For a Multilink('klass') property, the form value is a
1012 comma-separated list of keys for 'klass', where the
1013 key field is specified in dbinit.py.
1015 Note that for simple-form-variables specifiying Link
1016 and Multilink properties, the linked-to class must
1017 have a key field.
1019 For a String() property specifying a filename, the
1020 file named by the form value is uploaded. This means we
1021 try to set additional properties "filename" and "type" (if
1022 they are valid for the class). Otherwise, the property
1023 is set to the form value.
1025 For Date(), Interval(), Boolean(), and Number()
1026 properties, the form value is converted to the
1027 appropriate
1029 Any of the form variables may be prefixed with a classname or
1030 designator.
1032 Two special form values are supported for backwards compatibility:
1034 @note
1035 This is equivalent to::
1037 @link@messages=msg-1
1038 msg-1@content=value
1040 except that in addition, the "author" and "date" properties of
1041 "msg-1" are set to the userid of the submitter, and the current
1042 time, respectively.
1044 @file
1045 This is equivalent to::
1047 @link@files=file-1
1048 file-1@content=value
1050 The String content value is handled as described above for file
1051 uploads.
1053 If both the "@note" and "@file" form variables are
1054 specified, the action::
1056 @link@msg-1@files=file-1
1058 is also performed.
1060 We also check that FileClass items have a "content" property with
1061 actual content, otherwise we remove them from all_props before
1062 returning.
1066 Default templates
1067 -----------------
1069 The default templates are html4 compliant. If you wish to change them to be
1070 xhtml compliant, you'll need to change the ``HTML_VERSION`` configuration
1071 variable in ``config.py`` to ``'xhtml'`` instead of ``'html4'``.
1073 Most customisation of the web view can be done by modifying the
1074 templates in the tracker ``'html'`` directory. There are several types
1075 of files in there. The *minimal* template includes:
1077 **page.html**
1078 This template usually defines the overall look of your tracker. When
1079 you view an issue, it appears inside this template. When you view an
1080 index, it also appears inside this template. This template defines a
1081 macro called "icing" which is used by almost all other templates as a
1082 coating for their content, using its "content" slot. It also defines
1083 the "head_title" and "body_title" slots to allow setting of the page
1084 title.
1085 **home.html**
1086 the default page displayed when no other page is indicated by the user
1087 **home.classlist.html**
1088 a special version of the default page that lists the classes in the
1089 tracker
1090 **classname.item.html**
1091 displays an item of the *classname* class
1092 **classname.index.html**
1093 displays a list of *classname* items
1094 **classname.search.html**
1095 displays a search page for *classname* items
1096 **_generic.index.html**
1097 used to display a list of items where there is no
1098 ``*classname*.index`` available
1099 **_generic.help.html**
1100 used to display a "class help" page where there is no
1101 ``*classname*.help``
1102 **user.register.html**
1103 a special page just for the user class, that renders the registration
1104 page
1105 **style.css.html**
1106 a static file that is served up as-is
1108 The *classic* template has a number of additional templates.
1110 Note: Remember that you can create any template extension you want to,
1111 so if you just want to play around with the templating for new issues,
1112 you can copy the current "issue.item" template to "issue.test", and then
1113 access the test template using the "@template" URL argument::
1115 http://your.tracker.example/tracker/issue?@template=test
1117 and it won't affect your users using the "issue.item" template.
1120 How the templates work
1121 ----------------------
1124 Basic Templating Actions
1125 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1127 Roundup's templates consist of special attributes on the HTML tags.
1128 These attributes form the Template Attribute Language, or TAL. The basic
1129 TAL commands are:
1131 **tal:define="variable expression; variable expression; ..."**
1132 Define a new variable that is local to this tag and its contents. For
1133 example::
1135 <html tal:define="title request/description">
1136 <head><title tal:content="title"></title></head>
1137 </html>
1139 In this example, the variable "title" is defined as the result of the
1140 expression "request/description". The "tal:content" command inside the
1141 <html> tag may then use the "title" variable.
1143 **tal:condition="expression"**
1144 Only keep this tag and its contents if the expression is true. For
1145 example::
1147 <p tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('View', 'issue')">
1148 Display some issue information.
1149 </p>
1151 In the example, the <p> tag and its contents are only displayed if
1152 the user has the "View" permission for issues. We consider the number
1153 zero, a blank string, an empty list, and the built-in variable
1154 nothing to be false values. Nearly every other value is true,
1155 including non-zero numbers, and strings with anything in them (even
1156 spaces!).
1158 **tal:repeat="variable expression"**
1159 Repeat this tag and its contents for each element of the sequence
1160 that the expression returns, defining a new local variable and a
1161 special "repeat" variable for each element. For example::
1163 <tr tal:repeat="u user/list">
1164 <td tal:content="u/id"></td>
1165 <td tal:content="u/username"></td>
1166 <td tal:content="u/realname"></td>
1167 </tr>
1169 The example would iterate over the sequence of users returned by
1170 "user/list" and define the local variable "u" for each entry.
1172 **tal:replace="expression"**
1173 Replace this tag with the result of the expression. For example::
1175 <span tal:replace="request/user/realname" />
1177 The example would replace the <span> tag and its contents with the
1178 user's realname. If the user's realname was "Bruce", then the
1179 resultant output would be "Bruce".
1181 **tal:content="expression"**
1182 Replace the contents of this tag with the result of the expression.
1183 For example::
1185 <span tal:content="request/user/realname">user's name appears here
1186 </span>
1188 The example would replace the contents of the <span> tag with the
1189 user's realname. If the user's realname was "Bruce" then the
1190 resultant output would be "<span>Bruce</span>".
1192 **tal:attributes="attribute expression; attribute expression; ..."**
1193 Set attributes on this tag to the results of expressions. For
1194 example::
1196 <a tal:attributes="href string:user${request/user/id}">My Details</a>
1198 In the example, the "href" attribute of the <a> tag is set to the
1199 value of the "string:user${request/user/id}" expression, which will
1200 be something like "user123".
1202 **tal:omit-tag="expression"**
1203 Remove this tag (but not its contents) if the expression is true. For
1204 example::
1206 <span tal:omit-tag="python:1">Hello, world!</span>
1208 would result in output of::
1210 Hello, world!
1212 Note that the commands on a given tag are evaulated in the order above,
1213 so *define* comes before *condition*, and so on.
1215 Additionally, you may include tags such as <tal:block>, which are
1216 removed from output. Its content is kept, but the tag itself is not (so
1217 don't go using any "tal:attributes" commands on it). This is useful for
1218 making arbitrary blocks of HTML conditional or repeatable (very handy
1219 for repeating multiple table rows, which would othewise require an
1220 illegal tag placement to effect the repeat).
1223 Templating Expressions
1224 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1226 The expressions you may use in the attribute values may be one of the
1227 following forms:
1229 **Path Expressions** - eg. ``item/status/checklist``
1230 These are object attribute / item accesses. Roughly speaking, the
1231 path ``item/status/checklist`` is broken into parts ``item``,
1232 ``status`` and ``checklist``. The ``item`` part is the root of the
1233 expression. We then look for a ``status`` attribute on ``item``, or
1234 failing that, a ``status`` item (as in ``item['status']``). If that
1235 fails, the path expression fails. When we get to the end, the object
1236 we're left with is evaluated to get a string - if it is a method, it
1237 is called; if it is an object, it is stringified. Path expressions
1238 may have an optional ``path:`` prefix, but they are the default
1239 expression type, so it's not necessary.
1241 If an expression evaluates to ``default``, then the expression is
1242 "cancelled" - whatever HTML already exists in the template will
1243 remain (tag content in the case of ``tal:content``, attributes in the
1244 case of ``tal:attributes``).
1246 If an expression evaluates to ``nothing`` then the target of the
1247 expression is removed (tag content in the case of ``tal:content``,
1248 attributes in the case of ``tal:attributes`` and the tag itself in
1249 the case of ``tal:replace``).
1251 If an element in the path may not exist, then you can use the ``|``
1252 operator in the expression to provide an alternative. So, the
1253 expression ``request/form/foo/value | default`` would simply leave
1254 the current HTML in place if the "foo" form variable doesn't exist.
1256 You may use the python function ``path``, as in
1257 ``path("item/status")``, to embed path expressions in Python
1258 expressions.
1260 **String Expressions** - eg. ``string:hello ${user/name}``
1261 These expressions are simple string interpolations - though they can
1262 be just plain strings with no interpolation if you want. The
1263 expression in the ``${ ... }`` is just a path expression as above.
1265 **Python Expressions** - eg. ``python: 1+1``
1266 These expressions give the full power of Python. All the "root level"
1267 variables are available, so ``python:item.status.checklist()`` would
1268 be equivalent to ``item/status/checklist``, assuming that
1269 ``checklist`` is a method.
1271 Modifiers:
1273 **structure** - eg. ``structure python:msg.content.plain(hyperlink=1)``
1274 The result of expressions are normally *escaped* to be safe for HTML
1275 display (all "<", ">" and "&" are turned into special entities). The
1276 ``structure`` expression modifier turns off this escaping - the
1277 result of the expression is now assumed to be HTML, which is passed
1278 to the web browser for rendering.
1280 **not:** - eg. ``not:python:1=1``
1281 This simply inverts the logical true/false value of another
1282 expression.
1285 Template Macros
1286 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1288 Macros are used in Roundup to save us from repeating the same common
1289 page stuctures over and over. The most common (and probably only) macro
1290 you'll use is the "icing" macro defined in the "page" template.
1292 Macros are generated and used inside your templates using special
1293 attributes similar to the `basic templating actions`_. In this case,
1294 though, the attributes belong to the Macro Expansion Template Attribute
1295 Language, or METAL. The macro commands are:
1297 **metal:define-macro="macro name"**
1298 Define that the tag and its contents are now a macro that may be
1299 inserted into other templates using the *use-macro* command. For
1300 example::
1302 <html metal:define-macro="page">
1303 ...
1304 </html>
1306 defines a macro called "page" using the ``<html>`` tag and its
1307 contents. Once defined, macros are stored on the template they're
1308 defined on in the ``macros`` attribute. You can access them later on
1309 through the ``templates`` variable, eg. the most common
1310 ``templates/page/macros/icing`` to access the "page" macro of the
1311 "page" template.
1313 **metal:use-macro="path expression"**
1314 Use a macro, which is identified by the path expression (see above).
1315 This will replace the current tag with the identified macro contents.
1316 For example::
1318 <tal:block metal:use-macro="templates/page/macros/icing">
1319 ...
1320 </tal:block>
1322 will replace the tag and its contents with the "page" macro of the
1323 "page" template.
1325 **metal:define-slot="slot name"** and **metal:fill-slot="slot name"**
1326 To define *dynamic* parts of the macro, you define "slots" which may
1327 be filled when the macro is used with a *use-macro* command. For
1328 example, the ``templates/page/macros/icing`` macro defines a slot like
1329 so::
1331 <title metal:define-slot="head_title">title goes here</title>
1333 In your *use-macro* command, you may now use a *fill-slot* command
1334 like this::
1336 <title metal:fill-slot="head_title">My Title</title>
1338 where the tag that fills the slot completely replaces the one defined
1339 as the slot in the macro.
1341 Note that you may not mix METAL and TAL commands on the same tag, but
1342 TAL commands may be used freely inside METAL-using tags (so your
1343 *fill-slots* tags may have all manner of TAL inside them).
1346 Information available to templates
1347 ----------------------------------
1349 Note: this is implemented by
1350 ``roundup.cgi.templating.RoundupPageTemplate``
1352 The following variables are available to templates.
1354 **context**
1355 The current context. This is either None, a `hyperdb class wrapper`_
1356 or a `hyperdb item wrapper`_
1357 **request**
1358 Includes information about the current request, including:
1359 - the current index information (``filterspec``, ``filter`` args,
1360 ``properties``, etc) parsed out of the form.
1361 - methods for easy filterspec link generation
1362 - *user*, the current user item as an HTMLItem instance
1363 - *form*
1364 The current CGI form information as a mapping of form argument name
1365 to value
1366 **config**
1367 This variable holds all the values defined in the tracker config.py
1368 file (eg. TRACKER_NAME, etc.)
1369 **db**
1370 The current database, used to access arbitrary database items.
1371 **templates**
1372 Access to all the tracker templates by name. Used mainly in
1373 *use-macro* commands.
1374 **utils**
1375 This variable makes available some utility functions like batching.
1376 **nothing**
1377 This is a special variable - if an expression evaluates to this, then
1378 the tag (in the case of a ``tal:replace``), its contents (in the case
1379 of ``tal:content``) or some attributes (in the case of
1380 ``tal:attributes``) will not appear in the the output. So, for
1381 example::
1383 <span tal:attributes="class nothing">Hello, World!</span>
1385 would result in::
1387 <span>Hello, World!</span>
1389 **default**
1390 Also a special variable - if an expression evaluates to this, then the
1391 existing HTML in the template will not be replaced or removed, it will
1392 remain. So::
1394 <span tal:replace="default">Hello, World!</span>
1396 would result in::
1398 <span>Hello, World!</span>
1401 The context variable
1402 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1404 The *context* variable is one of three things based on the current
1405 context (see `determining web context`_ for how we figure this out):
1407 1. if we're looking at a "home" page, then it's None
1408 2. if we're looking at a specific hyperdb class, it's a
1409 `hyperdb class wrapper`_.
1410 3. if we're looking at a specific hyperdb item, it's a
1411 `hyperdb item wrapper`_.
1413 If the context is not None, we can access the properties of the class or
1414 item. The only real difference between cases 2 and 3 above are:
1416 1. the properties may have a real value behind them, and this will
1417 appear if the property is displayed through ``context/property`` or
1418 ``context/property/field``.
1419 2. the context's "id" property will be a false value in the second case,
1420 but a real, or true value in the third. Thus we can determine whether
1421 we're looking at a real item from the hyperdb by testing
1422 "context/id".
1424 Hyperdb class wrapper
1425 :::::::::::::::::::::
1427 Note: this is implemented by the ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLClass``
1428 class.
1430 This wrapper object provides access to a hyperb class. It is used
1431 primarily in both index view and new item views, but it's also usable
1432 anywhere else that you wish to access information about a class, or the
1433 items of a class, when you don't have a specific item of that class in
1434 mind.
1436 We allow access to properties. There will be no "id" property. The value
1437 accessed through the property will be the current value of the same name
1438 from the CGI form.
1440 There are several methods available on these wrapper objects:
1442 =========== =============================================================
1443 Method Description
1444 =========== =============================================================
1445 properties return a `hyperdb property wrapper`_ for all of this class's
1446 properties.
1447 list lists all of the active (not retired) items in the class.
1448 csv return the items of this class as a chunk of CSV text.
1449 propnames lists the names of the properties of this class.
1450 filter lists of items from this class, filtered and sorted by the
1451 current *request* filterspec/filter/sort/group args
1452 classhelp display a link to a javascript popup containing this class'
1453 "help" template.
1454 submit generate a submit button (and action hidden element)
1455 renderWith render this class with the given template.
1456 history returns 'New node - no history' :)
1457 is_edit_ok is the user allowed to Edit the current class?
1458 is_view_ok is the user allowed to View the current class?
1459 =========== =============================================================
1461 Note that if you have a property of the same name as one of the above
1462 methods, you'll need to access it using a python "item access"
1463 expression. For example::
1465 python:context['list']
1467 will access the "list" property, rather than the list method.
1470 Hyperdb item wrapper
1471 ::::::::::::::::::::
1473 Note: this is implemented by the ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLItem``
1474 class.
1476 This wrapper object provides access to a hyperb item.
1478 We allow access to properties. There will be no "id" property. The value
1479 accessed through the property will be the current value of the same name
1480 from the CGI form.
1482 There are several methods available on these wrapper objects:
1484 =============== ========================================================
1485 Method Description
1486 =============== ========================================================
1487 submit generate a submit button (and action hidden element)
1488 journal return the journal of the current item (**not
1489 implemented**)
1490 history render the journal of the current item as HTML
1491 renderQueryForm specific to the "query" class - render the search form
1492 for the query
1493 hasPermission specific to the "user" class - determine whether the
1494 user has a Permission
1495 is_edit_ok is the user allowed to Edit the current item?
1496 is_view_ok is the user allowed to View the current item?
1497 =============== ========================================================
1499 Note that if you have a property of the same name as one of the above
1500 methods, you'll need to access it using a python "item access"
1501 expression. For example::
1503 python:context['journal']
1505 will access the "journal" property, rather than the journal method.
1508 Hyperdb property wrapper
1509 ::::::::::::::::::::::::
1511 Note: this is implemented by subclasses of the
1512 ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLProperty`` class (``HTMLStringProperty``,
1513 ``HTMLNumberProperty``, and so on).
1515 This wrapper object provides access to a single property of a class. Its
1516 value may be either:
1518 1. if accessed through a `hyperdb item wrapper`_, then it's a value from
1519 the hyperdb
1520 2. if access through a `hyperdb class wrapper`_, then it's a value from
1521 the CGI form
1524 The property wrapper has some useful attributes:
1526 =============== ========================================================
1527 Attribute Description
1528 =============== ========================================================
1529 _name the name of the property
1530 _value the value of the property if any - this is the actual
1531 value retrieved from the hyperdb for this property
1532 =============== ========================================================
1534 There are several methods available on these wrapper objects:
1536 =========== ================================================================
1537 Method Description
1538 =========== ================================================================
1539 plain render a "plain" representation of the property. This method
1540 may take two arguments:
1542 escape
1543 If true, escape the text so it is HTML safe (default: no). The
1544 reason this defaults to off is that text is usually escaped
1545 at a later stage by the TAL commands, unless the "structure"
1546 option is used in the template. The following ``tal:content``
1547 expressions are all equivalent::
1549 "structure python:msg.content.plain(escape=1)"
1550 "python:msg.content.plain()"
1551 "msg/content/plain"
1552 "msg/content"
1554 Usually you'll only want to use the escape option in a
1555 complex expression.
1557 hyperlink
1558 If true, turn URLs, email addresses and hyperdb item
1559 designators in the text into hyperlinks (default: no). Note
1560 that you'll need to use the "structure" TAL option if you
1561 want to use this ``tal:content`` expression::
1563 "structure python:msg.content.plain(hyperlink=1)"
1565 Note also that the text is automatically HTML-escaped before
1566 the hyperlinking transformation.
1567 hyperlinked The same as msg.content.plain(hyperlink=1), but nicer::
1569 "structure msg/content/hyperlinked"
1571 field render an appropriate form edit field for the property - for
1572 most types this is a text entry box, but for Booleans it's a
1573 tri-state yes/no/neither selection.
1574 stext only on String properties - render the value of the property
1575 as StructuredText (requires the StructureText module to be
1576 installed separately)
1577 multiline only on String properties - render a multiline form edit
1578 field for the property
1579 email only on String properties - render the value of the property
1580 as an obscured email address
1581 confirm only on Password properties - render a second form edit field
1582 for the property, used for confirmation that the user typed
1583 the password correctly. Generates a field with name
1584 "name:confirm".
1585 now only on Date properties - return the current date as a new
1586 property
1587 reldate only on Date properties - render the interval between the date
1588 and now
1589 local only on Date properties - return this date as a new property
1590 with some timezone offset
1591 pretty only on Interval properties - render the interval in a pretty
1592 format (eg. "yesterday")
1593 menu only on Link and Multilink properties - render a form select
1594 list for this property
1595 reverse only on Multilink properties - produce a list of the linked
1596 items in reverse order
1597 =========== ================================================================
1600 The request variable
1601 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1603 Note: this is implemented by the ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLRequest``
1604 class.
1606 The request variable is packed with information about the current
1607 request.
1609 .. taken from ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLRequest`` docstring
1611 =========== ============================================================
1612 Variable Holds
1613 =========== ============================================================
1614 form the CGI form as a cgi.FieldStorage
1615 env the CGI environment variables
1616 base the base URL for this tracker
1617 user a HTMLUser instance for this user
1618 classname the current classname (possibly None)
1619 template the current template (suffix, also possibly None)
1620 form the current CGI form variables in a FieldStorage
1621 =========== ============================================================
1623 **Index page specific variables (indexing arguments)**
1625 =========== ============================================================
1626 Variable Holds
1627 =========== ============================================================
1628 columns dictionary of the columns to display in an index page
1629 show a convenience access to columns - request/show/colname will
1630 be true if the columns should be displayed, false otherwise
1631 sort index sort column (direction, column name)
1632 group index grouping property (direction, column name)
1633 filter properties to filter the index on
1634 filterspec values to filter the index on
1635 search_text text to perform a full-text search on for an index
1636 =========== ============================================================
1638 There are several methods available on the request variable:
1640 =============== ========================================================
1641 Method Description
1642 =============== ========================================================
1643 description render a description of the request - handle for the
1644 page title
1645 indexargs_form render the current index args as form elements
1646 indexargs_url render the current index args as a URL
1647 base_javascript render some javascript that is used by other components
1648 of the templating
1649 batch run the current index args through a filter and return a
1650 list of items (see `hyperdb item wrapper`_, and
1651 `batching`_)
1652 =============== ========================================================
1654 The form variable
1655 :::::::::::::::::
1657 The form variable is a bit special because it's actually a python
1658 FieldStorage object. That means that you have two ways to access its
1659 contents. For example, to look up the CGI form value for the variable
1660 "name", use the path expression::
1662 request/form/name/value
1664 or the python expression::
1666 python:request.form['name'].value
1668 Note the "item" access used in the python case, and also note the
1669 explicit "value" attribute we have to access. That's because the form
1670 variables are stored as MiniFieldStorages. If there's more than one
1671 "name" value in the form, then the above will break since
1672 ``request/form/name`` is actually a *list* of MiniFieldStorages. So it's
1673 best to know beforehand what you're dealing with.
1676 The db variable
1677 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1679 Note: this is implemented by the ``roundup.cgi.templating.HTMLDatabase``
1680 class.
1682 Allows access to all hyperdb classes as attributes of this variable. If
1683 you want access to the "user" class, for example, you would use::
1685 db/user
1686 python:db.user
1688 Also, the current id of the current user is available as
1689 ``db.getuid()``. This isn't so useful in templates (where you have
1690 ``request/user``), but it can be useful in detectors or interfaces.
1692 The access results in a `hyperdb class wrapper`_.
1695 The templates variable
1696 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1698 Note: this is implemented by the ``roundup.cgi.templating.Templates``
1699 class.
1701 This variable doesn't have any useful methods defined. It supports being
1702 used in expressions to access the templates, and consequently the
1703 template macros. You may access the templates using the following path
1704 expression::
1706 templates/name
1708 or the python expression::
1710 templates[name]
1712 where "name" is the name of the template you wish to access. The
1713 template has one useful attribute, namely "macros". To access a specific
1714 macro (called "macro_name"), use the path expression::
1716 templates/name/macros/macro_name
1718 or the python expression::
1720 templates[name].macros[macro_name]
1723 The utils variable
1724 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1726 Note: this is implemented by the
1727 ``roundup.cgi.templating.TemplatingUtils`` class, but it may be extended
1728 as described below.
1730 =============== ========================================================
1731 Method Description
1732 =============== ========================================================
1733 Batch return a batch object using the supplied list
1734 =============== ========================================================
1736 You may add additional utility methods by writing them in your tracker
1737 ``interfaces.py`` module's ``TemplatingUtils`` class. See `adding a time
1738 log to your issues`_ for an example. The TemplatingUtils class itself
1739 will have a single attribute, ``client``, which may be used to access
1740 the ``client.db`` when you need to perform arbitrary database queries.
1742 Batching
1743 ::::::::
1745 Use Batch to turn a list of items, or item ids of a given class, into a
1746 series of batches. Its usage is::
1748 python:utils.Batch(sequence, size, start, end=0, orphan=0,
1749 overlap=0)
1751 or, to get the current index batch::
1753 request/batch
1755 The parameters are:
1757 ========= ==============================================================
1758 Parameter Usage
1759 ========= ==============================================================
1760 sequence a list of HTMLItems
1761 size how big to make the sequence.
1762 start where to start (0-indexed) in the sequence.
1763 end where to end (0-indexed) in the sequence.
1764 orphan if the next batch would contain less items than this value,
1765 then it is combined with this batch
1766 overlap the number of items shared between adjacent batches
1767 ========= ==============================================================
1769 All of the parameters are assigned as attributes on the batch object. In
1770 addition, it has several more attributes:
1772 =============== ========================================================
1773 Attribute Description
1774 =============== ========================================================
1775 start indicates the start index of the batch. *Note: unlike
1776 the argument, is a 1-based index (I know, lame)*
1777 first indicates the start index of the batch *as a 0-based
1778 index*
1779 length the actual number of elements in the batch
1780 sequence_length the length of the original, unbatched, sequence.
1781 =============== ========================================================
1783 And several methods:
1785 =============== ========================================================
1786 Method Description
1787 =============== ========================================================
1788 previous returns a new Batch with the previous batch settings
1789 next returns a new Batch with the next batch settings
1790 propchanged detect if the named property changed on the current item
1791 when compared to the last item
1792 =============== ========================================================
1794 An example of batching::
1796 <table class="otherinfo">
1797 <tr><th colspan="4" class="header">Existing Keywords</th></tr>
1798 <tr tal:define="keywords db/keyword/list"
1799 tal:repeat="start python:range(0, len(keywords), 4)">
1800 <td tal:define="batch python:utils.Batch(keywords, 4, start)"
1801 tal:repeat="keyword batch" tal:content="keyword/name">
1802 keyword here</td>
1803 </tr>
1804 </table>
1806 ... which will produce a table with four columns containing the items of
1807 the "keyword" class (well, their "name" anyway).
1809 Displaying Properties
1810 ---------------------
1812 Properties appear in the user interface in three contexts: in indices,
1813 in editors, and as search arguments. For each type of property, there
1814 are several display possibilities. For example, in an index view, a
1815 string property may just be printed as a plain string, but in an editor
1816 view, that property may be displayed in an editable field.
1819 Index Views
1820 -----------
1822 This is one of the class context views. It is also the default view for
1823 classes. The template used is "*classname*.index".
1826 Index View Specifiers
1827 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1829 An index view specifier (URL fragment) looks like this (whitespace has
1830 been added for clarity)::
1832 /issue?status=unread,in-progress,resolved&
1833 topic=security,ui&
1834 :group=+priority&
1835 :sort==activity&
1836 :filters=status,topic&
1837 :columns=title,status,fixer
1839 The index view is determined by two parts of the specifier: the layout
1840 part and the filter part. The layout part consists of the query
1841 parameters that begin with colons, and it determines the way that the
1842 properties of selected items are displayed. The filter part consists of
1843 all the other query parameters, and it determines the criteria by which
1844 items are selected for display. The filter part is interactively
1845 manipulated with the form widgets displayed in the filter section. The
1846 layout part is interactively manipulated by clicking on the column
1847 headings in the table.
1849 The filter part selects the union of the sets of items with values
1850 matching any specified Link properties and the intersection of the sets
1851 of items with values matching any specified Multilink properties.
1853 The example specifies an index of "issue" items. Only items with a
1854 "status" of either "unread" or "in-progress" or "resolved" are
1855 displayed, and only items with "topic" values including both "security"
1856 and "ui" are displayed. The items are grouped by priority, arranged in
1857 ascending order; and within groups, sorted by activity, arranged in
1858 descending order. The filter section shows filters for the "status" and
1859 "topic" properties, and the table includes columns for the "title",
1860 "status", and "fixer" properties.
1862 Searching Views
1863 ---------------
1865 Note: if you add a new column to the ``:columns`` form variable
1866 potentials then you will need to add the column to the appropriate
1867 `index views`_ template so that it is actually displayed.
1869 This is one of the class context views. The template used is typically
1870 "*classname*.search". The form on this page should have "search" as its
1871 ``@action`` variable. The "search" action:
1873 - sets up additional filtering, as well as performing indexed text
1874 searching
1875 - sets the ``:filter`` variable correctly
1876 - saves the query off if ``:query_name`` is set.
1878 The search page should lay out any fields that you wish to allow the
1879 user to search on. If your schema contains a large number of properties,
1880 you should be wary of making all of those properties available for
1881 searching, as this can cause confusion. If the additional properties are
1882 Strings, consider having their value indexed, and then they will be
1883 searchable using the full text indexed search. This is both faster, and
1884 more useful for the end user.
1886 The two special form values on search pages which are handled by the
1887 "search" action are:
1889 :search_text
1890 Text with which to perform a search of the text index. Results from
1891 that search will be used to limit the results of other filters (using
1892 an intersection operation)
1893 :query_name
1894 If supplied, the search parameters (including :search_text) will be
1895 saved off as a the query item and registered against the user's
1896 queries property. Note that the *classic* template schema has this
1897 ability, but the *minimal* template schema does not.
1900 Item Views
1901 ----------
1903 The basic view of a hyperdb item is provided by the "*classname*.item"
1904 template. It generally has three sections; an "editor", a "spool" and a
1905 "history" section.
1908 Editor Section
1909 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1911 The editor section is used to manipulate the item - it may be a static
1912 display if the user doesn't have permission to edit the item.
1914 Here's an example of a basic editor template (this is the default
1915 "classic" template issue item edit form - from the "issue.item.html"
1916 template)::
1918 <table class="form">
1919 <tr>
1920 <th>Title</th>
1921 <td colspan="3" tal:content="structure python:context.title.field(size=60)">title</td>
1922 </tr>
1924 <tr>
1925 <th>Priority</th>
1926 <td tal:content="structure context/priority/menu">priority</td>
1927 <th>Status</th>
1928 <td tal:content="structure context/status/menu">status</td>
1929 </tr>
1931 <tr>
1932 <th>Superseder</th>
1933 <td>
1934 <span tal:replace="structure python:context.superseder.field(showid=1, size=20)" />
1935 <span tal:replace="structure python:db.issue.classhelp('id,title')" />
1936 <span tal:condition="context/superseder">
1937 <br>View: <span tal:replace="structure python:context.superseder.link(showid=1)" />
1938 </span>
1939 </td>
1940 <th>Nosy List</th>
1941 <td>
1942 <span tal:replace="structure context/nosy/field" />
1943 <span tal:replace="structure python:db.user.classhelp('username,realname,address,phone')" />
1944 </td>
1945 </tr>
1947 <tr>
1948 <th>Assigned To</th>
1949 <td tal:content="structure context/assignedto/menu">
1950 assignedto menu
1951 </td>
1952 <td> </td>
1953 <td> </td>
1954 </tr>
1956 <tr>
1957 <th>Change Note</th>
1958 <td colspan="3">
1959 <textarea name=":note" wrap="hard" rows="5" cols="60"></textarea>
1960 </td>
1961 </tr>
1963 <tr>
1964 <th>File</th>
1965 <td colspan="3"><input type="file" name=":file" size="40"></td>
1966 </tr>
1968 <tr>
1969 <td> </td>
1970 <td colspan="3" tal:content="structure context/submit">
1971 submit button will go here
1972 </td>
1973 </tr>
1974 </table>
1977 When a change is submitted, the system automatically generates a message
1978 describing the changed properties. As shown in the example, the editor
1979 template can use the ":note" and ":file" fields, which are added to the
1980 standard changenote message generated by Roundup.
1983 Form values
1984 :::::::::::
1986 We have a number of ways to pull properties out of the form in order to
1987 meet the various needs of:
1989 1. editing the current item (perhaps an issue item)
1990 2. editing information related to the current item (eg. messages or
1991 attached files)
1992 3. creating new information to be linked to the current item (eg. time
1993 spent on an issue)
1995 In the following, ``<bracketed>`` values are variable, ":" may be one of
1996 ":" or "@", and other text ("required") is fixed.
1998 Properties are specified as form variables:
2000 ``<propname>``
2001 property on the current context item
2003 ``<designator>:<propname>``
2004 property on the indicated item (for editing related information)
2006 ``<classname>-<N>:<propname>``
2007 property on the Nth new item of classname (generally for creating new
2008 items to attach to the current item)
2010 Once we have determined the "propname", we check to see if it is one of
2011 the special form values:
2013 ``@required``
2014 The named property values must be supplied or a ValueError will be
2015 raised.
2017 ``@remove@<propname>=id(s)``
2018 The ids will be removed from the multilink property.
2020 ``:add:<propname>=id(s)``
2021 The ids will be added to the multilink property.
2023 ``:link:<propname>=<designator>``
2024 Used to add a link to new items created during edit. These are
2025 collected and returned in ``all_links``. This will result in an
2026 additional linking operation (either Link set or Multilink append)
2027 after the edit/create is done using ``all_props`` in ``_editnodes``.
2028 The <propname> on the current item will be set/appended the id of the
2029 newly created item of class <designator> (where <designator> must be
2030 <classname>-<N>).
2032 Any of the form variables may be prefixed with a classname or
2033 designator.
2035 Two special form values are supported for backwards compatibility:
2037 ``:note``
2038 create a message (with content, author and date), linked to the
2039 context item. This is ALWAYS designated "msg-1".
2040 ``:file``
2041 create a file, attached to the current item and any message created by
2042 :note. This is ALWAYS designated "file-1".
2045 Spool Section
2046 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2048 The spool section lists related information like the messages and files
2049 of an issue.
2051 TODO
2054 History Section
2055 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2057 The final section displayed is the history of the item - its database
2058 journal. This is generally generated with the template::
2060 <tal:block tal:replace="structure context/history" />
2062 *To be done:*
2064 *The actual history entries of the item may be accessed for manual
2065 templating through the "journal" method of the item*::
2067 <tal:block tal:repeat="entry context/journal">
2068 a journal entry
2069 </tal:block>
2071 *where each journal entry is an HTMLJournalEntry.*
2073 Defining new web actions
2074 ------------------------
2076 You may define new actions to be triggered by the ``@action`` form
2077 variable. These are added to the tracker ``interfaces.py`` as methods on
2078 the ``Client`` class.
2080 Adding action methods takes three steps; first you `define the new
2081 action method`_, then you `register the action method`_ with the cgi
2082 interface so it may be triggered by the ``@action`` form variable.
2083 Finally you `use the new action`_ in your HTML form.
2085 See "`setting up a "wizard" (or "druid") for controlled adding of
2086 issues`_" for an example.
2089 Define the new action method
2090 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2092 The action methods have the following interface::
2094 def myActionMethod(self):
2095 ''' Perform some action. No return value is required.
2096 '''
2098 The *self* argument is an instance of your tracker ``instance.Client``
2099 class - thus it's mostly implemented by ``roundup.cgi.Client``. See the
2100 docstring of that class for details of what it can do.
2102 The method will typically check the ``self.form`` variable's contents.
2103 It may then:
2105 - add information to ``self.ok_message`` or ``self.error_message``
2106 - change the ``self.template`` variable to alter what the user will see
2107 next
2108 - raise Unauthorised, SendStaticFile, SendFile, NotFound or Redirect
2109 exceptions
2112 Register the action method
2113 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2115 The method is now written, but isn't available to the user until you add
2116 it to the `instance.Client`` class ``actions`` variable, like so::
2118 actions = client.Class.actions + (
2119 ('myaction', 'myActionMethod'),
2120 )
2122 This maps the action name "myaction" to the action method we defined.
2125 Use the new action
2126 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2128 In your HTML form, add a hidden form element like so::
2130 <input type="hidden" name="@action" value="myaction">
2132 where "myaction" is the name you registered in the previous step.
2135 Examples
2136 ========
2138 .. contents::
2139 :local:
2140 :depth: 1
2143 Adding a new field to the classic schema
2144 ----------------------------------------
2146 This example shows how to add a new constrained property (i.e. a
2147 selection of distinct values) to your tracker.
2150 Introduction
2151 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
2153 To make the classic schema of roundup useful as a TODO tracking system
2154 for a group of systems administrators, it needed an extra data field per
2155 issue: a category.
2157 This would let sysadmins quickly list all TODOs in their particular area
2158 of interest without having to do complex queries, and without relying on
2159 the spelling capabilities of other sysadmins (a losing proposition at
2160 best).
2163 Adding a field to the database
2164 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2166 This is the easiest part of the change. The category would just be a
2167 plain string, nothing fancy. To change what is in the database you need
2168 to add some lines to the ``open()`` function in ``dbinit.py``. Under the
2169 comment::
2171 # add any additional database schema configuration here
2173 add::
2175 category = Class(db, "category", name=String())
2176 category.setkey("name")
2178 Here we are setting up a chunk of the database which we are calling
2179 "category". It contains a string, which we are refering to as "name" for
2180 lack of a more imaginative title. (Since "name" is one of the properties
2181 that Roundup looks for on items if you do not set a key for them, it's
2182 probably a good idea to stick with it for new classes if at all
2183 appropriate.) Then we are setting the key of this chunk of the database
2184 to be that "name". This is equivalent to an index for database types.
2185 This also means that there can only be one category with a given name.
2187 Adding the above lines allows us to create categories, but they're not
2188 tied to the issues that we are going to be creating. It's just a list of
2189 categories off on its own, which isn't much use. We need to link it in
2190 with the issues. To do that, find the lines in the ``open()`` function
2191 in ``dbinit.py`` which set up the "issue" class, and then add a link to
2192 the category::
2194 issue = IssueClass(db, "issue", ... ,
2195 category=Multilink("category"), ... )
2197 The ``Multilink()`` means that each issue can have many categories. If
2198 you were adding something with a one-to-one relationship to issues (such
2199 as the "assignedto" property), use ``Link()`` instead.
2201 That is all you need to do to change the schema. The rest of the effort
2202 is fiddling around so you can actually use the new category.
2205 Populating the new category class
2206 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2208 If you haven't initialised the database with the roundup-admin
2209 "initialise" command, then you can add the following to the tracker
2210 ``dbinit.py`` in the ``init()`` function under the comment::
2212 # add any additional database create steps here - but only if you
2213 # haven't initialised the database with the admin "initialise" command
2215 Add::
2217 category = db.getclass('category')
2218 category.create(name="scipy", order="1")
2219 category.create(name="chaco", order="2")
2220 category.create(name="weave", order="3")
2222 If the database has already been initalised, then you need to use the
2223 ``roundup-admin`` tool::
2225 % roundup-admin -i <tracker home>
2226 Roundup <version> ready for input.
2227 Type "help" for help.
2228 roundup> create category name=scipy order=1
2229 1
2230 roundup> create category name=chaco order=1
2231 2
2232 roundup> create category name=weave order=1
2233 3
2234 roundup> exit...
2235 There are unsaved changes. Commit them (y/N)? y
2237 TODO: explain why order=1 in each case. Also, does key get set to "name"
2238 automatically when added via roundup-admin?
2241 Setting up security on the new objects
2242 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2244 By default only the admin user can look at and change objects. This
2245 doesn't suit us, as we want any user to be able to create new categories
2246 as required, and obviously everyone needs to be able to view the
2247 categories of issues for it to be useful.
2249 We therefore need to change the security of the category objects. This
2250 is also done in the ``open()`` function of ``dbinit.py``.
2252 There are currently two loops which set up permissions and then assign
2253 them to various roles. Simply add the new "category" to both lists::
2255 # new permissions for this schema
2256 for cl in 'issue', 'file', 'msg', 'user', 'category':
2257 db.security.addPermission(name="Edit", klass=cl,
2258 description="User is allowed to edit "+cl)
2259 db.security.addPermission(name="View", klass=cl,
2260 description="User is allowed to access "+cl)
2262 # Assign the access and edit permissions for issue, file and message
2263 # to regular users now
2264 for cl in 'issue', 'file', 'msg', 'category':
2265 p = db.security.getPermission('View', cl)
2266 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
2267 p = db.security.getPermission('Edit', cl)
2268 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
2270 So you are in effect doing the following (with 'cl' substituted by its
2271 value)::
2273 db.security.addPermission(name="Edit", klass='category',
2274 description="User is allowed to edit "+'category')
2275 db.security.addPermission(name="View", klass='category',
2276 description="User is allowed to access "+'category')
2278 which is creating two permission types; that of editing and viewing
2279 "category" objects respectively. Then the following lines assign those
2280 new permissions to the "User" role, so that normal users can view and
2281 edit "category" objects::
2283 p = db.security.getPermission('View', 'category')
2284 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
2286 p = db.security.getPermission('Edit', 'category')
2287 db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p)
2289 This is all the work that needs to be done for the database. It will
2290 store categories, and let users view and edit them. Now on to the
2291 interface stuff.
2294 Changing the web left hand frame
2295 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2297 We need to give the users the ability to create new categories, and the
2298 place to put the link to this functionality is in the left hand function
2299 bar, under the "Issues" area. The file that defines how this area looks
2300 is ``html/page``, which is what we are going to be editing next.
2302 If you look at this file you can see that it contains a lot of
2303 "classblock" sections which are chunks of HTML that will be included or
2304 excluded in the output depending on whether the condition in the
2305 classblock is met. Under the end of the classblock for issue is where we
2306 are going to add the category code::
2308 <p class="classblock"
2309 tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('View', 'category')">
2310 <b>Categories</b><br>
2311 <a tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('Edit', 'category')"
2312 href="category?@template=item">New Category<br></a>
2313 </p>
2315 The first two lines is the classblock definition, which sets up a
2316 condition that only users who have "View" permission for the "category"
2317 object will have this section included in their output. Next comes a
2318 plain "Categories" header in bold. Everyone who can view categories will
2319 get that.
2321 Next comes the link to the editing area of categories. This link will
2322 only appear if the condition - that the user has "Edit" permissions for
2323 the "category" objects - is matched. If they do have permission then
2324 they will get a link to another page which will let the user add new
2325 categories.
2327 Note that if you have permission to *view* but not to *edit* categories,
2328 then all you will see is a "Categories" header with nothing underneath
2329 it. This is obviously not very good interface design, but will do for
2330 now. I just claim that it is so I can add more links in this section
2331 later on. However to fix the problem you could change the condition in
2332 the classblock statement, so that only users with "Edit" permission
2333 would see the "Categories" stuff.
2336 Setting up a page to edit categories
2337 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2339 We defined code in the previous section which let users with the
2340 appropriate permissions see a link to a page which would let them edit
2341 conditions. Now we have to write that page.
2343 The link was for the *item* template of the *category* object. This
2344 translates into Roundup looking for a file called ``category.item.html``
2345 in the ``html`` tracker directory. This is the file that we are going to
2346 write now.
2348 First we add an info tag in a comment which doesn't affect the outcome
2349 of the code at all, but is useful for debugging. If you load a page in a
2350 browser and look at the page source, you can see which sections come
2351 from which files by looking for these comments::
2353 <!-- category.item -->
2355 Next we need to add in the METAL macro stuff so we get the normal page
2356 trappings::
2358 <tal:block metal:use-macro="templates/page/macros/icing">
2359 <title metal:fill-slot="head_title">Category editing</title>
2360 <td class="page-header-top" metal:fill-slot="body_title">
2361 <h2>Category editing</h2>
2362 </td>
2363 <td class="content" metal:fill-slot="content">
2365 Next we need to setup up a standard HTML form, which is the whole
2366 purpose of this file. We link to some handy javascript which sends the
2367 form through only once. This is to stop users hitting the send button
2368 multiple times when they are impatient and thus having the form sent
2369 multiple times::
2371 <form method="POST" onSubmit="return submit_once()"
2372 enctype="multipart/form-data">
2374 Next we define some code which sets up the minimum list of fields that
2375 we require the user to enter. There will be only one field - "name" - so
2376 they better put something in it, otherwise the whole form is pointless::
2378 <input type="hidden" name="@required" value="name">
2380 To get everything to line up properly we will put everything in a table,
2381 and put a nice big header on it so the user has an idea what is
2382 happening::
2384 <table class="form">
2385 <tr><th class="header" colspan="2">Category</th></tr>
2387 Next, we need the field into which the user is going to enter the new
2388 category. The "context.name.field(size=60)" bit tells Roundup to
2389 generate a normal HTML field of size 60, and the contents of that field
2390 will be the "name" variable of the current context (which is
2391 "category"). The upshot of this is that when the user types something in
2392 to the form, a new category will be created with that name::
2394 <tr>
2395 <th>Name</th>
2396 <td tal:content="structure python:context.name.field(size=60)">
2397 name</td>
2398 </tr>
2400 Then a submit button so that the user can submit the new category::
2402 <tr>
2403 <td> </td>
2404 <td colspan="3" tal:content="structure context/submit">
2405 submit button will go here
2406 </td>
2407 </tr>
2409 Finally we finish off the tags we used at the start to do the METAL
2410 stuff::
2412 </td>
2413 </tal:block>
2415 So putting it all together, and closing the table and form we get::
2417 <!-- category.item -->
2418 <tal:block metal:use-macro="templates/page/macros/icing">
2419 <title metal:fill-slot="head_title">Category editing</title>
2420 <td class="page-header-top" metal:fill-slot="body_title">
2421 <h2>Category editing</h2>
2422 </td>
2423 <td class="content" metal:fill-slot="content">
2424 <form method="POST" onSubmit="return submit_once()"
2425 enctype="multipart/form-data">
2427 <table class="form">
2428 <tr><th class="header" colspan="2">Category</th></tr>
2430 <tr>
2431 <th>Name</th>
2432 <td tal:content="structure python:context.name.field(size=60)">
2433 name</td>
2434 </tr>
2436 <tr>
2437 <td>
2438
2439 <input type="hidden" name="@required" value="name">
2440 </td>
2441 <td colspan="3" tal:content="structure context/submit">
2442 submit button will go here
2443 </td>
2444 </tr>
2445 </table>
2446 </form>
2447 </td>
2448 </tal:block>
2450 This is quite a lot to just ask the user one simple question, but there
2451 is a lot of setup for basically one line (the form line) to do its work.
2452 To add another field to "category" would involve one more line (well,
2453 maybe a few extra to get the formatting correct).
2456 Adding the category to the issue
2457 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2459 We now have the ability to create issues to our heart's content, but
2460 that is pointless unless we can assign categories to issues. Just like
2461 the ``html/category.item.html`` file was used to define how to add a new
2462 category, the ``html/issue.item.html`` is used to define how a new issue
2463 is created.
2465 Just like ``category.issue.html`` this file defines a form which has a
2466 table to lay things out. It doesn't matter where in the table we add new
2467 stuff, it is entirely up to your sense of aesthetics::
2469 <th>Category</th>
2470 <td><span tal:replace="structure context/category/field" />
2471 <span tal:replace="structure db/category/classhelp" />
2472 </td>
2474 First, we define a nice header so that the user knows what the next
2475 section is, then the middle line does what we are most interested in.
2476 This ``context/category/field`` gets replaced by a field which contains
2477 the category in the current context (the current context being the new
2478 issue).
2480 The classhelp lines generate a link (labelled "list") to a popup window
2481 which contains the list of currently known categories.
2484 Searching on categories
2485 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2487 We can add categories, and create issues with categories. The next
2488 obvious thing that we would like to be able to do, would be to search
2489 for issues based on their category, so that, for example, anyone working
2490 on the web server could look at all issues in the category "Web".
2492 If you look for "Search Issues" in the 'html/page.html' file, you will
2493 find that it looks something like
2494 ``<a href="issue?@template=search">Search Issues</a>``. This shows us
2495 that when you click on "Search Issues" it will be looking for a
2496 ``issue.search.html`` file to display. So that is the file that we will
2497 change.
2499 If you look at this file it should be starting to seem familiar, although it
2500 does use some new macros. You can add the new category search code anywhere you
2501 like within that form::
2503 <tr tal:define="name string:category;
2504 db_klass string:category;
2505 db_content string:name;">
2506 <th>Priority:</th>
2507 <td metal:use-macro="search_select"></td>
2508 <td metal:use-macro="column_input"></td>
2509 <td metal:use-macro="sort_input"></td>
2510 <td metal:use-macro="group_input"></td>
2511 </tr>
2513 The definitions in the <tr> opening tag are used by the macros:
2515 - search_select expands to a drop-down box with all categories using db_klass
2516 and db_content.
2517 - column_input expands to a checkbox for selecting what columns should be
2518 displayed.
2519 - sort_input expands to a radio button for selecting what property should be
2520 sorted on.
2521 - group_input expands to a radio button for selecting what property should be
2522 group on.
2524 The category search code above would expand to the following::
2526 <tr>
2527 <th>Category:</th>
2528 <td>
2529 <select name="category">
2530 <option value="">don't care</option>
2531 <option value="">------------</option>
2532 <option value="1">scipy</option>
2533 <option value="2">chaco</option>
2534 <option value="3">weave</option>
2535 </select>
2536 </td>
2537 <td><input type="checkbox" name=":columns" value="category"></td>
2538 <td><input type="radio" name=":sort" value="category"></td>
2539 <td><input type="radio" name=":group" value="category"></td>
2540 </tr>
2542 Adding category to the default view
2543 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2545 We can now add categories, add issues with categories, and search for
2546 issues based on categories. This is everything that we need to do;
2547 however, there is some more icing that we would like. I think the
2548 category of an issue is important enough that it should be displayed by
2549 default when listing all the issues.
2551 Unfortunately, this is a bit less obvious than the previous steps. The
2552 code defining how the issues look is in ``html/issue.index.html``. This
2553 is a large table with a form down at the bottom for redisplaying and so
2554 forth.
2556 Firstly we need to add an appropriate header to the start of the table::
2558 <th tal:condition="request/show/category">Category</th>
2560 The *condition* part of this statement is to avoid displaying the
2561 Category column if the user has selected not to see it.
2563 The rest of the table is a loop which will go through every issue that
2564 matches the display criteria. The loop variable is "i" - which means
2565 that every issue gets assigned to "i" in turn.
2567 The new part of code to display the category will look like this::
2569 <td tal:condition="request/show/category"
2570 tal:content="i/category"></td>
2572 The condition is the same as above: only display the condition when the
2573 user hasn't asked for it to be hidden. The next part is to set the
2574 content of the cell to be the category part of "i" - the current issue.
2576 Finally we have to edit ``html/page.html`` again. This time, we need to
2577 tell it that when the user clicks on "Unasigned Issues" or "All Issues",
2578 the category column should be included in the resulting list. If you
2579 scroll down the page file, you can see the links with lots of options.
2580 The option that we are interested in is the ``:columns=`` one which
2581 tells roundup which fields of the issue to display. Simply add
2582 "category" to that list and it all should work.
2585 Adding in state transition control
2586 ----------------------------------
2588 Sometimes tracker admins want to control the states that users may move
2589 issues to. You can do this by following these steps:
2591 1. make "status" a required variable. This is achieved by adding the
2592 following to the top of the form in the ``issue.item.html``
2593 template::
2595 <input type="hidden" name="@required" value="status">
2597 this will force users to select a status.
2599 2. add a Multilink property to the status class::
2601 stat = Class(db, "status", ... , transitions=Multilink('status'),
2602 ...)
2604 and then edit the statuses already created, either:
2606 a. through the web using the class list -> status class editor, or
2607 b. using the roundup-admin "set" command.
2609 3. add an auditor module ``checktransition.py`` in your tracker's
2610 ``detectors`` directory, for example::
2612 def checktransition(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
2613 ''' Check that the desired transition is valid for the "status"
2614 property.
2615 '''
2616 if not newvalues.has_key('status'):
2617 return
2618 current = cl.get(nodeid, 'status')
2619 new = newvalues['status']
2620 if new == current:
2621 return
2622 ok = db.status.get(current, 'transitions')
2623 if new not in ok:
2624 raise ValueError, 'Status not allowed to move from "%s" to "%s"'%(
2625 db.status.get(current, 'name'), db.status.get(new, 'name'))
2627 def init(db):
2628 db.issue.audit('set', checktransition)
2630 4. in the ``issue.item.html`` template, change the status editing bit
2631 from::
2633 <th>Status</th>
2634 <td tal:content="structure context/status/menu">status</td>
2636 to::
2638 <th>Status</th>
2639 <td>
2640 <select tal:condition="context/id" name="status">
2641 <tal:block tal:define="ok context/status/transitions"
2642 tal:repeat="state db/status/list">
2643 <option tal:condition="python:state.id in ok"
2644 tal:attributes="
2645 value state/id;
2646 selected python:state.id == context.status.id"
2647 tal:content="state/name"></option>
2648 </tal:block>
2649 </select>
2650 <tal:block tal:condition="not:context/id"
2651 tal:replace="structure context/status/menu" />
2652 </td>
2654 which displays only the allowed status to transition to.
2657 Displaying only message summaries in the issue display
2658 ------------------------------------------------------
2660 Alter the issue.item template section for messages to::
2662 <table class="messages" tal:condition="context/messages">
2663 <tr><th colspan="5" class="header">Messages</th></tr>
2664 <tr tal:repeat="msg context/messages">
2665 <td><a tal:attributes="href string:msg${msg/id}"
2666 tal:content="string:msg${msg/id}"></a></td>
2667 <td tal:content="msg/author">author</td>
2668 <td class="date" tal:content="msg/date/pretty">date</td>
2669 <td tal:content="msg/summary">summary</td>
2670 <td>
2671 <a tal:attributes="href string:?@remove@messages=${msg/id}&@action=edit">
2672 remove</a>
2673 </td>
2674 </tr>
2675 </table>
2677 Restricting the list of users that are assignable to a task
2678 -----------------------------------------------------------
2680 1. In your tracker's "dbinit.py", create a new Role, say "Developer"::
2682 db.security.addRole(name='Developer', description='A developer')
2684 2. Just after that, create a new Permission, say "Fixer", specific to
2685 "issue"::
2687 p = db.security.addPermission(name='Fixer', klass='issue',
2688 description='User is allowed to be assigned to fix issues')
2690 3. Then assign the new Permission to your "Developer" Role::
2692 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Developer', p)
2694 4. In the issue item edit page ("html/issue.item.html" in your tracker
2695 directory), use the new Permission in restricting the "assignedto"
2696 list::
2698 <select name="assignedto">
2699 <option value="-1">- no selection -</option>
2700 <tal:block tal:repeat="user db/user/list">
2701 <option tal:condition="python:user.hasPermission(
2702 'Fixer', context._classname)"
2703 tal:attributes="
2704 value user/id;
2705 selected python:user.id == context.assignedto"
2706 tal:content="user/realname"></option>
2707 </tal:block>
2708 </select>
2710 For extra security, you may wish to setup an auditor to enforce the
2711 Permission requirement (install this as "assignedtoFixer.py" in your
2712 tracker "detectors" directory)::
2714 def assignedtoMustBeFixer(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
2715 ''' Ensure the assignedto value in newvalues is a used with the
2716 Fixer Permission
2717 '''
2718 if not newvalues.has_key('assignedto'):
2719 # don't care
2720 return
2722 # get the userid
2723 userid = newvalues['assignedto']
2724 if not db.security.hasPermission('Fixer', userid, cl.classname):
2725 raise ValueError, 'You do not have permission to edit %s'%cl.classname
2727 def init(db):
2728 db.issue.audit('set', assignedtoMustBeFixer)
2729 db.issue.audit('create', assignedtoMustBeFixer)
2731 So now, if an edit action attempts to set "assignedto" to a user that
2732 doesn't have the "Fixer" Permission, the error will be raised.
2735 Setting up a "wizard" (or "druid") for controlled adding of issues
2736 ------------------------------------------------------------------
2738 1. Set up the page templates you wish to use for data input. My wizard
2739 is going to be a two-step process: first figuring out what category
2740 of issue the user is submitting, and then getting details specific to
2741 that category. The first page includes a table of help, explaining
2742 what the category names mean, and then the core of the form::
2744 <form method="POST" onSubmit="return submit_once()"
2745 enctype="multipart/form-data">
2746 <input type="hidden" name="@template" value="add_page1">
2747 <input type="hidden" name="@action" value="page1submit">
2749 <strong>Category:</strong>
2750 <tal:block tal:replace="structure context/category/menu" />
2751 <input type="submit" value="Continue">
2752 </form>
2754 The next page has the usual issue entry information, with the
2755 addition of the following form fragments::
2757 <form method="POST" onSubmit="return submit_once()"
2758 enctype="multipart/form-data"
2759 tal:condition="context/is_edit_ok"
2760 tal:define="cat request/form/category/value">
2762 <input type="hidden" name="@template" value="add_page2">
2763 <input type="hidden" name="@required" value="title">
2764 <input type="hidden" name="category" tal:attributes="value cat">
2765 .
2766 .
2767 .
2768 </form>
2770 Note that later in the form, I test the value of "cat" include form
2771 elements that are appropriate. For example::
2773 <tal:block tal:condition="python:cat in '6 10 13 14 15 16 17'.split()">
2774 <tr>
2775 <th>Operating System</th>
2776 <td tal:content="structure context/os/field"></td>
2777 </tr>
2778 <tr>
2779 <th>Web Browser</th>
2780 <td tal:content="structure context/browser/field"></td>
2781 </tr>
2782 </tal:block>
2784 ... the above section will only be displayed if the category is one
2785 of 6, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17.
2787 3. Determine what actions need to be taken between the pages - these are
2788 usually to validate user choices and determine what page is next. Now
2789 encode those actions in methods on the ``interfaces.Client`` class
2790 and insert hooks to those actions in the "actions" attribute on that
2791 class, like so::
2793 actions = client.Client.actions + (
2794 ('page1_submit', 'page1SubmitAction'),
2795 )
2797 def page1SubmitAction(self):
2798 ''' Verify that the user has selected a category, and then move
2799 on to page 2.
2800 '''
2801 category = self.form['category'].value
2802 if category == '-1':
2803 self.error_message.append('You must select a category of report')
2804 return
2805 # everything's ok, move on to the next page
2806 self.template = 'add_page2'
2808 4. Use the usual "new" action as the ``@action`` on the final page, and
2809 you're done (the standard context/submit method can do this for you).
2812 Using an external password validation source
2813 --------------------------------------------
2815 We have a centrally-managed password changing system for our users. This
2816 results in a UN*X passwd-style file that we use for verification of
2817 users. Entries in the file consist of ``name:password`` where the
2818 password is encrypted using the standard UN*X ``crypt()`` function (see
2819 the ``crypt`` module in your Python distribution). An example entry
2820 would be::
2822 admin:aamrgyQfDFSHw
2824 Each user of Roundup must still have their information stored in the
2825 Roundup database - we just use the passwd file to check their password.
2826 To do this, we add the following code to our ``Client`` class in the
2827 tracker home ``interfaces.py`` module::
2829 def verifyPassword(self, userid, password):
2830 # get the user's username
2831 username = self.db.user.get(userid, 'username')
2833 # the passwords are stored in the "passwd.txt" file in the
2834 # tracker home
2835 file = os.path.join(self.db.config.TRACKER_HOME, 'passwd.txt')
2837 # see if we can find a match
2838 for ent in [line.strip().split(':') for line in
2839 open(file).readlines()]:
2840 if ent[0] == username:
2841 return crypt.crypt(password, ent[1][:2]) == ent[1]
2843 # user doesn't exist in the file
2844 return 0
2846 What this does is look through the file, line by line, looking for a
2847 name that matches.
2849 We also remove the redundant password fields from the ``user.item``
2850 template.
2853 Adding a "vacation" flag to users for stopping nosy messages
2854 ------------------------------------------------------------
2856 When users go on vacation and set up vacation email bouncing, you'll
2857 start to see a lot of messages come back through Roundup "Fred is on
2858 vacation". Not very useful, and relatively easy to stop.
2860 1. add a "vacation" flag to your users::
2862 user = Class(db, "user",
2863 username=String(), password=Password(),
2864 address=String(), realname=String(),
2865 phone=String(), organisation=String(),
2866 alternate_addresses=String(),
2867 roles=String(), queries=Multilink("query"),
2868 vacation=Boolean())
2870 2. So that users may edit the vacation flags, add something like the
2871 following to your ``user.item`` template::
2873 <tr>
2874 <th>On Vacation</th>
2875 <td tal:content="structure context/vacation/field">vacation</td>
2876 </tr>
2878 3. edit your detector ``nosyreactor.py`` so that the ``nosyreaction()``
2879 consists of::
2881 def nosyreaction(db, cl, nodeid, oldvalues):
2882 # send a copy of all new messages to the nosy list
2883 for msgid in determineNewMessages(cl, nodeid, oldvalues):
2884 try:
2885 users = db.user
2886 messages = db.msg
2888 # figure the recipient ids
2889 sendto = []
2890 r = {}
2891 recipients = messages.get(msgid, 'recipients')
2892 for recipid in messages.get(msgid, 'recipients'):
2893 r[recipid] = 1
2895 # figure the author's id, and indicate they've received
2896 # the message
2897 authid = messages.get(msgid, 'author')
2899 # possibly send the message to the author, as long as
2900 # they aren't anonymous
2901 if (db.config.MESSAGES_TO_AUTHOR == 'yes' and
2902 users.get(authid, 'username') != 'anonymous'):
2903 sendto.append(authid)
2904 r[authid] = 1
2906 # now figure the nosy people who weren't recipients
2907 nosy = cl.get(nodeid, 'nosy')
2908 for nosyid in nosy:
2909 # Don't send nosy mail to the anonymous user (that
2910 # user shouldn't appear in the nosy list, but just
2911 # in case they do...)
2912 if users.get(nosyid, 'username') == 'anonymous':
2913 continue
2914 # make sure they haven't seen the message already
2915 if not r.has_key(nosyid):
2916 # send it to them
2917 sendto.append(nosyid)
2918 recipients.append(nosyid)
2920 # generate a change note
2921 if oldvalues:
2922 note = cl.generateChangeNote(nodeid, oldvalues)
2923 else:
2924 note = cl.generateCreateNote(nodeid)
2926 # we have new recipients
2927 if sendto:
2928 # filter out the people on vacation
2929 sendto = [i for i in sendto
2930 if not users.get(i, 'vacation', 0)]
2932 # map userids to addresses
2933 sendto = [users.get(i, 'address') for i in sendto]
2935 # update the message's recipients list
2936 messages.set(msgid, recipients=recipients)
2938 # send the message
2939 cl.send_message(nodeid, msgid, note, sendto)
2940 except roundupdb.MessageSendError, message:
2941 raise roundupdb.DetectorError, message
2943 Note that this is the standard nosy reaction code, with the small
2944 addition of::
2946 # filter out the people on vacation
2947 sendto = [i for i in sendto if not users.get(i, 'vacation', 0)]
2949 which filters out the users that have the vacation flag set to true.
2952 Adding a time log to your issues
2953 --------------------------------
2955 We want to log the dates and amount of time spent working on issues, and
2956 be able to give a summary of the total time spent on a particular issue.
2958 1. Add a new class to your tracker ``dbinit.py``::
2960 # storage for time logging
2961 timelog = Class(db, "timelog", period=Interval())
2963 Note that we automatically get the date of the time log entry
2964 creation through the standard property "creation".
2966 2. Link to the new class from your issue class (again, in
2967 ``dbinit.py``)::
2969 issue = IssueClass(db, "issue",
2970 assignedto=Link("user"), topic=Multilink("keyword"),
2971 priority=Link("priority"), status=Link("status"),
2972 times=Multilink("timelog"))
2974 the "times" property is the new link to the "timelog" class.
2976 3. We'll need to let people add in times to the issue, so in the web
2977 interface we'll have a new entry field. This is a special field
2978 because unlike the other fields in the issue.item template, it
2979 affects a different item (a timelog item) and not the template's
2980 item, an issue. We have a special syntax for form fields that affect
2981 items other than the template default item (see the cgi
2982 documentation on `special form variables`_). In particular, we add a
2983 field to capture a new timelog item's perdiod::
2985 <tr>
2986 <th>Time Log</th>
2987 <td colspan=3><input type="text" name="timelog-1@period" />
2988 <br />(enter as '3y 1m 4d 2:40:02' or parts thereof)
2989 </td>
2990 </tr>
2992 and another hidden field that links that new timelog item (new
2993 because it's marked as having id "-1") to the issue item. It looks
2994 like this::
2996 <input type="hidden" name="@link@times" value="timelog-1" />
2998 On submission, the "-1" timelog item will be created and assigned a
2999 real item id. The "times" property of the issue will have the new id
3000 added to it.
3002 4. We want to display a total of the time log times that have been
3003 accumulated for an issue. To do this, we'll need to actually write
3004 some Python code, since it's beyond the scope of PageTemplates to
3005 perform such calculations. We do this by adding a method to the
3006 TemplatingUtils class in our tracker ``interfaces.py`` module::
3008 class TemplatingUtils:
3009 ''' Methods implemented on this class will be available to HTML
3010 templates through the 'utils' variable.
3011 '''
3012 def totalTimeSpent(self, times):
3013 ''' Call me with a list of timelog items (which have an
3014 Interval "period" property)
3015 '''
3016 total = Interval('0d')
3017 for time in times:
3018 total += time.period._value
3019 return total
3021 Replace the ``pass`` line if one appears in your TemplatingUtils
3022 class. As indicated in the docstrings, we will be able to access the
3023 ``totalTimeSpent`` method via the ``utils`` variable in our templates.
3025 5. Display the time log for an issue::
3027 <table class="otherinfo" tal:condition="context/times">
3028 <tr><th colspan="3" class="header">Time Log
3029 <tal:block
3030 tal:replace="python:utils.totalTimeSpent(context.times)" />
3031 </th></tr>
3032 <tr><th>Date</th><th>Period</th><th>Logged By</th></tr>
3033 <tr tal:repeat="time context/times">
3034 <td tal:content="time/creation"></td>
3035 <td tal:content="time/period"></td>
3036 <td tal:content="time/creator"></td>
3037 </tr>
3038 </table>
3040 I put this just above the Messages log in my issue display. Note our
3041 use of the ``totalTimeSpent`` method which will total up the times
3042 for the issue and return a new Interval. That will be automatically
3043 displayed in the template as text like "+ 1y 2:40" (1 year, 2 hours
3044 and 40 minutes).
3046 8. If you're using a persistent web server - roundup-server or
3047 mod_python for example - then you'll need to restart that to pick up
3048 the code changes. When that's done, you'll be able to use the new
3049 time logging interface.
3051 Using a UN*X passwd file as the user database
3052 ---------------------------------------------
3054 On some systems the primary store of users is the UN*X passwd file. It
3055 holds information on users such as their username, real name, password
3056 and primary user group.
3058 Roundup can use this store as its primary source of user information,
3059 but it needs additional information too - email address(es), roundup
3060 Roles, vacation flags, roundup hyperdb item ids, etc. Also, "retired"
3061 users must still exist in the user database, unlike some passwd files in
3062 which the users are removed when they no longer have access to a system.
3064 To make use of the passwd file, we therefore synchronise between the two
3065 user stores. We also use the passwd file to validate the user logins, as
3066 described in the previous example, `using an external password
3067 validation source`_. We keep the users lists in sync using a fairly
3068 simple script that runs once a day, or several times an hour if more
3069 immediate access is needed. In short, it:
3071 1. parses the passwd file, finding usernames, passwords and real names,
3072 2. compares that list to the current roundup user list:
3074 a. entries no longer in the passwd file are *retired*
3075 b. entries with mismatching real names are *updated*
3076 c. entries only exist in the passwd file are *created*
3078 3. send an email to administrators to let them know what's been done.
3080 The retiring and updating are simple operations, requiring only a call
3081 to ``retire()`` or ``set()``. The creation operation requires more
3082 information though - the user's email address and their roundup Roles.
3083 We're going to assume that the user's email address is the same as their
3084 login name, so we just append the domain name to that. The Roles are
3085 determined using the passwd group identifier - mapping their UN*X group
3086 to an appropriate set of Roles.
3088 The script to perform all this, broken up into its main components, is
3089 as follows. Firstly, we import the necessary modules and open the
3090 tracker we're to work on::
3092 import sys, os, smtplib
3093 from roundup import instance, date
3095 # open the tracker
3096 tracker_home = sys.argv[1]
3097 tracker = instance.open(tracker_home)
3099 Next we read in the *passwd* file from the tracker home::
3101 # read in the users
3102 file = os.path.join(tracker_home, 'users.passwd')
3103 users = [x.strip().split(':') for x in open(file).readlines()]
3105 Handle special users (those to ignore in the file, and those who don't
3106 appear in the file)::
3108 # users to not keep ever, pre-load with the users I know aren't
3109 # "real" users
3110 ignore = ['ekmmon', 'bfast', 'csrmail']
3112 # users to keep - pre-load with the roundup-specific users
3113 keep = ['comment_pool', 'network_pool', 'admin', 'dev-team',
3114 'cs_pool', 'anonymous', 'system_pool', 'automated']
3116 Now we map the UN*X group numbers to the Roles that users should have::
3118 roles = {
3119 '501': 'User,Tech', # tech
3120 '502': 'User', # finance
3121 '503': 'User,CSR', # customer service reps
3122 '504': 'User', # sales
3123 '505': 'User', # marketing
3124 }
3126 Now we do all the work. Note that the body of the script (where we have
3127 the tracker database open) is wrapped in a ``try`` / ``finally`` clause,
3128 so that we always close the database cleanly when we're finished. So, we
3129 now do all the work::
3131 # open the database
3132 db = tracker.open('admin')
3133 try:
3134 # store away messages to send to the tracker admins
3135 msg = []
3137 # loop over the users list read in from the passwd file
3138 for user,passw,uid,gid,real,home,shell in users:
3139 if user in ignore:
3140 # this user shouldn't appear in our tracker
3141 continue
3142 keep.append(user)
3143 try:
3144 # see if the user exists in the tracker
3145 uid = db.user.lookup(user)
3147 # yes, they do - now check the real name for correctness
3148 if real != db.user.get(uid, 'realname'):
3149 db.user.set(uid, realname=real)
3150 msg.append('FIX %s - %s'%(user, real))
3151 except KeyError:
3152 # nope, the user doesn't exist
3153 db.user.create(username=user, realname=real,
3154 address='%s@ekit-inc.com'%user, roles=roles[gid])
3155 msg.append('ADD %s - %s (%s)'%(user, real, roles[gid]))
3157 # now check that all the users in the tracker are also in our
3158 # "keep" list - retire those who aren't
3159 for uid in db.user.list():
3160 user = db.user.get(uid, 'username')
3161 if user not in keep:
3162 db.user.retire(uid)
3163 msg.append('RET %s'%user)
3165 # if we did work, then send email to the tracker admins
3166 if msg:
3167 # create the email
3168 msg = '''Subject: %s user database maintenance
3170 %s
3171 '''%(db.config.TRACKER_NAME, '\n'.join(msg))
3173 # send the email
3174 smtp = smtplib.SMTP(db.config.MAILHOST)
3175 addr = db.config.ADMIN_EMAIL
3176 smtp.sendmail(addr, addr, msg)
3178 # now we're done - commit the changes
3179 db.commit()
3180 finally:
3181 # always close the database cleanly
3182 db.close()
3184 And that's it!
3187 Using an LDAP database for user information
3188 -------------------------------------------
3190 A script that reads users from an LDAP store using
3191 http://python-ldap.sf.net/ and then compares the list to the users in the
3192 roundup user database would be pretty easy to write. You'd then have it run
3193 once an hour / day (or on demand if you can work that into your LDAP store
3194 workflow). See the example `Using a UN*X passwd file as the user database`_
3195 for more information about doing this.
3197 To authenticate off the LDAP store (rather than using the passwords in the
3198 roundup user database) you'd use the same python-ldap module inside an
3199 extension to the cgi interface. You'd do this by adding a method called
3200 "verifyPassword" to the Client class in your tracker's interfaces.py
3201 module. The method is implemented by default as::
3203 def verifyPassword(self, userid, password):
3204 ''' Verify the password that the user has supplied
3205 '''
3206 stored = self.db.user.get(self.userid, 'password')
3207 if password == stored:
3208 return 1
3209 if not password and not stored:
3210 return 1
3211 return 0
3213 So you could reimplement this as something like::
3215 def verifyPassword(self, userid, password):
3216 ''' Verify the password that the user has supplied
3217 '''
3218 # look up some unique LDAP information about the user
3219 username = self.db.user.get(self.userid, 'username')
3220 # now verify the password supplied against the LDAP store
3223 Enabling display of either message summaries or the entire messages
3224 -------------------------------------------------------------------
3226 This is pretty simple - all we need to do is copy the code from the
3227 example `displaying only message summaries in the issue display`_ into
3228 our template alongside the summary display, and then introduce a switch
3229 that shows either one or the other. We'll use a new form variable,
3230 ``@whole_messages`` to achieve this::
3232 <table class="messages" tal:condition="context/messages">
3233 <tal:block tal:condition="not:request/form/@whole_messages/value | python:0">
3234 <tr><th colspan="3" class="header">Messages</th>
3235 <th colspan="2" class="header">
3236 <a href="?@whole_messages=yes">show entire messages</a>
3237 </th>
3238 </tr>
3239 <tr tal:repeat="msg context/messages">
3240 <td><a tal:attributes="href string:msg${msg/id}"
3241 tal:content="string:msg${msg/id}"></a></td>
3242 <td tal:content="msg/author">author</td>
3243 <td class="date" tal:content="msg/date/pretty">date</td>
3244 <td tal:content="msg/summary">summary</td>
3245 <td>
3246 <a tal:attributes="href string:?@remove@messages=${msg/id}&@action=edit">remove</a>
3247 </td>
3248 </tr>
3249 </tal:block>
3251 <tal:block tal:condition="request/form/@whole_messages/value | python:0">
3252 <tr><th colspan="2" class="header">Messages</th>
3253 <th class="header">
3254 <a href="?@whole_messages=">show only summaries</a>
3255 </th>
3256 </tr>
3257 <tal:block tal:repeat="msg context/messages">
3258 <tr>
3259 <th tal:content="msg/author">author</th>
3260 <th class="date" tal:content="msg/date/pretty">date</th>
3261 <th style="text-align: right">
3262 (<a tal:attributes="href string:?@remove@messages=${msg/id}&@action=edit">remove</a>)
3263 </th>
3264 </tr>
3265 <tr><td colspan="3" tal:content="msg/content"></td></tr>
3266 </tal:block>
3267 </tal:block>
3268 </table>
3271 Blocking issues that depend on other issues
3272 -------------------------------------------
3274 We needed the ability to mark certain issues as "blockers" - that is,
3275 they can't be resolved until another issue (the blocker) they rely on is
3276 resolved. To achieve this:
3278 1. Create a new property on the issue Class,
3279 ``blockers=Multilink("issue")``. Edit your tracker's dbinit.py file.
3280 Where the "issue" class is defined, something like::
3282 issue = IssueClass(db, "issue",
3283 assignedto=Link("user"), topic=Multilink("keyword"),
3284 priority=Link("priority"), status=Link("status"))
3286 add the blockers entry like so::
3288 issue = IssueClass(db, "issue",
3289 blockers=Multilink("issue"),
3290 assignedto=Link("user"), topic=Multilink("keyword"),
3291 priority=Link("priority"), status=Link("status"))
3293 2. Add the new "blockers" property to the issue.item edit page, using
3294 something like::
3296 <th>Waiting On</th>
3297 <td>
3298 <span tal:replace="structure python:context.blockers.field(showid=1,
3299 size=20)" />
3300 <span tal:replace="structure python:db.issue.classhelp('id,title')" />
3301 <span tal:condition="context/blockers"
3302 tal:repeat="blk context/blockers">
3303 <br>View: <a tal:attributes="href string:issue${blk/id}"
3304 tal:content="blk/id"></a>
3305 </span>
3307 You'll need to fiddle with your item page layout to find an
3308 appropriate place to put it - I'll leave that fun part up to you.
3309 Just make sure it appears in the first table, possibly somewhere near
3310 the "superseders" field.
3312 3. Create a new detector module (attached) which enforces the rules:
3314 - issues may not be resolved if they have blockers
3315 - when a blocker is resolved, it's removed from issues it blocks
3317 The contents of the detector should be something like this::
3319 def blockresolution(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
3320 ''' If the issue has blockers, don't allow it to be resolved.
3321 '''
3322 if nodeid is None:
3323 blockers = []
3324 else:
3325 blockers = cl.get(nodeid, 'blockers')
3326 blockers = newvalues.get('blockers', blockers)
3328 # don't do anything if there's no blockers or the status hasn't
3329 # changed
3330 if not blockers or not newvalues.has_key('status'):
3331 return
3333 # get the resolved state ID
3334 resolved_id = db.status.lookup('resolved')
3336 # format the info
3337 u = db.config.TRACKER_WEB
3338 s = ', '.join(['<a href="%sissue%s">%s</a>'%(
3339 u,id,id) for id in blockers])
3340 if len(blockers) == 1:
3341 s = 'issue %s is'%s
3342 else:
3343 s = 'issues %s are'%s
3345 # ok, see if we're trying to resolve
3346 if newvalues['status'] == resolved_id:
3347 raise ValueError, "This issue can't be resolved until %s resolved."%s
3349 def resolveblockers(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
3350 ''' When we resolve an issue that's a blocker, remove it from the
3351 blockers list of the issue(s) it blocks.
3352 '''
3353 if not newvalues.has_key('status'):
3354 return
3356 # get the resolved state ID
3357 resolved_id = db.status.lookup('resolved')
3359 # interesting?
3360 if newvalues['status'] != resolved_id:
3361 return
3363 # yes - find all the blocked issues, if any, and remove me from
3364 # their blockers list
3365 issues = cl.find(blockers=nodeid)
3366 for issueid in issues:
3367 blockers = cl.get(issueid, 'blockers')
3368 if nodeid in blockers:
3369 blockers.remove(nodeid)
3370 cl.set(issueid, blockers=blockers)
3373 def init(db):
3374 # might, in an obscure situation, happen in a create
3375 db.issue.audit('create', blockresolution)
3376 db.issue.audit('set', blockresolution)
3378 # can only happen on a set
3379 db.issue.react('set', resolveblockers)
3381 Put the above code in a file called "blockers.py" in your tracker's
3382 "detectors" directory.
3384 4. Finally, and this is an optional step, modify the tracker web page
3385 URLs so they filter out issues with any blockers. You do this by
3386 adding an additional filter on "blockers" for the value "-1". For
3387 example, the existing "Show All" link in the "page" template (in the
3388 tracker's "html" directory) looks like this::
3390 <a href="issue?:sort=-activity&:group=priority&:filter=status&:columns=id,activity,title,creator,assignedto,status&status=-1,1,2,3,4,5,6,7">Show All</a><br>
3392 modify it to add the "blockers" info to the URL (note, both the
3393 ":filter" *and* "blockers" values must be specified)::
3395 <a href="issue?:sort=-activity&:group=priority&:filter=status,blockers&blockers=-1&:columns=id,activity,title,creator,assignedto,status&status=-1,1,2,3,4,5,6,7">Show All</a><br>
3397 That's it. You should now be able to set blockers on your issues. Note
3398 that if you want to know whether an issue has any other issues dependent
3399 on it (i.e. it's in their blockers list) you can look at the journal
3400 history at the bottom of the issue page - look for a "link" event to
3401 another issue's "blockers" property.
3403 Add users to the nosy list based on the topic
3404 ---------------------------------------------
3406 We need the ability to automatically add users to the nosy list based
3407 on the occurence of a topic. Every user should be allowed to edit his
3408 own list of topics for which he wants to be added to the nosy list.
3410 Below will be showed that such a change can be performed with only
3411 minimal understanding of the roundup system, but with clever use
3412 of Copy and Paste.
3414 This requires three changes to the tracker: a change in the database to
3415 allow per-user recording of the lists of topics for which he wants to
3416 be put on the nosy list, a change in the user view allowing to edit
3417 this list of topics, and addition of an auditor which updates the nosy
3418 list when a topic is set.
3420 Adding the nosy topic list
3421 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3423 The change in the database to make is that for any user there should be
3424 a list of topics for which he wants to be put on the nosy list. Adding
3425 a ``Multilink`` of ``keyword`` seem to fullfill this (note that within
3426 the code topics are called ``keywords``.) As such, all what has to be
3427 done is to add a new field to the definition of ``user`` within the
3428 file ``dbinit.py``. We will call this new field ``nosy_keywords``, and
3429 the updated definition of user will be::
3431 user = Class(db, "user",
3432 username=String(), password=Password(),
3433 address=String(), realname=String(),
3434 phone=String(), organisation=String(),
3435 alternate_addresses=String(),
3436 queries=Multilink('query'), roles=String(),
3437 timezone=String(),
3438 nosy_keywords=Multilink('keyword'))
3440 Changing the user view to allow changing the nosy topic list
3441 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3443 We want any user to be able to change the list of topics for which
3444 he will by default be added to the nosy list. We choose to add this
3445 to the user view, as is generated by the file ``html/user.item.html``.
3446 We easily can
3447 see that the topic field in the issue view has very similar editting
3448 requirements as our nosy topics, both being a list of topics. As
3449 such, we search for Topics in ``issue.item.html``, and extract the
3450 associated parts from there. We add this to ``user.item.html`` at the
3451 bottom of the list of viewed items (i.e. just below the 'Alternate
3452 E-mail addresses' in the classic template)::
3454 <tr>
3455 <th>Nosy Topics</th>
3456 <td>
3457 <span tal:replace="structure context/nosy_keywords/field" />
3458 <span tal:replace="structure python:db.keyword.classhelp(property='nosy_keywords')" />
3459 </td>
3460 </tr>
3463 Addition of an auditor to update the nosy list
3464 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3466 The more difficult part is the addition of the logic to actually
3467 at the users to the nosy list when it is required.
3468 The choice is made to perform this action when the topics on an
3469 item are set, including when an item is created.
3470 Here we choose to start out with a copy of the
3471 ``detectors/nosyreaction.py`` detector, which we copy to the file
3472 ``detectors/nosy_keyword_reaction.py``.
3473 This looks like a good start as it also adds users
3474 to the nosy list. A look through the code reveals that the
3475 ``nosyreaction`` function actually is sending the e-mail, which
3476 we do not need. As such, we can change the init function to::
3478 def init(db):
3479 db.issue.audit('create', update_kw_nosy)
3480 db.issue.audit('set', update_kw_nosy)
3482 After that we rename the ``updatenosy`` function to ``update_kw_nosy``.
3483 The first two blocks of code in that function relate to settings
3484 ``current`` to a combination of the old and new nosy lists. This
3485 functionality is left in the new auditor. The following block of
3486 code, which in ``updatenosy`` handled adding the assignedto user(s)
3487 to the nosy list, should be replaced by a block of code to add the
3488 interested users to the nosy list. We choose here to loop over all
3489 new topics, than loop over all users,
3490 and assign the user to the nosy list when the topic in the user's
3491 nosy_keywords. The next part in ``updatenosy``, adding the author
3492 and/or recipients of a message to the nosy list, obviously is not
3493 relevant here and thus is deleted from the new auditor. The last
3494 part, copying the new nosy list to newvalues, does not have to be changed.
3495 This brings the following function::
3497 def update_kw_nosy(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
3498 '''Update the nosy list for changes to the topics
3499 '''
3500 # nodeid will be None if this is a new node
3501 current = {}
3502 if nodeid is None:
3503 ok = ('new', 'yes')
3504 else:
3505 ok = ('yes',)
3506 # old node, get the current values from the node if they haven't
3507 # changed
3508 if not newvalues.has_key('nosy'):
3509 nosy = cl.get(nodeid, 'nosy')
3510 for value in nosy:
3511 if not current.has_key(value):
3512 current[value] = 1
3514 # if the nosy list changed in this transaction, init from the new value
3515 if newvalues.has_key('nosy'):
3516 nosy = newvalues.get('nosy', [])
3517 for value in nosy:
3518 if not db.hasnode('user', value):
3519 continue
3520 if not current.has_key(value):
3521 current[value] = 1
3523 # add users with topic in nosy_keywords to the nosy list
3524 if newvalues.has_key('topic') and newvalues['topic'] is not None:
3525 topic_ids = newvalues['topic']
3526 for topic in topic_ids:
3527 # loop over all users,
3528 # and assign user to nosy when topic in nosy_keywords
3529 for user_id in db.user.list():
3530 nosy_kw = db.user.get(user_id, "nosy_keywords")
3531 found = 0
3532 for kw in nosy_kw:
3533 if kw == topic:
3534 found = 1
3535 if found:
3536 current[user_id] = 1
3538 # that's it, save off the new nosy list
3539 newvalues['nosy'] = current.keys()
3541 and these two function are the only ones needed in the file.
3543 TODO: update this example to use the find() Class method.
3545 Caveats
3546 ~~~~~~~
3548 A few problems with the design here can be noted:
3550 Multiple additions
3551 When a user, after automatic selection, is manually removed
3552 from the nosy list, he again is added to the nosy list when the
3553 topic list of the issue is updated. A better design might be
3554 to only check which topics are new compared to the old list
3555 of topics, and only add users when they have indicated
3556 interest on a new topic.
3558 The code could also be changed to only trigger on the create() event,
3559 rather than also on the set() event, thus only setting the nosy list
3560 when the issue is created.
3562 Scalability
3563 In the auditor there is a loop over all users. For a site with
3564 only few users this will pose no serious problem, however, with
3565 many users this will be a serious performance bottleneck.
3566 A way out will be to link from the topics to the users which
3567 selected these topics a nosy topics. This will eliminate the
3568 loop over all users.
3571 Adding action links to the index page
3572 -------------------------------------
3574 Add a column to the item.index.html template.
3576 Resolving the issue::
3578 <a tal:attributes="href
3579 string:issue${i/id}?:status=resolved&:action=edit">resolve</a>
3581 "Take" the issue::
3583 <a tal:attributes="href
3584 string:issue${i/id}?:assignedto=${request/user/id}&:action=edit">take</a>
3586 ... and so on
3588 Users may only edit their issues
3589 --------------------------------
3591 Users registering themselves are granted Provisional access - meaning they
3592 have access to edit the issues they submit, but not others. We create a new
3593 Role called "Provisional User" which is granted to newly-registered users,
3594 and has limited access. One of the Permissions they have is the new "Edit
3595 Own" on issues (regular users have "Edit".) We back up the permissions with
3596 an auditor.
3598 First up, we create the new Role and Permission structure in
3599 ``dbinit.py``::
3601 # New users not approved by the admin
3602 db.security.addRole(name='Provisional User',
3603 description='New user registered via web or email')
3604 p = db.security.addPermission(name='Edit Own', klass='issue',
3605 description='Can only edit own issues')
3606 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Provisional User', p)
3608 # Assign the access and edit Permissions for issue to new users now
3609 p = db.security.getPermission('View', 'issue')
3610 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Provisional User', p)
3611 p = db.security.getPermission('Edit', 'issue')
3612 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Provisional User', p)
3614 # and give the new users access to the web and email interface
3615 p = db.security.getPermission('Web Access')
3616 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Provisional User', p)
3617 p = db.security.getPermission('Email Access')
3618 db.security.addPermissionToRole('Provisional User', p)
3621 Then in the ``config.py`` we change the Role assigned to newly-registered
3622 users, replacing the existing ``'User'`` values::
3624 NEW_WEB_USER_ROLES = 'Provisional User'
3625 NEW_EMAIL_USER_ROLES = 'Provisional User'
3627 Finally we add a new *auditor* to the ``detectors`` directory called
3628 ``provisional_user_auditor.py``::
3630 def audit_provisionaluser(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues):
3631 ''' New users are only allowed to modify their own issues.
3632 '''
3633 if (db.getuid() != cl.get(nodeid, 'creator')
3634 and db.security.hasPermission('Edit Own', db.getuid(), cl.classname)):
3635 raise ValueError, ('You are only allowed to edit your own %s'
3636 % cl.classname)
3638 def init(db):
3639 # fire before changes are made
3640 db.issue.audit('set', audit_provisionaluser)
3641 db.issue.audit('retire', audit_provisionaluser)
3642 db.issue.audit('restore', audit_provisionaluser)
3644 Note that some older trackers might also want to change the ``page.html``
3645 template as follows::
3647 <p class="classblock"
3648 - tal:condition="python:request.user.username != 'anonymous'">
3649 + tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('View', 'user')">
3650 <b>Administration</b><br>
3651 <tal:block tal:condition="python:request.user.hasPermission('Edit', None)">
3652 <a href="home?:template=classlist">Class List</a><br>
3654 (note that the "-" indicates a removed line, and the "+" indicates an added
3655 line).
3658 Colouring the rows in the issue index according to priority
3659 -----------------------------------------------------------
3661 A simple ``tal:attributes`` statement will do the bulk of the work here. In
3662 the ``issue.index.html`` template, add to the ``<tr>`` that displays the
3663 actual rows of data::
3665 <tr tal:attributes="class string:priority-${i/priority/plain}">
3667 and then in your stylesheet (``style.css``) specify the colouring for the
3668 different priorities, like::
3670 tr.priority-critical td {
3671 background-color: red;
3672 }
3674 tr.priority-urgent td {
3675 background-color: orange;
3676 }
3678 and so on, with far less offensive colours :)
3680 -------------------
3682 Back to `Table of Contents`_
3684 .. _`Table of Contents`: index.html
3685 .. _`design documentation`: design.html