631 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
631 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
This is an idea from [[JoshTriplett]]. --[[Joey]]
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* See further discussion at [[forum/an_alternative_approach_to_structured_data]].
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Some uses of ikiwiki, such as for a bug-tracking system (BTS), move a bit away from the wiki end
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of the spectrum, and toward storing structured data about a page or instead
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of a page.
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For example, in a bug report you might want to choose a severity from a
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list, enter a version number, and have a bug submitter or owner recorded,
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etc. When editing online, it would be nice if these were separate fields on
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the form, rather than the data being edited in the big edit form.
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There's a tension here between remaining a wiki with human-editable source
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files, containing freeform markup, and more structured data storage. I
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think that it would be best to include the structured data in the page,
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using a directive. Something like:
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part of page content
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\[[data yaml="<arbitrary yaml here>"]]
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rest of page content
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As long as the position of the directive is not significant, it could be
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stripped out when web editing, the yaml used to generate/populate form fields,
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and then on save, the directive regenerated and inserted at top/bottom of
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the page.
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Josh thinks that yaml is probably a good choice, but the source could be a
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`.yaml` file that contains no directives, and just yaml. An addition
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complication in this scenario is, if the yaml included wiki page formatted content,
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ikiwiki would have to guess or be told what markup language it used.
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Either way, the yaml on the page would encode fields and their current content.
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Information about data types would be encoded elsewhere, probably on a
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parent page (using a separate directive). That way, all child pages could
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be forced to have the same fields.
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There would be some simple types like select, boolean, multiselect, string, wiki markup.
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Probably lists of these (ie, list of strings). Possibly more complex data
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structures.
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It should also be possible for plugins to define new types, and the type
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definitions should include validation of entered data, and how to prompt
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the user for the data.
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This seems conceptually straightforward, if possibly quite internally
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complex to handle the more complicated types and validation.
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One implementation wrinkle is how to build the html form. The editpage.tmpl
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currently overrides the standard [[!cpan CGI::FormBuilder]] generated form,
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which was done to make the edit page be laid out in a nice way. This,
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however, means that new fields cannot be easily added to it using
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[[!cpan CGI::FormBuilder]]. The attachment plugin uses the hack of bouilding
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up html by hand and dumping it into the form via a template variable.
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It would be nice if the type implementation code could just use
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FormBuilder, since its automatic form generation, and nice field validation
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model is a perfect match for structured data. But this problem with
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editpage.tmpl would have to be sorted out to allow that.
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Additional tie-ins:
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* Pagespecs that can select pages with a field with a given value, etc.
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This should use a pagespec function like field(fieldname, value). The
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semantics of this will depend on the type of the field; text fields will
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match value against the text, and link fields will check for a link
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matching the pagespec value.
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* The search plugin could allow searching for specific fields with specific
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content. (xapian term search is a good fit).
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See also:
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[[tracking_bugs_with_dependencies]]
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> I was also thinking about this for bug tracking. I'm not sure what
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> sort of structured data is wanted in a page, so I decided to brainstorm
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> use cases:
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>
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> * You just want the page to be pretty.
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> * You want to access the data from another page. This would be almost like
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> like a database lookup, or the OpenOffice Calc [VLookup](http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Calc:_VLOOKUP_function) function.
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> * You want to make a pagespec depend upon the data. This could be used
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> for dependancy tracking - you could match against pages listed as dependencies,
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> rather than all pages linked from a given page.
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>
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>The first use case is handled by having a template in the page creation. You could
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>have some type of form to edit the data, but that's just sugar on top of the template.
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>If you were going to have a web form to edit the data, I can imagine a few ways to do it:
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>
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> * Have a special page type which gets compiled into the form. The page type would
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> need to define the form as well as hold the stored data.
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> * Have special directives that allow you to insert form elements into a normal page.
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>
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>I'm happy with template based page creation as a first pass...
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>
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>The second use case could be handled by a regular expression directive. eg:
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>
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> \[[regex spec="myBug" regex="Depends: ([^\s]+)"]]
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>
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> The directive would be replaced with the match from the regex on the 'myBug' page... or something.
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>
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>The third use case requires a pagespec function. One that matched a regex in the page might work.
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>Otherwise, another option would be to annotate links with a type, and then check the type of links in
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>a pagespec. e.g. you could have `depends` links and normal links.
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>
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>Anyway, I just wanted to list the thoughts. In none of these use cases is straight yaml or json the
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>obvious answer. -- [[Will]]
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>> Okie. I've had a play with this. A 'form' plugin is included inline below, but it is only a rough first pass to
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>> get a feel for the design space.
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>>
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>> The current design defines a new type of page - a 'form'. The type of page holds YAML data
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>> defining a FormBuilder form. For example, if we add a file to the wiki source `test.form`:
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---
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fields:
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age:
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comment: This is a test
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validate: INT
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value: 15
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>> The YAML content is a series of nested hashes. The outer hash is currently checked for two keys:
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>> 'template', which specifies a parameter to pass to the FromBuilder as the template for the
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>> form, and 'fields', which specifies the data for the fields on the form.
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>> each 'field' is itself a hash. The keys and values are arguments to the formbuilder form method.
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>> The most important one is 'value', which specifies the value of that field.
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>>
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>> Using this, the plugin below can output a form when asked to generate HTML. The Formbuilder
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>> arguments are sanitized (need a thorough security audit here - I'm sure I've missed a bunch of
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>> holes). The form is generated with default values as supplied in the YAML data. It also has an
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>> 'Update Form' button at the bottom.
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>>
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>> The 'Update Form' button in the generated HTML submits changed values back to IkiWiki. The
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>> plugin captures these new values, updates the YAML and writes it out again. The form is
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>> validated when edited using this method. This method can only edit the values in the form.
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>> You cannot add new fields this way.
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>>
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>> It is still possible to edit the YAML directly using the 'edit' button. This allows adding new fields
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>> to the form, or adding other formbuilder data to change how the form is displayed.
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>>
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>> One final part of the plugin is a new pagespec function. `form_eq()` is a pagespec function that
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>> takes two arguments (separated by a ','). The first argument is a field name, the second argument
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>> a value for that field. The function matches forms (and not other page types) where the named
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>> field exists and holds the value given in the second argument. For example:
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\[[!inline pages="form_eq(age,15)" archive="yes"]]
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>> will include a link to the page generated above.
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>>> Okie, I've just made another plugin to try and do things in a different way.
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>>> This approach adds a 'data' directive. There are two arguments, `key` and `value`.
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>>> The directive is replaced by the value. There is also a match function, which is similar
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>>> to the one above. It also takes two arguments, a key and a value. It returns true if the
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>>> page has that key/value pair in a data directive. e.g.:
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\[[!data key="age" value="15"]]
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>>> then, in another page:
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\[[!inline pages="data_eq(age,15)" archive="yes"]]
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>>> I expect that we could have more match functions for each type of structured data,
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>>> I just wanted to implement a rough prototype to get a feel for how it behaves. -- [[Will]]
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>> Anyway, here are the plugins. As noted above these are only preliminary, exploratory, attempts. -- [[Will]]
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>>>> I've just updated the second of the two patches below. The two patches are not mutually
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>>>> exclusive, but I'm leaning towards the second as more useful (for the things I'm doing). -- [[Will]]
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I think it's awesome that you're writing this code to explore the problem
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space, [[Will]] -- and these plugins are good stabs at at least part of it.
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Let me respond to a few of your comments.. --[[Joey]]
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On use cases, one use case is a user posting a bug report with structured
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data in it. A template is one way, but then the user has to deal with the
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format used to store the structured data. This is where a edit-time form
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becomes essential.
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> This was the idea with the 'form' plugin. With the 'data' plugin I was exploring
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> a different approach: try to keep the markup simple enough that the user can edit
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> the markup directly, and still have that be ok. I admit it is a stretch, but I thought
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> it worth exploring.
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Another use case is, after many such bugs have been filed,
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wanting to add a new field to each bug report. To avoid needing to edit
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every bug report it would be good if the fields in a bug report were
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defined somewhere else, so that just that one place can be edited to add
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the new field, and it will show up in each bug report (and in each bug
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report's edit page, as a new form field).
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> If I was going to do that, I'd use a perl script on a checked out
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> workspace. I think you're describing a rare operation and
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> so I'd be happy not having a web interface for it. Having said that,
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> if you just wanted to change the form for *new* pages, then you
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> can just edit the template used to create new pages.
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Re the form plugin, I'm uncomfortable with tying things into
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[[!cpan CGI::FormBuilder]] quite so tightly as you have.
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> Yeah :). But I wanted to explore the space and that was the
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> easiest way to start.
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CGI::FormBuilder
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could easily change in a way that broke whole wikis full of pages. Also,
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needing to sanitize FormBuilder fields with security implications is asking
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for trouble, since new FormBuilder features could add new fields, or
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add new features to existing fields (FormBuilder is very DWIM) that open
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new security holes.
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> There is a list of allowed fields. I only interpret those.
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I think that having a type system, that allows defining specific types,
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like "email address", by writing code (that in turn can use FormBuilder),
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is a better approach, since it should avoid becoming a security problem.
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> That would be possible. I think an extension to the 'data' plugin might
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> work here.
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One specific security hole, BTW, is that if you allow the `validate` field,
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FormBuilder will happily treat it as a regexp, and we don't want to expose
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arbitrary perl regexps, since they can at least DOS a system, and can
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probably be used to run arbitrary perl code.
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> I validate the validate field :). It only allows validate fields that match
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> `/^[\w\s]+$/`. This means you can really only use the pre-defined
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> validation types in FormBuilder.
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The data plugin only deals with a fairly small corner of the problem space,
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but I think does a nice job at what it does. And could probably be useful
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in a large number of other cases.
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> I think the data plugin is more likely to be useful than the form plugin.
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> I was thinking of extending the data directive by allowing an 'id' parameter.
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> When you have an id parameter, then you can display a small form for that
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> data element. The submission handler would look through the page source
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> for the data directive with the right id parameter and edit it. This would
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> make the data directive more like the current 'form' plugin.
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> That is making things significantly more complex for less significant gain though. --[[Will]]
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> Oh, one quick other note. The data plugin below was designed to handle multiple
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> data elements in a single directive. e.g.
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\[[!data key="Depends on" link="bugs/bugA" link="bugs/bugB" value=6]]
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> would match `data_eq(Depends on,6)`, `data_link(Depends on,bugs/bugA)`, `data_link(Depends on,bugs/bugB)`
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> or, if you applied the patch in [[todo/tracking_bugs_with_dependencies]] then you can use 'defined pagespecs'
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> such as `data_link(Depends on,~openBugs)`. <a id="another_kind_of_links" />The ability to label links like this allows separation of
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> dependencies between bugs from arbitrary links.
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>> This issue (the need for distinguished kinds of links) has also been brought up in other discussions: [[tracking_bugs_with_dependencies#another_kind_of_links]] (deps vs. links) and [[tag_pagespec_function]] (tags vs. links). --Ivan Z.
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----
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#!/usr/bin/perl
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# Interpret YAML data to make a web form
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package IkiWiki::Plugin::form;
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use warnings;
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use strict;
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use CGI::FormBuilder;
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use IkiWiki 2.00;
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sub import {
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hook(type => "getsetup", id => "form", call => \&getsetup);
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hook(type => "htmlize", id => "form", call => \&htmlize);
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hook(type => "sessioncgi", id => "form", call => \&cgi_submit);
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}
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sub getsetup () {
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return
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plugin => {
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safe => 1,
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rebuild => 1, # format plugin
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},
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}
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sub makeFormFromYAML ($$$) {
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my $page = shift;
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my $YAMLString = shift;
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my $q = shift;
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eval q{use YAML};
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error($@) if $@;
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eval q{use CGI::FormBuilder};
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error($@) if $@;
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my ($dataHashRef) = YAML::Load($YAMLString);
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my @fields = keys %{ $dataHashRef->{fields} };
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unshift(@fields, 'do');
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unshift(@fields, 'page');
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unshift(@fields, 'rcsinfo');
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# print STDERR "Fields: @fields\n";
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my $submittedPage;
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$submittedPage = $q->param('page') if defined $q;
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if (defined $q && defined $submittedPage && ! ($submittedPage eq $page)) {
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error("Submitted page doensn't match current page: $page, $submittedPage");
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}
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error("Page not backed by file") unless defined $pagesources{$page};
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my $file = $pagesources{$page};
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my $template;
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if (defined $dataHashRef->{template}) {
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$template = $dataHashRef->{template};
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} else {
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$template = "form.tmpl";
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}
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my $form = CGI::FormBuilder->new(
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fields => \@fields,
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charset => "utf-8",
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method => 'POST',
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required => [qw{page}],
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params => $q,
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action => $config{cgiurl},
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template => scalar IkiWiki::template_params($template),
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wikiname => $config{wikiname},
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header => 0,
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javascript => 0,
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keepextras => 0,
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title => $page,
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);
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$form->field(name => 'do', value => 'Update Form', required => 1, force => 1, type => 'hidden');
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$form->field(name => 'page', value => $page, required => 1, force => 1, type => 'hidden');
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$form->field(name => 'rcsinfo', value => IkiWiki::rcs_prepedit($file), required => 1, force => 0, type => 'hidden');
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my %validkey;
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foreach my $x (qw{label type multiple value fieldset growable message other required validate cleanopts columns comment disabled linebreaks class}) {
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$validkey{$x} = 1;
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}
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while ( my ($name, $data) = each(%{ $dataHashRef->{fields} }) ) {
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next if $name eq 'page';
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next if $name eq 'rcsinfo';
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while ( my ($key, $value) = each(%{ $data }) ) {
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next unless $validkey{$key};
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next if $key eq 'validate' && !($value =~ /^[\w\s]+$/);
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# print STDERR "Adding to field $name: $key => $value\n";
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$form->field(name => $name, $key => $value);
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}
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}
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# IkiWiki::decode_form_utf8($form);
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return $form;
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}
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sub htmlize (@) {
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my %params=@_;
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my $content = $params{content};
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my $page = $params{page};
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my $form = makeFormFromYAML($page, $content, undef);
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return $form->render(submit => 'Update Form');
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}
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sub cgi_submit ($$) {
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my $q=shift;
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my $session=shift;
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my $do=$q->param('do');
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return unless $do eq 'Update Form';
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IkiWiki::decode_cgi_utf8($q);
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eval q{use YAML};
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error($@) if $@;
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eval q{use CGI::FormBuilder};
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error($@) if $@;
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my $page = $q->param('page');
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return unless exists $pagesources{$page};
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return unless $pagesources{$page} =~ m/\.form$/ ;
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return unless IkiWiki::check_canedit($page, $q, $session);
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my $file = $pagesources{$page};
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my $YAMLString = readfile(IkiWiki::srcfile($file));
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my $form = makeFormFromYAML($page, $YAMLString, $q);
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my ($dataHashRef) = YAML::Load($YAMLString);
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if ($form->submitted eq 'Update Form' && $form->validate) {
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#first update our data structure
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while ( my ($name, $data) = each(%{ $dataHashRef->{fields} }) ) {
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next if $name eq 'page';
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next if $name eq 'rcs-data';
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if (defined $q->param($name)) {
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$data->{value} = $q->param($name);
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}
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}
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# now write / commit the data
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writefile($file, $config{srcdir}, YAML::Dump($dataHashRef));
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my $message = "Web form submission";
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IkiWiki::disable_commit_hook();
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my $conflict=IkiWiki::rcs_commit($file, $message,
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$form->field("rcsinfo"),
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$session->param("name"), $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR});
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IkiWiki::enable_commit_hook();
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IkiWiki::rcs_update();
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require IkiWiki::Render;
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IkiWiki::refresh();
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IkiWiki::redirect($q, "$config{url}/".htmlpage($page)."?updated");
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} else {
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error("Invalid data!");
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}
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exit;
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}
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package IkiWiki::PageSpec;
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sub match_form_eq ($$;@) {
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my $page=shift;
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my $argSet=shift;
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my @args=split(/,/, $argSet);
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my $field=shift @args;
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my $value=shift @args;
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my $file = $IkiWiki::pagesources{$page};
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if ($file !~ m/\.form$/) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("page is not a form");
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}
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my $YAMLString = IkiWiki::readfile(IkiWiki::srcfile($file));
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eval q{use YAML};
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error($@) if $@;
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my ($dataHashRef) = YAML::Load($YAMLString);
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if (! defined $dataHashRef->{fields}->{$field}) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("field '$field' not defined in page");
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}
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my $formVal = $dataHashRef->{fields}->{$field}->{value};
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if ($formVal eq $value) {
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return IkiWiki::SuccessReason->new("field value matches");
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} else {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("field value does not match");
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}
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}
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1
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----
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#!/usr/bin/perl
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# Allow data embedded in a page to be checked for
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package IkiWiki::Plugin::data;
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use warnings;
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use strict;
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use IkiWiki 2.00;
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my $inTable = 0;
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sub import {
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hook(type => "getsetup", id => "data", call => \&getsetup);
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hook(type => "needsbuild", id => "data", call => \&needsbuild);
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hook(type => "preprocess", id => "data", call => \&preprocess, scan => 1);
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hook(type => "preprocess", id => "datatable", call => \&preprocess_table, scan => 1); # does this need scan?
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}
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sub getsetup () {
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return
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plugin => {
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safe => 1,
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rebuild => 1, # format plugin
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},
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}
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sub needsbuild (@) {
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my $needsbuild=shift;
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foreach my $page (keys %pagestate) {
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if (exists $pagestate{$page}{data}) {
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if (exists $pagesources{$page} &&
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grep { $_ eq $pagesources{$page} } @$needsbuild) {
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# remove state, it will be re-added
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# if the preprocessor directive is still
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# there during the rebuild
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delete $pagestate{$page}{data};
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}
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}
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}
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}
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sub preprocess (@) {
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my @argslist = @_;
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my %params=@argslist;
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my $html = '';
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my $class = defined $params{class}
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? 'class="'.$params{class}.'"'
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: '';
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if ($inTable) {
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$html = "<th $class >$params{key}:</th><td $class >";
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} else {
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$html = "<span $class >$params{key}:";
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}
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while (scalar(@argslist) > 1) {
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my $type = shift @argslist;
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my $data = shift @argslist;
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if ($type eq 'link') {
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# store links raw
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$pagestate{$params{page}}{data}{$params{key}}{link}{$data} = 1;
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my $link=IkiWiki::linkpage($data);
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add_depends($params{page}, $link);
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$html .= ' ' . htmllink($params{page}, $params{destpage}, $link);
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} elsif ($type eq 'data') {
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$data = IkiWiki::preprocess($params{page}, $params{destpage},
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IkiWiki::filter($params{page}, $params{destpage}, $data));
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$html .= ' ' . $data;
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# store data after processing - allows pagecounts to be stored, etc.
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$pagestate{$params{page}}{data}{$params{key}}{data}{$data} = 1;
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}
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}
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if ($inTable) {
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$html .= "</td>";
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} else {
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$html .= "</span>";
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}
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return $html;
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}
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sub preprocess_table (@) {
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my %params=@_;
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my @lines;
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push @lines, defined $params{class}
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? "<table class=\"".$params{class}.'">'
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: '<table>';
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$inTable = 1;
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foreach my $line (split(/\n/, $params{datalist})) {
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push @lines, "<tr>" . IkiWiki::preprocess($params{page}, $params{destpage},
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IkiWiki::filter($params{page}, $params{destpage}, $line)) . "</tr>";
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}
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$inTable = 0;
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push @lines, '</table>';
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return join("\n", @lines);
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}
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package IkiWiki::PageSpec;
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sub match_data_eq ($$;@) {
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my $page=shift;
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my $argSet=shift;
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my @args=split(/,/, $argSet);
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my $key=shift @args;
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my $value=shift @args;
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if (! exists $IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("page does not contain any data directives");
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}
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if (! exists $IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}{$key}) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("page does not contain data key '$key'");
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}
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if ($IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}{$key}{data}{$value}) {
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return IkiWiki::SuccessReason->new("value matches");
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} else {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("value does not match");
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}
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}
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sub match_data_link ($$;@) {
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my $page=shift;
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my $argSet=shift;
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my @params=@_;
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my @args=split(/,/, $argSet);
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my $key=shift @args;
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my $value=shift @args;
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if (! exists $IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("page $page does not contain any data directives and so cannot match a link");
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}
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if (! exists $IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}{$key}) {
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("page $page does not contain data key '$key'");
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}
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foreach my $link (keys %{ $IkiWiki::pagestate{$page}{data}{$key}{link} }) {
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# print STDERR "Checking if $link matches glob $value\n";
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if (match_glob($link, $value, @params)) {
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return IkiWiki::SuccessReason->new("Data link on page $page with key $key matches glob $value: $link");
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}
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}
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return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("No data link on page $page with key $key matches glob $value");
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}
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1
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