Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view share/roundup/templates/minimal/schema.py @ 8040:19cef1e285b0
fix: remove delay when using csv export actions.
The CSV file is written incrementally, so we can't determine the
Content-Length. When using HTTP/1.1, this causes a delay while the
browser waits for a timeout. Forcing the connection to close after
the CSV file is written removes the delay.
Ideally we should shift to chunked transfer encoding for these two
actions, but that is much more invasive and when posting a request for
CSV, it is unlikely that another request will be sent over the same
socket.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Tue, 18 Jun 2024 00:48:06 -0400 |
| parents | c087ad45bf4d |
| children | 984bc9f94ec6 |
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# # TRACKER SCHEMA # # Class automatically gets these properties: # creation = Date() # activity = Date() # creator = Link('user') # actor = Link('user') # The "Minimal" template gets only one class, the required "user" # class. That's it. And even that has the bare minimum of properties. # Note: roles is a comma-separated string of Role names user = Class(db, "user", username=String(), password=Password(), address=String(), alternate_addresses=String(), roles=String()) user.setkey("username") db.security.addPermission(name='Register', klass='user', description='User is allowed to register new user') # # TRACKER SECURITY SETTINGS # # See the configuration and customisation document for information # about security setup. # # REGULAR USERS # # Give the regular users access to the web and email interface db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Web Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Email Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Rest Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Xmlrpc Access') # May users view other user information? # Comment these lines out if you don't want them to p = db.security.addPermission(name='View', klass='user', properties=('id', 'username')) db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) # Users should be able to edit their own details -- this permission is # limited to only the situation where the Viewed or Edited item is their own. def own_record(db, userid, itemid): '''Determine whether the userid matches the item being accessed.''' return userid == itemid p = db.security.addPermission(name='View', klass='user', check=own_record, description="User is allowed to view their own user details") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Edit', klass='user', check=own_record, properties=('username', 'password', 'address', 'alternate_addresses'), description="User is allowed to edit their own user details") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) # # ANONYMOUS USER PERMISSIONS # # Let anonymous users access the web interface. Note that almost all # trackers will need this Permission. The only situation where it's not # required is in a tracker that uses an HTTP Basic Authenticated front-end. db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Web Access') # Let anonymous users access the email interface (note that this implies # that they will be registered automatically, hence they will need the # "Register" user Permission below) db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Email Access') # Assign the appropriate permissions to the anonymous user's # Anonymous Role. Choices here are: # - Allow anonymous users to register db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Register', 'user') # vim: set et sts=4 sw=4 :
