Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view detectors/emailauditor.py @ 7695:2be7a8f66ea7
fix: windows install using pip mislocates share directory
The setup code that tries to make the share install path absolute
prependeds something like:
c:\program files\python_venv
to the paths. The equivalent on linux is recognized as an absolute
path. On windows this is treated oddly. This resulted in
the share files being placed in:
c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\site-packages\program files\python_venv\share
Roundup was unable to find the files there. On windows (where the
platform starts with 'win') don't make the path absolute. This puts
share in:
c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\share
and Roundup finds them.
The translations and templates are found by the roundup-server.
The docs are also installed under the share directory. The man pages
are not installed as windows doesn't have groff to format the source
documents.
This is the second fix from issues getting Roundup running on windows
discussed on mailing list by Simon Eigeldinger.
Thread starts with:
https://sourceforge.net/p/roundup/mailman/message/41557096/
subject: Installing Roundup on Windows 2023-10-05.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 05 Nov 2023 23:01:29 -0500 |
| parents | 0942fe89e82e |
| children |
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def eml_to_mht(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): '''This auditor fires whenever a new file entity is created. If the file is of type message/rfc822, we tack onthe extension .eml. The reason for this is that Microsoft Internet Explorer will not open things with a .eml attachment, as they deem it 'unsafe'. Worse yet, they'll just give you an incomprehensible error message. For more information, please see: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;825803 Their suggested work around is (excerpt): WORKAROUND To work around this behavior, rename the .EML file that the URL links to so that it has a .MHT file name extension, and then update the URL to reflect the change to the file name. To do this: 1. In Windows Explorer, locate and then select the .EML file that the URL links. 2. Right-click the .EML file, and then click Rename. 3. Change the file name so that the .EML file uses a .MHT file name extension, and then press ENTER. 4. Updated the URL that links to the file to reflect the new file name extension. So... we do that. :)''' if newvalues.get('type', '').lower() == "message/rfc822": if 'name' not in newvalues: newvalues['name'] = 'email.mht' return name = newvalues['name'] if name.endswith('.eml'): name = name[:-4] newvalues['name'] = name + '.mht' def init(db): db.file.audit('create', eml_to_mht)
