Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view roundup/backends/sessions_rdbms.py @ 7800:2d4684e4702d
fix: enhancement to history command output and % template fix.
Rather than using the key field, use the label field for descriptions.
Call cls.labelprop(default_to_id=True) so it returns id rather than
the first sorted property name.
If labelprop() returns 'id' or 'title', we return nothing. 'id' means
there is no label set and no properties named 'name' or 'title'. So
have the caller do whatever it wants (prepend classname for example)
when there is no human readable name. This prevents %(name)s%(key)s
from producing: 23(23).
Also don't accept the 'title' property. Titles can be too
long. Arguably we could: '%(name)20s' to limit the title
length. However without ellipses or something truncating the title
might be confusing. So again pretend there is no human readable name.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Tue, 12 Mar 2024 11:52:17 -0400 |
| parents | fe0091279f50 |
| children | ee17f62c8341 |
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"""This module defines a very basic store that's used by the CGI interface to store session and one-time-key information. Yes, it's called "sessions" - because originally it only defined a session class. It's now also used for One Time Key handling too. """ __docformat__ = 'restructuredtext' import time from roundup.anypy.html import html_escape as escape from roundup.backends.sessions_common import SessionCommon class BasicDatabase(SessionCommon): ''' Provide a nice encapsulation of an RDBMS table. Keys are id strings, values are automatically marshalled data. ''' name = None def __init__(self, db): self.db = db self.conn, self.cursor = self.db.sql_open_connection() def clear(self): self.cursor.execute('delete from %ss' % self.name) def exists(self, infoid): n = self.name self.cursor.execute('select count(*) from %ss where %s_key=%s' % (n, n, self.db.arg), (infoid,)) return int(self.cursor.fetchone()[0]) _marker = [] def get(self, infoid, value, default=_marker): n = self.name self.cursor.execute('select %s_value from %ss where %s_key=%s' % (n, n, n, self.db.arg), (infoid,)) res = self.cursor.fetchone() if not res: if default != self._marker: return default raise KeyError('No such %s "%s"' % (self.name, escape(infoid))) values = eval(res[0]) return values.get(value, None) def getall(self, infoid): n = self.name self.cursor.execute('select %s_value from %ss where %s_key=%s' % (n, n, n, self.db.arg), (infoid,)) res = self.cursor.fetchone() if not res: raise KeyError('No such %s "%s"' % (self.name, escape(infoid))) return eval(res[0]) def set(self, infoid, **newvalues): """ Store all newvalues under key infoid with a timestamp in database. If newvalues['__timestamp'] exists and is representable as a floating point number (i.e. could be generated by time.time()), that value is used for the <name>_time column in the database. """ c = self.cursor n = self.name a = self.db.arg c.execute('select %s_value from %ss where %s_key=%s' % (n, n, n, a), (infoid,)) res = c.fetchone() timestamp = time.time() if res: values = eval(res[0]) else: values = {} if '__timestamp' in newvalues: try: # __timestamp must be representable as a float. Check it. timestamp = float(newvalues['__timestamp']) except ValueError: if res: # keep the original timestamp del(newvalues['__timestamp']) else: # here timestamp is the new timestamp newvalues['__timestamp'] = timestamp values.update(newvalues) if res: sql = ('update %ss set %s_value=%s, %s_time=%s ' 'where %s_key=%s' % (n, n, a, n, a, n, a)) args = (repr(values), timestamp, infoid) else: sql = 'insert into %ss (%s_key, %s_time, %s_value) '\ 'values (%s, %s, %s)' % (n, n, n, n, a, a, a) args = (infoid, timestamp, repr(values)) c.execute(sql, args) def list(self): c = self.cursor n = self.name c.execute('select %s_key from %ss' % (n, n)) return [res[0] for res in c.fetchall()] def destroy(self, infoid): self.cursor.execute('delete from %ss where %s_key=%s' % (self.name, self.name, self.db.arg), (infoid,)) def updateTimestamp(self, infoid): """ don't update every hit - once a minute should be OK """ now = time.time() self.cursor.execute('''update %ss set %s_time=%s where %s_key=%s ''' '''and %s_time < %s''' % (self.name, self.name, self.db.arg, self.name, self.db.arg, self.name, self.db.arg), (now, infoid, now-60)) def clean(self): ''' Remove session records that haven't been used for a week. ''' now = time.time() week = 60*60*24*7 old = now - week self.cursor.execute('delete from %ss where %s_time < %s' % (self.name, self.name, self.db.arg), (old, )) def commit(self): self.log_info('commit %s' % self.name) self.conn.commit() self.cursor = self.conn.cursor() def lifetime(self, item_lifetime=0): """Return the proper timestamp for a key with key_lifetime specified in seconds. Default lifetime is 0. """ now = time.time() week = 60*60*24*7 return now - week + item_lifetime def close(self): self.conn.close() class Sessions(BasicDatabase): name = 'session' class OneTimeKeys(BasicDatabase): name = 'otk' # vim: set et sts=4 sw=4 :
