Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view tools/fixroles.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 | 52c8324d1539 |
| children |
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import sys from roundup import admin class AdminTool(admin.AdminTool): def __init__(self): self.commands = admin.CommandDict() for k in AdminTool.__dict__.keys(): if k[:3] == 'do_': self.commands[k[3:]] = getattr(self, k) self.help = {} for k in AdminTool.__dict__.keys(): if k[:5] == 'help_': self.help[k[5:]] = getattr(self, k) self.instance_home = '' self.db = None def do_fixroles(self, args): '''Usage: fixroles Set the roles property for all users to reasonable defaults. The admin user gets "Admin", the anonymous user gets "Anonymous" and all other users get "User". ''' # get the user class cl = self.get_class('user') for userid in cl.list(): username = cl.get(userid, 'username') if username == 'admin': roles = 'Admin' elif username == 'anonymous': roles = 'Anonymous' else: roles = 'User' cl.set(userid, roles=roles) return 0 if __name__ == '__main__': tool = AdminTool() sys.exit(tool.main())
