Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view tools/fixroles.py @ 5661:b08a308c273b
Better display for Link/Multilink and content
Link/Multilink are now displayed as a dictionary by default. The format
is controlled by the setting of the @verbose option. With @verbose=0 we
get the old behavior displaying only the id. With the default @verbose=1
we get a dictionary with the id and a link inside. With @verbose=2 or
larger we get the label property in the dictionary in addition (e.g. the
name of a status or the name of a file).
The content property is also handled differently now. For @verbose < 2
we get a dictionary with a link property in it. The property points to
the standard download link for the content (or message). For
@verbose >= 2 we get the previous behavior, the content property as a
possibly very large json string.
| author | Ralf Schlatterbeck <rsc@runtux.com> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 22 Mar 2019 14:03:37 +0100 |
| 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())
