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view roundup/cgi/engine_zopetal.py @ 5543:bc3e00a3d24b
MySQL backend fixes for Python 3.
With Python 2, text sent to and from MySQL is treated as bytes in
Python. The database may be recorded by MySQL as having some other
encoding (latin1 being the default in some MySQL versions - Roundup
does not set an encoding explicitly, unlike in back_postgresql), but
as long as MySQL's notion of the connection encoding agrees with its
notion of the database encoding, no conversions actually take place
and the bytes are stored and returned as-is.
With Python 3, text sent to and from MySQL is treated as Python
Unicode strings. When the database and connection encoding is latin1,
that means the bytes stored in the database under Python 2 are
interpreted as latin1 and converted from that to Unicode, producing
incorrect results for any non-ASCII characters; furthermore, if trying
to store new non-ASCII data in the database under Python 3, any
non-latin1 characters produce errors.
This patch arranges for both the connection and database character
sets to be UTF-8 when using Python 3, and documents a need to export
and import the database when moving from Python 2 to Python 3 with
this backend.
| author | Joseph Myers <jsm@polyomino.org.uk> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 16 Sep 2018 16:19:20 +0000 |
| parents | 55f09ca366c4 |
| children | 38d04127d9bb |
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"""Templating engine adapter for the legacy TAL implementation ported from Zope. """ __docformat__ = 'restructuredtext' import errno import mimetypes import os import os.path from roundup.cgi.templating import StringIO, context, translationService, TALLoaderBase from roundup.cgi.PageTemplates import PageTemplate, GlobalTranslationService from roundup.cgi.PageTemplates.Expressions import getEngine from roundup.cgi.TAL import TALInterpreter GlobalTranslationService.setGlobalTranslationService(translationService) class Loader(TALLoaderBase): templates = {} def __init__(self, dir): self.dir = dir def load(self, tplname): # find the source src, filename = self._find(tplname) # has it changed? try: stime = os.stat(src)[os.path.stat.ST_MTIME] except os.error as error: if error.errno != errno.ENOENT: raise if src in self.templates and \ stime <= self.templates[src].mtime: # compiled template is up to date return self.templates[src] # compile the template pt = RoundupPageTemplate() # use pt_edit so we can pass the content_type guess too content_type = mimetypes.guess_type(filename)[0] or 'text/html' pt.pt_edit(open(src).read(), content_type) pt.id = filename pt.mtime = stime # Add it to the cache. We cannot do this until the template # is fully initialized, as we could otherwise have a race # condition when running with multiple threads: # # 1. Thread A notices the template is not in the cache, # adds it, but has not yet set "mtime". # # 2. Thread B notices the template is in the cache, checks # "mtime" (above) and crashes. # # Since Python dictionary access is atomic, as long as we # insert "pt" only after it is fully initialized, we avoid # this race condition. It's possible that two separate # threads will both do the work of initializing the template, # but the risk of wasted work is offset by avoiding a lock. self.templates[src] = pt return pt class RoundupPageTemplate(PageTemplate.PageTemplate): """A Roundup-specific PageTemplate. Interrogate the client to set up Roundup-specific template variables to be available. See 'context' function for the list of variables. """ def render(self, client, classname, request, **options): """Render this Page Template""" if not self._v_cooked: self._cook() __traceback_supplement__ = (PageTemplate.PageTemplateTracebackSupplement, self) if self._v_errors: raise PageTemplate.PTRuntimeError('Page Template %s has errors.'%self.id) # figure the context c = context(client, self, classname, request) c.update({'options': options}) # and go output = StringIO() TALInterpreter.TALInterpreter(self._v_program, self.macros, getEngine().getContext(c), output, tal=1, strictinsert=0)() return output.getvalue()
