Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view share/roundup/templates/jinja2/schema.py @ 6593:e70e2789bc2c
issue2551189 - increase text search maxlength
This removes I think all the magic references to 25 and 30 (varchar
size) and replaces them with references to maxlength or maxlength+5.
I am not sure why the db column is 5 characters larger than the size
of what should be the max size of a word, but I'll keep the buffer
of 5 as making it 1/5 the size of maxlength makes less sense.
Also added tests for fts search in templating which were missing.
Added postgres, mysql and sqlite native indexing backends in which to
test fts. Added fts test to native-fts as well to make sure it's
working.
I want to commit this now for CI.
Todo:
add test cases for the use of FTS in the csv output in
actions.py. There is no test coverage of the match case there.
change maxlength to a higher value (50) as requested in the ticket.
Modify existing extremewords test cases to allow words > 25 and < 51
write code to migrate column sizes for mysql and postgresql to match
maxlength I will roll this into the version 7 schema update that
supports use of database fts support.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Tue, 25 Jan 2022 13:22:00 -0500 |
| parents | bae060c8a5ac |
| children | c087ad45bf4d |
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# # TRACKER SCHEMA # # Class automatically gets these properties: # creation = Date() # activity = Date() # creator = Link('user') # actor = Link('user') # Priorities pri = Class(db, "priority", name=String(), order=Number()) pri.setkey("name") # Statuses stat = Class(db, "status", name=String(), order=Number()) stat.setkey("name") # Keywords keyword = Class(db, "keyword", name=String()) keyword.setkey("name") # User-defined saved searches query = Class(db, "query", klass=String(), name=String(), url=String(), private_for=Link('user')) # add any additional database schema configuration here user = Class(db, "user", username=String(), password=Password(), address=String(), realname=String(), phone=String(), organisation=String(), alternate_addresses=String(), queries=Multilink('query'), roles=String(), # comma-separated string of Role names timezone=String()) user.setkey("username") db.security.addPermission(name='Register', klass='user', description='User is allowed to register new user') # FileClass automatically gets this property in addition to the Class ones: # content = String() [saved to disk in <tracker home>/db/files/] # type = String() [MIME type of the content, default 'text/plain'] msg = FileClass(db, "msg", author=Link("user", do_journal='no'), recipients=Multilink("user", do_journal='no'), date=Date(), summary=String(), files=Multilink("file"), messageid=String(), inreplyto=String()) file = FileClass(db, "file", name=String()) # IssueClass automatically gets these properties in addition to the Class ones: # title = String() # messages = Multilink("msg") # files = Multilink("file") # nosy = Multilink("user") # superseder = Multilink("issue") issue = IssueClass(db, "issue", assignedto=Link("user"), keyword=Multilink("keyword"), priority=Link("priority"), status=Link("status")) # # TRACKER SECURITY SETTINGS # # See the configuration and customisation document for information # about security setup. # # REGULAR USERS # # Give the regular users access to the web and email interface db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Web Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Email Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Rest Access') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Xmlrpc Access') # Assign the access and edit Permissions for issue, file and message # to regular users now for cl in 'issue', 'file', 'msg', 'keyword': db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'View', cl) db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Edit', cl) db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'Create', cl) for cl in 'priority', 'status': db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', 'View', cl) # May users view other user information? Comment these lines out # if you don't want them to p = db.security.addPermission(name='View', klass='user', properties=('id', 'organisation', 'phone', 'realname', 'timezone', 'username')) db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) # Users should be able to edit their own details -- this permission is # limited to only the situation where the Viewed or Edited item is their own. def own_record(db, userid, itemid): '''Determine whether the userid matches the item being accessed.''' return userid == itemid p = db.security.addPermission(name='View', klass='user', check=own_record, description="User is allowed to view their own user details") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Edit', klass='user', check=own_record, properties=('username', 'password', 'address', 'realname', 'phone', 'organisation', 'alternate_addresses', 'queries', 'timezone'), description="User is allowed to edit their own user details") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) # Users should be able to edit and view their own queries. They should also # be able to view any marked as not private. They should not be able to # edit others' queries, even if they're not private def view_query(db, userid, itemid): private_for = db.query.get(itemid, 'private_for') if not private_for: return True return userid == private_for def edit_query(db, userid, itemid): return userid == db.query.get(itemid, 'creator') p = db.security.addPermission(name='View', klass='query', check=view_query, description="User is allowed to view their own and public queries") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Search', klass='query') db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Edit', klass='query', check=edit_query, description="User is allowed to edit their queries") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Retire', klass='query', check=edit_query, description="User is allowed to retire their queries") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Restore', klass='query', check=edit_query, description="User is allowed to restore their queries") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) p = db.security.addPermission(name='Create', klass='query', description="User is allowed to create queries") db.security.addPermissionToRole('User', p) # # ANONYMOUS USER PERMISSIONS # # Let anonymous users access the web interface. Note that almost all # trackers will need this Permission. The only situation where it's not # required is in a tracker that uses an HTTP Basic Authenticated front-end. db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Web Access') # Let anonymous users access the email interface (note that this implies # that they will be registered automatically, hence they will need the # "Create" user Permission below) # This is disabled by default to stop spam from auto-registering users on # public trackers. #db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Email Access') # Assign the appropriate permissions to the anonymous user's Anonymous # Role. Choices here are: # - Allow anonymous users to register db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Register', 'user') # Allow anonymous users access to view issues (and the related, linked # information) for cl in 'issue', 'file', 'msg', 'keyword', 'priority', 'status': db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'View', cl) # Allow the anonymous user to use the "Show Unassigned" search. # It acts like "Show Open" if this permission is not available. # If you are running a tracker that does not allow read access for # anonymous, you should remove this entry as it can be used to perform # a username guessing attack against a roundup install. p = db.security.addPermission(name='Search', klass='user') db.security.addPermissionToRole ('Anonymous', p) # [OPTIONAL] # Allow anonymous users access to create or edit "issue" items (and the # related file and message items) #for cl in 'issue', 'file', 'msg': # db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Create', cl) # db.security.addPermissionToRole('Anonymous', 'Edit', cl) # vim: set filetype=python sts=4 sw=4 et si :
