Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view doc/tracker_templates.txt @ 8408:e882a5d52ae5
refactor: move RateLimitExceeded to roundup.cgi.exceptions
RateLimitExceeded is an HTTP exception that raises code 429. Move it
to roundup.cgi.exceptions where all the other exceptions that result
in http status codes are located. Also make it inherit from
HTTPException since it is one.
Also add docstrings for all HTTP exceptions and order HTTPExceptions
by status code.
BREAKING CHANGE: if somebody is importing RateLimitExceeded they will
need to change their import. I consider it unlikely anybody is using
RateLimitExceeded. Detectors and extensions are unlikely to raise
RateLimitExceeded. So I am leaving it out of the upgrading doc. Just
doc in change log.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 10 Aug 2025 21:27:06 -0400 |
| parents | 3614cd64f4c4 |
| children |
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========================= Roundup Tracker Templates ========================= The templates distributed with Roundup are stored in the "share" directory nominated by Python. On Unix this is typically ``/usr/share/roundup/templates/`` (or ``/usr/local/share...``) and on Windows this is ``c:\python38\share\roundup\templates\``. The template loading looks in four places to find the templates: 1. *share* - eg. ``<prefix>/share/roundup/templates/*``. This should be the standard place to find them when Roundup is installed running setup.py from source. 2. ``install_dir``/../<prefix>/share/....``, where prefix is the Python's ``sys.prefix``. ``sys.base_prefix`` or `sys.base_prefix/local``. This finds templates (and locales) installed by pip. E.G. in a virtualenv located at (``sys.prefix``): ``/tools/roundup``, roundup would be at: ``/tools/roundup/lib/python3.7/site-packages/roundup``. The templates would be at: ``/tools/roundup/lib/python3.7/site-packages/tools/roundup/share/roundup/templates/``. (Replace 3.7 with the Python version you are running.) 3. ``<roundup.admin.__file__>/../../share/roundup/templates/*``. This will be used if Roundup's run in the distro (aka. source) directory. 4. ``<current working dir>/*``. This is for when someone unpacks a 3rd-party template. 5. ``<current working dir>``. This is for someone who "cd"s to the 3rd-party template dir. Templates contain: - modules ``schema.py`` and ``initial_data.py`` - directories ``html``, ``detectors`` and ``extensions`` (with appropriate contents) - optional directory ``lib`` which contains modules used by the other tracker components - optional ``config_ini.ini`` file. It is structured like a tracker's ``config.ini`` but contains only headers (e.g. ``[main]``) and *required* parameters that are different from defaults. For example:: [main] template_engine = jinja2 static_files = static These settings override the default values in the tracker's ``config.ini`` when using roundup-admin to install a template. - template "marker" file ``TEMPLATE-INFO.txt``, which contains the name of the template, a description of the template and its intended audience. An example TEMPLATE-INFO.txt: .. code-block:: text Name: classic Description: This is a generic issue tracker that may be used to track bugs, feature requests, project issues or any number of other types of issues. Most users of Roundup will find that this template suits them, with perhaps a few customisations. Intended-For: All first-time Roundup users
