view roundup/backends/sessions_dbm.py @ 8540:e8d1da6e3571

bug: fix traceback in roundup-admin init with bad config values initialize accepts setting values for config.ini file settings. If they are not valid, you got a python traceback. ConfigurationError exceptions are now trapped. The admin.py's usageError_feedback method is used to inform the user. Also the feedback message now starts with a newline making it easier to read by separating it from command that caused the issue.
author John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org>
date Mon, 23 Mar 2026 13:18:41 -0400
parents e331be9bc473
children
line wrap: on
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"""This module defines a very basic store that's used by the CGI interface
to store session and one-time-key information.

Yes, it's called "sessions" - because originally it only defined a session
class. It's now also used for One Time Key handling too.
"""
__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext'

import marshal, os, random, time

from roundup.anypy.html import html_escape as escape

from roundup import hyperdb
from roundup.i18n import _
from roundup.anypy.dbm_ import anydbm, whichdb
from roundup.backends.sessions_common import SessionCommon


class BasicDatabase(SessionCommon):
    ''' Provide a nice encapsulation of an anydbm store.

        Keys are id strings, values are automatically marshalled data.
    '''
    _db_type = None
    name = None

    def __init__(self, db):
        self.config = db.config
        self.dir = db.config.DATABASE
        os.umask(db.config.UMASK)

    def exists(self, infoid):
        db = self.opendb('c')
        try:
            return infoid in db
        finally:
            db.close()

    def clear(self):
        path = os.path.join(self.dir, self.name)
        if os.path.exists(path):
            os.remove(path)
        elif os.path.exists(path+'.db'):    # dbm appends .db
            os.remove(path+'.db')
        elif os.path.exists(path+".dir"):  # dumb dbm
            os.remove(path+".dir")
            os.remove(path+".dat")

        #self._db_type = None

    def cache_db_type(self, path):
        ''' determine which DB wrote the class file, and cache it as an
            attribute of __class__ (to allow for subclassed DBs to be
            different sorts)
        '''
        db_type = ''
        if os.path.exists(path):
            db_type = whichdb(path)
            if not db_type:
                raise hyperdb.DatabaseError(
                    _("Couldn't identify database type"))
        elif os.path.exists(path+'.db'):
            # if the path ends in '.db', it's a dbm database, whether
            # anydbm says it's dbhash or not!
            db_type = 'dbm'
        self.__class__._db_type = db_type

    _marker = []

    def get(self, infoid, value, default=_marker):
        db = self.opendb('c')
        try:
            if infoid in db:
                values = marshal.loads(db[infoid])
            else:
                if default != self._marker:
                    return default
                raise KeyError('No such %s "%s"' % (self.name, escape(infoid)))
            return values.get(value, None)
        finally:
            db.close()

    def getall(self, infoid):
        db = self.opendb('c')
        try:
            try:
                d = marshal.loads(db[infoid])
                del d['__timestamp']
                return d
            except KeyError:
                raise KeyError('No such %s "%s"' % (self.name, escape(infoid)))
        finally:
            db.close()

    def set(self, infoid, **newvalues):
        db = self.opendb('c')
        timestamp = None
        try:
            if infoid in db:
                values = marshal.loads(db[infoid])
                try:
                    timestamp = values['__timestamp']
                except KeyError:
                    pass  # stay at None
            else:
                values = {}

            if '__timestamp' in newvalues:
                try:
                    float(newvalues['__timestamp'])
                except ValueError:
                    # keep original timestamp if present
                    newvalues['__timestamp'] = timestamp or time.time()
            else:
                newvalues['__timestamp'] = time.time()

            values.update(newvalues)
            db[infoid] = marshal.dumps(values)
        finally:
            db.close()

    def list(self):
        db = self.opendb('r')
        try:
            return list(db.keys())
        finally:
            db.close()

    def destroy(self, infoid):
        db = self.opendb('c')
        try:
            if infoid in db:
                del db[infoid]
        finally:
            db.close()

    def opendb(self, mode):
        '''Low-level database opener that gets around anydbm/dbm
           eccentricities.
        '''
        # figure the class db type
        path = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), self.dir, self.name)
        if self._db_type is None:
            self.cache_db_type(path)

        db_type = self._db_type

        # new database? let anydbm pick the best dbm
        if not db_type:
            db = anydbm.open(path, 'c')
            #self.cache_db_type(path)
            return db

        # open the database with the correct module
        dbm = __import__(db_type)

        retries_left = 15
        while True:
            try:
                handle = dbm.open(path, mode)
                break
            except OSError as e:
                # Primarily we want to catch and retry:
                #   [Errno 11] Resource temporarily unavailable retry
                # FIXME: make this more specific
                if retries_left < 10:
                    self.log_warning(
                        'dbm.open failed on ...%s, retry %s left: %s, %s' %
                        (path[-15:], 15-retries_left, retries_left, e))
                if retries_left < 0:
                    # We have used up the retries. Reraise the exception
                    # that got us here.
                    raise
                else:
                    # stagger retry to try to get around thundering herd issue.
                    time.sleep(random.randint(0, 25)*.005)
                    retries_left = retries_left - 1
                    continue  # the while loop
        return handle

    def commit(self):
        pass

    def lifetime(self, key_lifetime=0):
        """Return the proper timestamp for a key with key_lifetime specified
           in seconds. Default lifetime is 0.
        """
        now = time.time()
        week = 60*60*24*7
        return now - week + key_lifetime

    def close(self):
        pass

    def updateTimestamp(self, sessid):
        ''' don't update every hit - once a minute should be OK '''
        sess = self.get(sessid, '__timestamp', None)
        now = time.time()
        if sess is None or now > sess + 60:
            self.set(sessid, __timestamp=now)

    def clean(self):
        ''' Remove session records that haven't been used for a week. '''
        ''' Note: deletion of old keys must be completed when this method
            returns. Calling code must not have any expired keys present
            after this returns or expired keys could be used to validate
            a user. This can mean a long delay when expiring but ....'''
        now = time.time()
        week = 60*60*24*7
        a_week_ago = now - week
        for sessid in self.list():
            sess = self.get(sessid, '__timestamp', None)
            if sess is None:
                self.updateTimestamp(sessid)
                continue
            if a_week_ago > sess:
                self.destroy(sessid)

        run_time = time.time() - now
        if run_time > 3:
            self.log_warning("clean() took %.2fs", run_time)

class Sessions(BasicDatabase):
    name = 'sessions'


class OneTimeKeys(BasicDatabase):
    name = 'otks'

# vim: set sts ts=4 sw=4 et si :

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