# -*- Mode: perl; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*- # # The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public # License Version 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file # except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of # the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ # # Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS # IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or # implied. See the License for the specific language governing # rights and limitations under the License. # # The Original Code is the Bugzilla Bug Tracking System. # # The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Netscape Communications # Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are # Copyright (C) 1998 Netscape Communications Corporation. All # Rights Reserved. # # Contributor(s): Terry Weissman # Dawn Endico # Dan Mosedale # Joe Robins # Jake # J. Paul Reed # Bradley Baetz # Christopher Aillon package Bugzilla::Config; use strict; use base qw(Exporter); use Bugzilla::Util; # Under mod_perl, get this from a .htaccess config variable, # and/or default from the current 'real' dir # At some stage after this, it may be possible for these dir locations # to go into localconfig. localconfig can't be specified in a config file, # except possibly with mod_perl. If you move localconfig, you need to change # the define here. # $libpath is really only for mod_perl; its not yet possible to move the # .pms elsewhere. # $webdotdir must be in the webtree somewhere. Even if you use a local dot, # we output images to there. Also, if $webdot dir is not relative to the # bugzilla root directory, you'll need to change showdependancygraph.cgi to # set image_url to the correct location. # The script should really generate these graphs directly... # Note that if $libpath is changed, some stuff will break, notably dependancy # graphs (since the path will be wrong in the HTML). This will be fixed at # some point. our $libpath = '.'; our $localconfig = "$libpath/localconfig"; our $datadir = "$libpath/data"; our $templatedir = "$libpath/template"; our $webdotdir = "$datadir/webdot"; # Module stuff @Bugzilla::Config::EXPORT = qw(Param); # Don't export localvars by default - people should have to explicitly # ask for it, as a (probably futile) attempt to stop code using it # when it shouldn't # ChmodDataFile is here until that stuff all moves out of globals.pl # into this file @Bugzilla::Config::EXPORT_OK = qw(ChmodDataFile); %Bugzilla::Config::EXPORT_TAGS = ( admin => [qw(GetParamList UpdateParams SetParam WriteParams)], db => [qw($db_host $db_port $db_name $db_user $db_pass $db_sock)], locations => [qw($libpath $localconfig $datadir $templatedir $webdotdir)], ); Exporter::export_ok_tags('admin', 'db', 'locations'); # Bugzilla version $Bugzilla::Config::VERSION = "2.18rc1"; use Safe; use vars qw(@param_list); # Data::Dumper is required as needed, below. The problem is that then when # the code locally sets $Data::Dumper::Foo, this triggers 'used only once' # warnings. # We can't predeclare another package's vars, though, so just use them { local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys; local $Data::Dumper::Terse; local $Data::Dumper::Indent; } my %param; # INITIALISATION CODE # XXX - mod_perl - need to register Apache init handler for params sub _load_datafiles { # read in localconfig variables do $localconfig; if (-e "$datadir/params") { # Handle reading old param files by munging the symbol table # Don't have to do this if we use safe mode, since its evaled # in a sandbox where $foo is in the same module as $::foo #local *::param = \%param; # Note that checksetup.pl sets file permissions on '$datadir/params' # Using Safe mode is _not_ a guarantee of safety if someone does # manage to write to the file. However, it won't hurt... # See bug 165144 for not needing to eval this at all my $s = new Safe; $s->rdo("$datadir/params"); die "Error reading $datadir/params: $!" if $!; die "Error evaluating $datadir/params: $@" if $@; # Now read the param back out from the sandbox %param = %{$s->varglob('param')}; } } # Load in the datafiles _load_datafiles(); # Load in the param defintions unless (my $ret = do 'defparams.pl') { die "Couldn't parse defparams.pl: $@" if $@; die "Couldn't do defparams.pl: $!" unless defined $ret; die "Couldn't run defparams.pl" unless $ret; } # Stick the params into a hash my %params; foreach my $item (@param_list) { $params{$item->{'name'}} = $item; } # END INIT CODE # Subroutines go here sub Param { my ($param) = @_; # By this stage, the param must be in the hash die "Can't find param named $param" unless (exists $params{$param}); # When module startup code runs (which is does even via -c, when using # |use|), we may try to grab params which don't exist yet. This affects # tests, so have this as a fallback for the -c case return $params{$param}->{default} if ($^C && not exists $param{$param}); # If we have a value for the param, return it return $param{$param} if exists $param{$param}; # Else error out die "No value for param $param (try running checksetup.pl again)"; } sub GetParamList { return @param_list; } sub SetParam { my ($name, $value) = @_; die "Unknown param $name" unless (exists $params{$name}); my $entry = $params{$name}; # sanity check the value # XXX - This runs the checks. Which would be good, except that # check_shadowdb creates the database as a sideeffect, and so the # checker fails the second time arround... if ($name ne 'shadowdb' && exists $entry->{'checker'}) { my $err = $entry->{'checker'}->($value, $entry); die "Param $name is not valid: $err" unless $err eq ''; } $param{$name} = $value; } sub UpdateParams { # --- PARAM CONVERSION CODE --- # Note that this isn't particuarly 'clean' in terms of separating # the backend code (ie this) from the actual params. # We don't care about that, though # Old bugzilla versions stored the version number in the params file # We don't want it, so get rid of it delete $param{'version'}; # Change from a boolean for quips to multi-state if (exists $param{'usequip'} && !exists $param{'enablequips'}) { $param{'enablequips'} = $param{'usequip'} ? 'on' : 'off'; delete $param{'usequip'}; } # Change from old product groups to controls for group_control_map # 2002-10-14 bug 147275 bugreport@peshkin.net if (exists $param{'usebuggroups'} && !exists $param{'makeproductgroups'}) { $param{'makeproductgroups'} = $param{'usebuggroups'}; } if (exists $param{'usebuggroupsentry'} && !exists $param{'useentrygroupdefault'}) { $param{'useentrygroupdefault'} = $param{'usebuggroupsentry'}; } # Modularise auth code if (exists $param{'useLDAP'} && !exists $param{'loginmethod'}) { $param{'loginmethod'} = $param{'useLDAP'} ? "LDAP" : "DB"; } # --- DEFAULTS FOR NEW PARAMS --- foreach my $item (@param_list) { my $name = $item->{'name'}; $param{$name} = $item->{'default'} unless exists $param{$name}; } # --- REMOVE OLD PARAMS --- my @oldparams = (); # Remove any old params foreach my $item (keys %param) { if (!grep($_ eq $item, map ($_->{'name'}, @param_list))) { require Data::Dumper; local $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1; local $Data::Dumper::Indent = 0; push (@oldparams, [$item, Data::Dumper->Dump([$param{$item}])]); delete $param{$item}; } } return @oldparams; } sub WriteParams { require Data::Dumper; # This only has an affect for Data::Dumper >= 2.12 (ie perl >= 5.8.0) # Its just cosmetic, though, so that doesn't matter local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1; require File::Temp; my ($fh, $tmpname) = File::Temp::tempfile('params.XXXXX', DIR => $datadir ); print $fh (Data::Dumper->Dump([ \%param ], [ '*param' ])) || die "Can't write param file: $!"; close $fh; rename $tmpname, "$datadir/params" || die "Can't rename $tmpname to $datadir/params: $!"; ChmodDataFile("$datadir/params", 0666); } # Some files in the data directory must be world readable iff we don't have # a webserver group. Call this function to do this. # This will become a private function once all the datafile handling stuff # moves into this package # This sub is not perldoc'd for that reason - noone should know about it sub ChmodDataFile { my ($file, $mask) = @_; my $perm = 0770; if ((stat($datadir))[2] & 0002) { $perm = 0777; } $perm = $perm & $mask; chmod $perm,$file; } sub check_multi { my ($value, $param) = (@_); if ($param->{'type'} eq "s") { unless (lsearch($param->{'choices'}, $value) >= 0) { return "Invalid choice '$value' for single-select list param '$param'"; } return ""; } elsif ($param->{'type'} eq "m") { foreach my $chkParam (@$value) { unless (lsearch($param->{'choices'}, $chkParam) >= 0) { return "Invalid choice '$chkParam' for multi-select list param '$param'"; } } return ""; } else { return "Invalid param type '$param->{'type'}' for check_multi(); " . "contact your Bugzilla administrator"; } } sub check_numeric { my ($value) = (@_); if ($value !~ /^[0-9]+$/) { return "must be a numeric value"; } return ""; } sub check_regexp { my ($value) = (@_); eval { qr/$value/ }; return $@; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Bugzilla::Config - Configuration parameters for Bugzilla =head1 SYNOPSIS # Getting parameters use Bugzilla::Config; my $fooSetting = Param('foo'); # Administration functions use Bugzilla::Config qw(:admin); my @valid_params = GetParamList(); my @removed_params = UpgradeParams(); SetParam($param, $value); WriteParams(); # Localconfig variables may also be imported use Bugzilla::Config qw(:db); print "Connecting to $db_name as $db_user with $db_pass\n"; =head1 DESCRIPTION This package contains ways to access Bugzilla configuration parameters. =head1 FUNCTIONS =head2 Parameters Parameters can be set, retrieved, and updated. =over 4 =item C Returns the Param with the specified name. Either a string, or, in the case of multiple-choice parameters, an array reference. =item C Returns the list of known parameter types, from defparams.pl. Users should not rely on this method; it is intended for editparams/doeditparams only The format for the list is specified in defparams.pl =item C Sets the param named $name to $value. Values are checked using the checker function for the given param if one exists. =item C Updates the parameters, by transitioning old params to new formats, setting defaults for new params, and removing obsolete ones. Any removed params are returned in a list, with elements [$item, $oldvalue] where $item is the entry in the param list. =item C Writes the parameters to disk. =back =head2 Parameter checking functions All parameter checking functions are called with two parameters: =over 4 =item * The new value for the parameter =item * A reference to the entry in the param list for this parameter =back Functions should return error text, or the empty string if there was no error. =over 4 =item C Checks that a multi-valued parameter (ie type C or type C) satisfies its contraints. =item C Checks that the value is a valid number =item C Checks that the value is a valid regexp =back