# -*- 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. # # Contributor(s): Max Kanat-Alexander # Marc Schumann package Bugzilla::Install::Requirements; # NOTE: This package MUST NOT "use" any Bugzilla modules other than # Bugzilla::Constants, anywhere. We may "use" standard perl modules. # # Subroutines may "require" and "import" from modules, but they # MUST NOT "use." use strict; use List::Util qw(max); use POSIX (); use Safe; use base qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT = qw( REQUIRED_MODULES OPTIONAL_MODULES check_requirements check_graphviz display_version_and_os have_vers vers_cmp install_command ); use Bugzilla::Constants; # The below two constants are subroutines so that they can implement # a hook. Other than that they are actually constants. # "package" is the perl package we're checking for. "module" is the name # of the actual module we load with "require" to see if the package is # installed or not. "version" is the version we need, or 0 if we'll accept # any version. sub REQUIRED_MODULES { my @modules = ( { package => 'CGI', module => 'CGI', version => '2.93' }, { package => 'TimeDate', module => 'Date::Format', version => '2.21' }, { package => 'DBI', module => 'DBI', version => '1.41' }, { package => 'PathTools', module => 'File::Spec', version => '0.84' }, { package => 'Template-Toolkit', module => 'Template', version => '2.12' }, { package => 'MailTools', module => 'Mail::Mailer', version => '1.67' }, { package => 'MIME-Base64', module => 'MIME::Base64', version => '3.01' }, { package => 'MIME-tools', # MIME::Parser is packaged as MIME::Tools on ActiveState Perl module => ON_WINDOWS ? 'MIME::Tools' : 'MIME::Parser', version => '5.406' }, ); my $all_modules = _get_extension_requirements( 'REQUIRED_MODULES', \@modules); return $all_modules; }; sub OPTIONAL_MODULES { my @modules = ( { package => 'GD', module => 'GD', version => '1.20', feature => 'Graphical Reports, New Charts, Old Charts' }, { package => 'Template-GD', # This module tells us whether or not Template-GD is installed # on Template-Toolkits after 2.14, and still works with 2.14 and lower. module => 'Template::Plugin::GD::Image', version => 0, feature => 'Graphical Reports' }, { package => 'Chart', module => 'Chart::Base', version => '1.0', feature => 'New Charts, Old Charts' }, { package => 'GDGraph', module => 'GD::Graph', version => 0, feature => 'Graphical Reports' }, { package => 'GDTextUtil', module => 'GD::Text', version => 0, feature => 'Graphical Reports' }, { package => 'XML-Twig', module => 'XML::Twig', version => 0, feature => 'Move Bugs Between Installations' }, { package => 'libwww-perl', module => 'LWP::UserAgent', version => 0, feature => 'Automatic Update Notifications' }, { package => 'PatchReader', module => 'PatchReader', version => '0.9.4', feature => 'Patch Viewer' }, { package => 'PerlMagick', module => 'Image::Magick', version => 0, feature => 'Optionally Convert BMP Attachments to PNGs' }, { package => 'perl-ldap', module => 'Net::LDAP', version => 0, feature => 'LDAP Authentication' }, { package => 'SOAP-Lite', module => 'SOAP::Lite', version => 0, feature => 'XML-RPC Interface' }, { # We need the 'utf8_mode' method of HTML::Parser, for HTML::Scrubber. package => 'HTML-Parser', module => 'HTML::Parser', version => '3.40', feature => 'More HTML in Product/Group Descriptions' }, { package => 'HTML-Scrubber', module => 'HTML::Scrubber', version => 0, feature => 'More HTML in Product/Group Descriptions' }, # Inbound Email { # Attachment::Stripper requires this, but doesn't pull it in # when you install it from CPAN. package => 'MIME-Types', module => 'MIME::Types', version => 0, feature => 'Inbound Email', }, { # Email::MIME::Attachment::Stripper can throw an error with # earlier versions. # This also pulls in Email::MIME and Email::Address for us. package => 'Email-MIME-Modifier', module => 'Email::MIME::Modifier', version => '1.43', feature => 'Inbound Email' }, { package => 'Email-MIME-Attachment-Stripper', module => 'Email::MIME::Attachment::Stripper', version => 0, feature => 'Inbound Email' }, { package => 'Email-Reply', module => 'Email::Reply', version => 0, feature => 'Inbound Email' }, # mod_perl { package => 'mod_perl', module => 'mod_perl2', version => '1.999022', feature => 'mod_perl' }, # Even very new releases of perl (5.8.5) don't come with this version, # so I didn't want to make it a general requirement just for # running under mod_cgi. { package => 'CGI', module => 'CGI', version => '3.11', feature => 'mod_perl' }, { package => 'Apache-DBI', module => 'Apache::DBI', version => '0.96', feature => 'mod_perl' }, ); my $all_modules = _get_extension_requirements( 'OPTIONAL_MODULES', \@modules); return $all_modules; }; # This implements the install-requirements hook described in Bugzilla::Hook. sub _get_extension_requirements { my ($function, $base_modules) = @_; my @all_modules; # get a list of all extensions my @extensions = glob(bz_locations()->{'extensionsdir'} . "/*"); foreach my $extension (@extensions) { my $file = "$extension/code/install-requirements.pl"; if (-e $file) { my $safe = new Safe; # This is a very liberal Safe. $safe->permit(qw(:browse require entereval caller)); $safe->rdo($file); if ($@) { warn $@; next; } my $modules = eval { &{$safe->varglob($function)}($base_modules) }; next unless $modules; push(@all_modules, @$modules); } } unshift(@all_modules, @$base_modules); return \@all_modules; }; sub check_requirements { my ($output) = @_; print "\nChecking perl modules...\n" if $output; my $root = ROOT_USER; my %missing = _check_missing(REQUIRED_MODULES, $output); print "\nChecking available perl DBD modules...\n" if $output; my $have_one_dbd = 0; my $db_modules = DB_MODULE; foreach my $db (keys %$db_modules) { my %info = (module => $db_modules->{$db}->{dbd}, version => $db_modules->{$db}->{dbd_version}); $have_one_dbd = 1 if have_vers(\%info, $output); } print "\nThe following Perl modules are optional:\n" if $output; my %missing_optional = _check_missing(OPTIONAL_MODULES, $output); # If we're running on Windows, reset the input line terminator so that # console input works properly - loading CGI tends to mess it up $/ = "\015\012" if ON_WINDOWS; my $pass = !scalar(keys %missing) && $have_one_dbd; return { pass => $pass, one_dbd => $have_one_dbd, missing => \%missing, optional => \%missing_optional, any_missing => !$pass || scalar(keys %missing_optional), }; } # A helper for check_requirements sub _check_missing { my ($modules, $output) = @_; my %missing; foreach my $module (@$modules) { unless (have_vers($module, $output)) { $missing{$module->{package}} = $module; } } return %missing; } sub print_module_instructions { my ($check_results, $output) = @_; # We only print these notes if we have to. if ((!$output && %{$check_results->{missing}}) || ($output && $check_results->{any_missing})) { print "\n* NOTE: You must run any commands listed below as " . ROOT_USER . ".\n\n"; if (ON_WINDOWS) { print <{missing}}) { print <{one_dbd}) { print < $db_modules{$db}->{dbd}, package => $db_modules{$db}->{dbd} }); printf "%10s: \%s\n", $db_modules{$db}->{name}, $command; print ' ' x 12 . "Minimum version required: " . $db_modules{$db}->{dbd_version} . "\n"; } print "\n"; } return unless $output; if (my %missing = %{$check_results->{optional}}) { print <{feature} cmp $missing{$b}->{feature}} (keys %missing); # Now we have to determine how large the table cols will be. my $longest_name = max(map(length($_), @missing_names)); # The first column header is at least 11 characters long. $longest_name = 11 if $longest_name < 11; # The table is 71 characters long. There are seven mandatory # characters (* and space) in the string. So, we have a total # of 64 characters to work with. my $remaining_space = 64 - $longest_name; print '*' x 71 . "\n"; printf "* \%${longest_name}s * %-${remaining_space}s *\n", 'MODULE NAME', 'ENABLES FEATURE(S)'; print '*' x 71 . "\n"; foreach my $name (@missing_names) { printf "* \%${longest_name}s * %-${remaining_space}s *\n", $name, $missing{$name}->{feature}; } print '*' x 71 . "\n"; print "COMMANDS TO INSTALL:\n\n"; foreach my $module (@missing_names) { my $command = install_command($missing{$module}); printf "%15s: $command\n", $module; } } } sub check_graphviz { my ($output) = @_; return 1 if (Bugzilla->params->{'webdotbase'} =~ /^https?:/); printf("Checking for %15s %-9s ", "GraphViz", "(any)") if $output; my $return = 0; if(-x Bugzilla->params->{'webdotbase'}) { print "ok: found\n" if $output; $return = 1; } else { print "not a valid executable: " . Bugzilla->params->{'webdotbase'} . "\n"; } my $webdotdir = bz_locations()->{'webdotdir'}; # Check .htaccess allows access to generated images if (-e "$webdotdir/.htaccess") { my $htaccess = new IO::File("$webdotdir/.htaccess", 'r') || die "$webdotdir/.htaccess: " . $!; if (!grep(/png/, $htaccess->getlines)) { print "Dependency graph images are not accessible.\n"; print "delete $webdotdir/.htaccess and re-run checksetup.pl to fix.\n"; } $htaccess->close; } return $return; } sub display_version_and_os { # Display version information printf "\n* This is Bugzilla " . BUGZILLA_VERSION . " on perl %vd\n", $^V; my @os_details = POSIX::uname; # 0 is the name of the OS, 2 is the major version, my $os_name = $os_details[0] . ' ' . $os_details[2]; if (ON_WINDOWS) { require Win32; $os_name = Win32::GetOSName(); } # 3 is the minor version. print "* Running on $os_name $os_details[3]\n" } # This was originally clipped from the libnet Makefile.PL, adapted here to # use the below vers_cmp routine for accurate version checking. sub have_vers { my ($params, $output) = @_; my $module = $params->{module}; my $package = $params->{package}; if (!$package) { $package = $module; $package =~ s/::/-/g; } my $wanted = $params->{version}; my ($msg, $vnum, $vstr); no strict 'refs'; printf("Checking for %15s %-9s ", $package, !$wanted?'(any)':"(v$wanted)") if $output; eval "require $module;"; # VERSION is provided by UNIVERSAL:: $vnum = eval { $module->VERSION } || -1; # CGI's versioning scheme went 2.75, 2.751, 2.752, 2.753, 2.76 # That breaks the standard version tests, so we need to manually correct # the version if ($module eq 'CGI' && $vnum =~ /(2\.7\d)(\d+)/) { $vnum = $1 . "." . $2; } if ($vnum eq "-1") { # string compare just in case it's non-numeric $vstr = "not found"; } elsif (vers_cmp($vnum,"0") > -1) { $vstr = "found v$vnum"; } else { $vstr = "found unknown version"; } my $vok = (vers_cmp($vnum,$wanted) > -1); print ((($vok) ? "ok: " : " "), "$vstr\n") if $output; return $vok ? 1 : 0; } # This is taken straight from Sort::Versions 1.5, which is not included # with perl by default. sub vers_cmp { my ($a, $b) = @_; # Remove leading zeroes - Bug 344661 $a =~ s/^0*(\d.+)/$1/; $b =~ s/^0*(\d.+)/$1/; my @A = ($a =~ /([-.]|\d+|[^-.\d]+)/g); my @B = ($b =~ /([-.]|\d+|[^-.\d]+)/g); my ($A, $B); while (@A and @B) { $A = shift @A; $B = shift @B; if ($A eq '-' and $B eq '-') { next; } elsif ( $A eq '-' ) { return -1; } elsif ( $B eq '-') { return 1; } elsif ($A eq '.' and $B eq '.') { next; } elsif ( $A eq '.' ) { return -1; } elsif ( $B eq '.' ) { return 1; } elsif ($A =~ /^\d+$/ and $B =~ /^\d+$/) { if ($A =~ /^0/ || $B =~ /^0/) { return $A cmp $B if $A cmp $B; } else { return $A <=> $B if $A <=> $B; } } else { $A = uc $A; $B = uc $B; return $A cmp $B if $A cmp $B; } } @A <=> @B; } sub install_command { my $module = shift; my ($command, $package); if (ON_WINDOWS) { $command = 'ppm install %s'; $package = $module->{package}; } else { $command = "$^X -MCPAN -e 'install \%s'"; # Non-Windows installations need to use module names, because # CPAN doesn't understand package names. $package = $module->{module}; } return sprintf $command, $package; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Bugzilla::Install::Requirements - Functions and variables dealing with Bugzilla's perl-module requirements. =head1 DESCRIPTION This module is used primarily by C to determine whether or not all of Bugzilla's prerequisites are installed. (That is, all the perl modules it requires.) =head1 CONSTANTS =over 4 =item C An arrayref of hashrefs that describes the perl modules required by Bugzilla. The hashes have two keys, C and C, which represent the name of the module and the version that we require. =back =head1 SUBROUTINES =over 4 =item C Description: This checks what optional or required perl modules are installed, like C does. Params: C<$output> - C if you want the function to print out information about what it's doing, and the versions of everything installed. If you don't pass the minimum requirements, the will always print out something, regardless of this parameter. Returns: A hashref containing three values: C - Whether or not we have all the mandatory requirements. C - A hash showing which mandatory requirements are missing. The key is the module name, and the value is the version we require. C - Which optional modules are installed and up-to-date enough for Bugzilla. =item C Description: Checks if the graphviz binary specified in the C parameter is a valid binary, or a valid URL. Params: C<$output> - C<$true> if you want the function to print out information about what it's doing. Returns: C<1> if the check was successful, C<0> otherwise. =item C Description: This is a comparison function, like you would use in C, except that it compares two version numbers. It's actually identical to versioncmp from L. Params: c<$a> and C<$b> are versions you want to compare. Returns: -1 if $a is less than $b, 0 if they are equal, and 1 if $a is greater than $b. =item C Description: Tells you whether or not you have the appropriate version of the module requested. It also prints out a message to the user explaining the check and the result. Params: C<$module> - A hashref, in the format of an item from L. C<$output> - Set to true if you want this function to print information to STDOUT about what it's doing. Returns: C<1> if you have the module installed and you have the appropriate version. C<0> otherwise. =item C Description: Prints out the appropriate command to install the module specified, depending on whether you're on Windows or Linux. Params: C<$module> - A hashref, in the format of an item from L. Returns: nothing =back