diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'FS/FS/part_virtual_field.pm')
-rwxr-xr-x | FS/FS/part_virtual_field.pm | 300 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 300 deletions
diff --git a/FS/FS/part_virtual_field.pm b/FS/FS/part_virtual_field.pm deleted file mode 100755 index 992d449..0000000 --- a/FS/FS/part_virtual_field.pm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,300 +0,0 @@ -package FS::part_virtual_field; - -use strict; -use vars qw( @ISA ); -use FS::Record qw( qsearchs qsearch ); -use FS::Schema qw( dbdef ); - -@ISA = qw( FS::Record ); - -=head1 NAME - -FS::part_virtual_field - Object methods for part_virtual_field records - -=head1 SYNOPSIS - - use FS::part_virtual_field; - - $record = new FS::part_virtual_field \%hash; - $record = new FS::part_virtual_field { 'column' => 'value' }; - - $error = $record->insert; - - $error = $new_record->replace($old_record); - - $error = $record->delete; - - $error = $record->check; - -=head1 DESCRIPTION - -An FS::part_virtual_field object represents the definition of a virtual field -(see the BACKGROUND section). FS::part_virtual_field contains the name and -base table of the field, as well as validation rules and UI hints about the -display of the field. The actual data is stored in FS::virtual_field; see -its manpage for details. - -FS::part_virtual_field inherits from FS::Record. The following fields are -currently supported: - -=over 2 - -=item vfieldpart - primary key (assigned automatically) - -=item name - name of the field - -=item dbtable - table for which this virtual field is defined - -=item check_block - Perl code to validate/normalize data - -=item list_source - Perl code to generate a list of values (UI hint) - -=item length - expected length of the value (UI hint) - -=item label - descriptive label for the field (UI hint) - -=item sequence - sort key (UI hint; unimplemented) - -=back - -=head1 BACKGROUND - -"Form is none other than emptiness, - and emptiness is none other than form." --- Heart Sutra - -The virtual field mechanism allows site admins to make trivial changes to -the Freeside database schema without modifying the code. Specifically, the -user can add custom-defined 'fields' to the set of data tracked by Freeside -about objects such as customers and services. These fields are not associated -with any logic in the core Freeside system, but may be referenced in peripheral -code such as exports, price calculations, or alternate interfaces, or may just -be stored in the database for future reference. - -This system was originally devised for svc_broadband, which (by necessity) -comprises such a wide range of access technologies that no static set of fields -could contain all the information needed by the exports. In an appalling -display of False Laziness, a parallel mechanism was implemented for the -router table, to store properties such as passwords to configure routers. - -The original system treated svc_broadband custom fields (sb_fields) as records -in a completely separate table. Any code that accessed or manipulated these -fields had to be aware that they were I<not> fields in svc_broadband, but -records in sb_field. For example, code that inserted a svc_broadband with -several custom fields had to create an FS::svc_broadband object, call its -insert() method, and then create several FS::sb_field objects and call I<their> -insert() methods. - -This created a problem for exports. The insert method on any FS::svc_Common -object (including svc_broadband) automatically triggers exports after the -record has been inserted. However, at this point, the sb_fields had not yet -been inserted, so the export could not rely on their presence, which was the -original purpose of sb_fields. - -Hence the new system. Virtual fields are appended to the field list of every -record at the FS::Record level, whether the object is created ex nihilo with -new() or fetched with qsearch(). The fields() method now returns a list of -both real and virtual fields. The insert(), replace(), and delete() methods -now update both the base table and the virtual fields, in a single transaction. - -A new method is provided, virtual_fields(), which gives only the virtual -fields. UI code that dynamically generates form widgets to edit virtual field -data should use this to figure out what fields are defined. (See below.) - -Subclasses may override virtual_fields() to restrict the set of virtual -fields available. Some discipline and sanity on the part of the programmer -are required; in particular, this function should probably not depend on any -fields in the record other than the primary key, since the others may change -after the object is instantiated. (Making it depend on I<virtual> fields is -just asking for pain.) One use of this is seen in FS::svc_Common; another -possibility is field-level access control based on FS::UID::getotaker(). - -As a trivial case, a subclass may opt out of supporting virtual fields with -the following code: - -sub virtual_fields { () } - -=head1 METHODS - -=over 4 - -=item new HASHREF - -Create a new record. To add the record to the database, see "insert". - -=cut - -sub table { 'part_virtual_field'; } -sub virtual_fields { () } - -=item insert - -Adds this record to the database. If there is an error, returns the error, -otherwise returns false. - -=item delete - -Deletes this record from the database. If there is an error, returns the -error, otherwise returns false. - -=item replace OLD_RECORD - -Replaces OLD_RECORD with this one in the database. If there is an error, -returns the error, otherwise returns false. - -=item check - -If there is an error, returns the error, otherwise returns false. -Called by the insert and replace methods. - -=back - -=cut - -sub check { - my $self = shift; - - my $error = $self->ut_text('name') || - $self->ut_text('dbtable') || - $self->ut_number('length') - ; - return $error if $error; - - # Make sure it's a real table with a numeric primary key - my ($table, $pkey); - if($table = dbdef->table($self->dbtable)) { - if($pkey = $table->primary_key) { - if($table->column($pkey)->type =~ /int/i) { - # this is what it should be - } else { - $error = "$table.$pkey is not an integer"; - } - } else { - $error = "$table does not have a single-field primary key"; - } - } else { - $error = "$table does not exist in the schema"; - } - return $error if $error; - - # Possibly some sanity checks for check_block and list_source? - - $self->SUPER::check; -} - -=item list - -Evaluates list_source. - -=cut - -sub list { - my $self = shift; - return () unless $self->list_source; - - my @opts = eval($self->list_source); - if($@) { - warn $@; - return (); - } else { - return @opts; - } -} - -=item widget UI_TYPE MODE [ VALUE ] - -Generates UI code for a widget suitable for editing/viewing the field, based on -list_source and length. - -The only UI_TYPE currently supported is 'HTML', and the only MODE is 'view'. -Others will be added later. - -In HTML, all widgets are assumed to be table rows. View widgets look like -<TR><TD ALIGN="right">Label</TD><TD BGCOLOR="#ffffff">Value</TD></TR> - -(Most of the display style stuff, such as the colors, should probably go into -a separate module specific to the UI. That can wait, though. The API for -this function won't change.) - -VALUE (optional) is the current value of the field. - -=cut - -sub widget { - my $self = shift; - my ($ui_type, $mode, $value) = @_; - my $text; - my $label = $self->label || $self->name; - - if ($ui_type eq 'HTML') { - if ($mode eq 'view') { - $text = q!<TR><TD ALIGN="right">! . $label . - q!</TD><TD BGCOLOR="#ffffff">! . $value . - q!</TD></TR>! . "\n"; - } elsif ($mode eq 'edit') { - $text = q!<TR><TD ALIGN="right">! . $label . - q!</TD><TD>!; - if ($self->list_source) { - $text .= q!<SELECT NAME="! . $self->name . - q!" SIZE=1>! . "\n"; - foreach ($self->list) { - $text .= q!<OPTION VALUE="! . $_ . q!"!; - $text .= ' SELECTED' if ($_ eq $value); - $text .= '>' . $_ . '</OPTION>' . "\n"; - } - } else { - $text .= q!<INPUT NAME="! . $self->name . - q!" VALUE="! . $value . q!"!; - if ($self->length) { - $text .= q! SIZE="! . $self->length . q!"!; - } - $text .= '>'; - } - $text .= q!</TD></TR>! . "\n"; - } else { - return ''; - } - } else { - return ''; - } - return $text; -} - -=head1 NOTES - -=head2 Semantics of check_block: - -This has been changed from the sb_field implementation to make check_blocks -simpler and more natural to Perl programmers who work on things other than -Freeside. - -The check_block is eval'd with the (proposed) new value of the field in $_, -and the object to be updated in $self. Its return value is ignored. The -check_block may change the value of $_ to override the proposed value, or -call die() (with an appropriate error message) to reject the update entirely; -the error string will be returned as the output of the check() method. - -This makes check_blocks like - -C<s/foo/bar/> - -do what you expect. - -The check_block is expected NOT to do anything freaky to $self, like modifying -other fields or calling $self->check(). You have been warned. - -(FIXME: Rewrite some of the warnings from part_sb_field and insert here.) - -=head1 BUGS - -None. It's absolutely falwless. - -=head1 SEE ALSO - -L<FS::Record>, L<FS::virtual_field> - -=cut - -1; - - |