ExternalEditor 0.7.2 README
Zope External Editor
The Zope External Editor is a new way to integrate Zope more seamlessly with client-side tools. It has the following features:
- Edit objects locally, directly from the ZMI.
- Works with any graphical editor application that can open a file from the command line, including: emacs, gvim, xemacs, nedit, gimp, etc.
- Automatically saves changes back to Zope without ending the editing session.
- Associate any client-side editor application with any Zope object by meta-type or content-type. Both text and binary object content can be edited.
- Locks objects while they are being edited. Automatically unlocks them when the editing session ends.
- Can add file extensions automatically to improve syntax highlighting or file type detection.
- Works with basic auth, cookie auth and Zope versions. Credentials are automatically passed down to the helper application. No need to reauthenticate.
- https support (Openssl required)
Using It
Use of the application is about as easy as using the ZMI once your browser is configured (see the installation instructions). To edit an object externally, just click on the pencil icon next to the object in the ZMI. The object will be downloaded and opened using the editor application you have chosen (you will be prompted the first time to choose an editor).
You edit the object just like any other file. When you save the changes in your editor, they are automatically uploaded back to Zope in the background. While the object is open in your editor, it is locked in Zope to prevent concurrent editing. When you end your editing session (ie you close your editor) the object is unlocked.
How it Works
Ok, so this all sounds a bit too good to be true, no? So how the heck does it work anyway? First I'll give you a block diagram:
+------------+ +------------+ +---------+ +------+ | Editor App | <-- | Helper App | <-- | Browser | <-/ /- | Zope | +------------+ +------------+ +---------+ +------+ ^ ^ ^ ^ \ / \ / v v -----------------------/ /---- ------- / Local \ \ File / -------
Now the key to getting this to work is solving the problem that the editor cannot know about Zope, and must only deal with local files. Also, there is no standard way to communication with editors, so the only communication channel can be the local file which contains the object's content or code.
It is trivial to get the browser to fire up your editor when you download a particular type of data with your browser. But that does you little good, since the browser no longer involves itself once the data is downloaded. It just creates a temp file and fires off the registered application, passing it the file path. Once the editor is running, it is only aware of the local file, and has no concept of where it originated from.
To solve this problem, I have developed a helper application whose job is essentially two-fold:
- Determine the correct editor to launch for a given Zope object
- Get the data back into Zope when the changes are saved
So, let's take a step by step look at how it works:
- You click on the external editor link (the pencil icon) in the Zope management interface.
- The product code on the server creates a response that encapsulates the necessary meta-data (URL, meta-type, content-type, cookies, etc) and the content of the Zope object, which can be text or binary data. The response has the contrived content-type "application/x-zope-edit".
- The browser receives the request, and finds our helper application registered for "application/x-zope-edit". It saves the response data locally to disk and spawns the helper app to process it.
- The helper app, reads its config file and the response data file. The meta-data from the file is parsed and the content is copied to a new temporary file. The appropriate editor program is determined based on the data file and the configuration (or alternately by asking the user).
- The editor is launched as a sub-process of the helper app, passing it the file containing the content data.
- If so configured, the helper app sends a WebDAV lock request back to Zope to lock the object.
- Every so often (if so configured), the helper app stats the content file to see if it has been changed. If so, it sends an HTTP PUT request back to Zope containing the new data.
- When the editor is closed, the content file is checked one more time and uploaded if it has changed. Then a WebDAV unlock request is sent to Zope.
- The helper application exits.
Configuration
The helper application supports several configuration options, each of which can be triggered in any combination of object meta-type, content-type or domain. This allows you to create appropriate behavior for different types of Zope objects and content or even different servers. The configuration file is stored in the file "~/.zope-external-edit" (Unix) or "~\ZopeEdit.ini" (Windows). If no configuration file is found when the helper application starts, a default config file is created in your home directory.
The configuration file follows the standard Python ConfigParser format, which is pretty much like the old .ini file format from windows. The file consists of sections and options in the following format:
[section 1] option1 = value option2 = value [section 2] ...
Options
The available options for all sections of the config file are:
- editor
- Command line or plugin name used to invoke the editor application. On Windows, if no editor setting is found for an object you edit, the helper app will search the file type registry for an appropriate editor based on the content-type or file extension of the object (which can be specified using the extension option below). By default, the file path of the local file being edited is appended to this command line. To insert the file path in the middle of your command, use "$1" for Unix and "%1" for Windows respectively.
- save_interval
- (float) The interval in seconds that the helper application checks the edited file for changes.
- use_locks
- (1 or 0) Whether to use WebDAV locking. The user editing must have the proper WebDAV related permissions for this to work.
- always_borrow_locks
- (1 or 0) When use_locks is enabled this features suppresses warnings when trying to edit an object you have already locked. When enabled, external editor will always "borrow" the existing lock token instead of doing the locking itself. This is useful when using CMFStaging for instance. If omitted, this option defaults to 0.
- cleanup_files
- (1 or 0) Whether to delete the temp files created. WARNING the temp file coming from the browser contains authentication information and therefore setting this to 0 is a security risk, especially on shared machines. If set to 1, that file is deleted at the earliest opportunity, before the editor is even spawned. Set to 0 for debugging only.
- extension
- (text) The file extension to add to the content file. Allows better handling of images and can improve syntax highlighting.
- temp_dir
- (path) Path to store local copies of object data being edited. Defaults to operating system temp directory.
Sections
The sections of the configuration file specify the types of objects and content that the options beneath them apply to.
There is only one mandatory section [general]
, which should define all
of the above options that do not have a default value. If no other
section defines an option for a given object, the general settings are
used.
Additional sections can apply to a particular domain, content-type or meta-type. Since objects can have all these properties, the options are applied in this order of precedence.
[content-type:text/html]
-- Options by whole content-type come first[content-type:text/*]
-- Options by major content-type come second.[meta-type:File]
-- Options by Zope meta-type are third.[domain:www.mydomain.com]
-- Options by domain follow. Several sections can be added for each domain level if desired.[general]
-- General options are last.
This scheme allows you to specify an extension by content-type, the editor by meta-type, the locking settings by domain and the remaining options under general for a given object.
Editor Plugins
For tighter client-side integration, external editor has a plugin system that allows it to interact directly with supported applications.
On Windows this generally means using COM to invoke the application, open the content file and wait for the user to save and close the file. Because each application has different remote scripting capabilities and APIs, editor specific plugins must be written tailored to each supported application and platform.
This system allows external editor to efficiently connect to running applications without relaunching them and therefore fully support MDI environments. The following applications currently have plugin support:
Application Platform Plugin Module Name(s) =================================================== HomeSite Windows homesite5, homesite Photoshop Windows photoshp, photoshop MS Word Windows winword, word MS Excel Windows excel MS Powerpoint Windows powerpnt, powerpoint
External editor will attempt to load a plugin for any application before using the general editor control method. It does this by matching the name of the application executable file (sans extension) in the editor command line with the available plugins.
Because plugins do not require the path of the editor application to work, you can simply specify the plugin module name for your editor in the configuration file if desired. For example, to specify Photoshop for all image files, use add the following section to your config file (ZopeEdit.ini on Windows):
[content-type:image/*] editor=photoshop
This is only a shortcut and specifying the full application path will still use the plugin where possible.
Plugin Notes
- Photoshop
- Photoshop's COM API is quite limited, and external editor cannot detect that you have closed a file until you exit the entire application (it can still detect saves). Therefore you may want to turn off DAV locking (use_locks=0) or borrow locks (always_borrow_locks=1) when using it.
If your favorite editor needs a plugin because the general support is not good enough, please let me know. Keep in mind that I must be able to run a copy of the application in order to develop a plugin for it. So, unless the application is free, or a full demo is available for download I won't be able to help much. Plugins are not difficult to write, and I encourage you to write one for your favorite editor, start by reading one of the existing ones. I am happy to include third-party plugins with the distribution.
Permissions
External editing is governed by the permission "Use external editor". Users with this permission can launch external editor from editable objects. In order to save changes, users will need additional permissions appropriate for the objects they are editing.
If users wish to use the built-in locking support, they must have the "WebDAV access", "WebDAV Lock items" and "WebDAV Unlock items" permissions for the objects they are editing.
If these permissions are not set in Zope, then the helper application will receive unauthorized errors from Zope which it will present to the user.
Integrating with External Editor
The external editor product in zope installs a globally available object that can format objects accessible through FTP/DAV for use by the helper application. You can take advantage of this functionality easily in your own content management applications.
Say you have an FTP editable object, "document", in a Zope folder named "my_stuff". The URL to view the object would be:
http://zopeserver/my_stuff/document
The URL to kick off the external editor on this document would be:
http://zopeserver/my_stuff/externalEdit_/document
Now, this may look a bit odd to you if you are used to tacking views on to
the end of the URL. Because externalEdit_
is required to work on Python
Scripts and Page Templates, which swallow the remaining path segments on
the URL following themselves, you must put the call to externalEdit_
directly before the object to be edited. You could do this in ZPT using
some TAL in a Page Template like:
<a href='edit' attributes='href string:${here/aq_parent/absolute_url}/externalEdit_/${here/getId}'> Edit Locally </a>
As an alternative, you can also pass the path the object you want to edit directly to the externalEdit_ object when you call its indexhtml method. It can be called either directly by URL or from a python script. externalEdit will return the proper response data for the object to edit. Here are some examples:
http://zopeserver/externalEdit_?path=/my_stuff/document return context.externalEdit_.index_html( context.REQUEST, context.RESPONSE, path='/my_stuff/document')
When integrating External Editor with a CMS that already uses DAV
locks, it will, by default allow users to borrow locks made on the server
after displaying a confirmation dialog box. Although you can make this
automatic by specifying always_borrow_locks = 1
in the External Editor
config file, it may be desireable to make this the default behavior when
using that server. To facilitate this, you can specify that locks
should be automatically borrowed in the URL (New in 0.7):
http://zopeserver/my_stuff/externalEdit_/document?borrow_lock=1
External Editor also defines a global method that you can call to insert pencil icon links for appropriate objects. The method automatically checks if the object supports external editing and whether the user has the "Use external editor" permission for that object. If both are true, it returns the HTML code to insert the external editor icon link. Otherwise it returns an empty string.
The method is externalEditLink_(object)
. The object argument is the
object to create the link for if appropriate. Here is some example page
template code that inserts links to objects in the current folder and the
external editor icon where appropriate:
<div tal:repeat="object here/objectValues"> <a href="#" tal:attributes="href object/absolute_url" tal:content="object/title_or_id">Object Title</a> <span tal:replace="structure python:here.externalEditLink_(object)" /> </div>
Conclusion
I hope you enjoy using this software. If you have any comments, suggestions or would like to report a bug, send an email to the author:
Casey Duncan
--
(c) 2003, Casey Duncan and Zope Corporation. All rights reserved.