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Technical Overview
internal package
Foswiki::Address
This class is used to handle pointers to Foswiki 'resources', which might be
webs, topics or parts of topics (such as attachments or metadata), optionally
of a specific revision.
The primary goal is to end the tyranny of arbitrary
(web, topic, attachment, rev...)
tuples. Users of
Foswiki::Address
should
be able to enjoy programmatically updating, stringifying, parsing, validating,
comparing and passing around of
address objects that might eventually be
understood by the wider Foswiki universe, without having to maintain proprietary
parse/stringify/validate/comparison handling code that must always be
considerate of the recipient for such tuples.
This class does not offer any interaction with resources themselves; rather,
functionality is provided to create, hold, manipulate, test
and de/serialise addresses
Fundamentally,
Foswiki::Address
can be thought of as an interface to a hash of
the components necessary to address a specific Foswiki resource.
my $addr = {
web => 'Web/SubWeb',
topic => 'Topic',
attachment => 'Attachment.pdf',
rev => 3
};
Unresolved issues
- Is this class necessary, or should we make a cleaner, lighter
Foswiki::Meta2
- where 'unloaded' objects are no heavier than Foswiki::Address
and provide the same functionality?
- Should the physical file attachment be treated separately to the metadata view of the file attachment(s)? Desirables:
- ability to unambiguously create pointers to an attachment's data (file)
- ability for Foswiki core to calculate an http URL for it
- ability to create pointers to properties (metadata) of the attachment
- These questions are slightly loaded in favour of distinguishing between the datastream and metadata about the attachment. In an ideal world a file attachment would be a first-class citizen to topics: rather than topic text, we have the iostream; attachments would have their own user metadata, dataforms...
- Duplicating QuerySearch parser functionality. 80% of the code in this class is related to parsing "string forms" of addresses of Foswiki resources... querysearch parser needs some refactoring so we can delete the parser code here.
- API usability - can we stop passing around (web, topic, attachment, rev) tuples - will the
->new()
constructor make sense to plugin authors, core hackers? FEEDBACK WELCOME, please comment at Foswiki:Development.TopicAddressing
ClassMethod
new( %constructor ) → $addrObj
Create a
Foswiki::Address
instance
The constructor takes two main forms:
Example:
my $addrObj = Foswiki::Address->new(
web => 'Web/SubWeb',
topic => 'Topic',
attachment => 'Attachment.pdf',
rev => 3
);
Options:
Param |
Description |
Notes |
web |
$string of web path, used if webpath is empty/null |
|
webpath |
\@arrayref of web path, root web first |
|
topic |
$string topic name |
|
rev |
$integer revision number. |
If the tompath is to a attachment datastream, rev applies to that file; topic rev otherwise |
tompath |
\@arrayref of a "TOM" path, one of: META , text , SECTION , attachment . |
See table below |
string |
string representation of an object |
eg. 'Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf@3' |
path forms:
tompath |
Description |
['attachments'] |
All datastreams attached to a topic |
['attachment', 'Attachment.pdf'] |
Datastream of the file attachment named 'Attachment.pdf' |
['META'] |
All META on a topic |
['META', 'FIELD'] |
All META:FIELD members on a topic |
['META', 'FIELD', { name => 'Colour' }] |
The META:FIELD member whose name='Colour' |
['META', 'FIELD', 3] |
The fourth META:FIELD member |
['META', 'FIELD', { name => 'Colour' }, 'title'] |
The 'title' attribute on the META:FIELD member whose name='Colour' |
['META', 'FIELD', 3, 'title'] |
The 'title' attribute on the fourth META:FIELD member |
['text'] |
The topic text |
['SECTION'] |
All topic sections as defined by VarSTARTSECTION |
['SECTION', {name => 'foo'}] |
The topic section named 'foo' |
['SECTION', {name => 'foo', type => 'include'}] |
The topic section named 'foo' of type='include' |
Example: Point to the value of a formfield
LastName
in
Web/SubWeb.Topic
,
my $addrObj = Foswiki::Address->new(
web => 'Web/SubWeb',
topic => 'Topic',
tompath => ['META', 'FIELD', {name => LastName}, 'value']
);
Equivalent: No such plugin chili
%QUERY{"'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD[name='LastName'].value"}%
or
%QUERY{"'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/LastName"}%
Example:
my $addrObj = Foswiki::Address->new(
string => 'Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf@3',
%opts
);
String form instantiation requires parsing
of the address string which comes with many options and caveats - refer to the
documentation for parse()
.
ClassMethod
finish( )
Clean up the object, releasing any memory stored in it.
PRIVATE ClassMethod _parse( $string, \%opts ) → $success
Parse the given string using options provided and update the instance with the
resulting address.
Examples of valid path strings include:
-
Web/
-
Web/SubWeb/
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic
or Web/SubWeb/Topic
or Web.SubWeb.Topic
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic@2
or Web/SubWeb/Topic@2
or Web.SubWeb.Topic@2
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf
or Web/SubWeb/Topic/Attachment.pdf
or Web.SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf@3
or Web/SubWeb/Topic/Attachment.pdf@3
or Web.SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf@3
"String" addresses are notoriously ambiguous: Foswiki traditionally allows web
& topic separators '.' & '/' to be used interchangably. For example, the
following strings could be topics or attachments (or even webs):
-
Foo.Bar
-
Foo.Bar.Cat.Dog
-
Foo/Bar
-
Foo/Bar/Cat/Dog
To resolve the ambiguity, components of ambiguous strings are tested for
existence as webs, topics or attachments and used as hints to help resolve them,
so it follows that:
Ambiguous address strings cannot be
considered stable; exactly which resource they resolve to depends on the
hinting algorithm, the parameters and hints supplied to it, and the existence
(or non-existence) of other resources
Options:
Param |
Description |
Values |
Notes |
webpath or web topic |
context hints |
refer to explicit form |
if string is ambiguous (and possibly not fully qualified, Eg. topic-only or attachment-only), the hinting algorithm tests string against them |
isA |
resource type specification |
$type - 'web', 'topic', 'attachment' |
parse string to resolve to the specified type; exist hinting is skipped |
catchAs |
default resource type |
$type - 'web', 'topic', 'attachment', 'none' |
if string is ambiguous AND (exist hinting fails OR is disabled), THEN assume string to be (web, topic, file attachment or unparseable) |
existAs |
resource types to test |
\@typelist containing one or more of 'web', 'topic', 'attachment' |
if string is ambiguous, test (in order) as each of the specified types. Default: [qw(attachment topic)] |
existHints |
exist hinting enable/disable |
$boolean |
enable/disable hinting through web/topic/attachment existence checks. string is assumed to be using the 'unambiguous' conventions below; if it isn't, catchAs is used |
Unambiguous strings
To build less ambiguous address strings, use the following conventions:
- Terminate web addresses with '/'
- Separate subwebs in the web path with '/'
- Separate topic from web path with '.'
- Separate file attachments from topics with '/'
Examples:
-
Web/SubWeb/
, Web/
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic
-
Web.Topic/Attachment.pdf
-
Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf
Many strings commonly used in Foswiki will always be ambiguous (such as
Foo
,
Foo/Bar
,
Foo/Bar/Cat
,
Foo.Bar.Cat
). Supplying an
isA
specification will
prevent the parser from using the (somewhat expensive) exist hinting heuristics.
In order to simplify the algorithm, a
string may only parse out as a web if:
- It is of the form
Foo/
, or
-
isA => 'web'
is specified, or
- No other type is possible, and
catchAs => 'web'
is specified
The exist hinting algorithm is skipped if:
-
isA
specified
-
string
not ambiguous
If
string
is ambiguous, the hinting algorithm works roughly as follows:
- if exist hinting is disabled
- and
catchAs
is specified (parse as the catchAs
type), otherwise
- the string cannot be parsed
- if exist hinting is enabled, the string is checked for existence as each of the
existAs
types (default is 'attachment', 'topic')
- if there is an exact match against one of the
existAs
types (finish), otherwise
- if there were partial matches (select the combination which scores highest), otherwise
- if
catchAs
was specified (parse as that type), otherwise
- the string cannot be parsed
The following table attempts to explain how ambiguous forms can be interpreted
and resolved.
String form |
existHints |
ambiguous |
web[s] |
topic |
possible types |
Foo/ |
|
|
|
|
web |
Foo |
|
|
|
|
web needs isA => 'web' or catchAs => 'web' , error otherwise |
Foo |
|
|
set |
|
topic |
Foo |
|
1 |
set |
set |
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar/ |
|
|
|
|
web |
Foo/Bar |
|
|
|
|
topic |
Foo/Bar |
|
1 |
set |
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar |
|
|
|
|
topic |
Foo.Bar |
|
1 |
set |
set |
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar/Dog/ |
|
|
|
|
web |
Foo/Bar/Dog |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar/Dog |
0 |
|
|
|
attachment |
Foo.Bar/Dog |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar/D.g |
|
|
|
|
attachment |
Foo/Bar.Dog |
|
|
|
|
topic |
Foo/Bar.Dog |
|
1 |
set |
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar.Dog |
|
|
|
|
topic |
Foo.Bar.Dog |
|
1 |
set |
set |
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar/Dog/Cat/ |
|
|
|
|
web |
Foo/Bar.Dog.Cat |
|
|
|
|
topic |
Foo/Bar.Dog.Cat |
|
1 |
set |
|
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar.Dog/Cat |
|
|
|
|
attachment |
Foo/Bar.Dog/C.t |
|
|
|
|
attachment |
Foo/Bar/Dog.Cat |
0 |
|
|
|
topic |
Foo/Bar/Dog.Cat |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar/Dog/Cat |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo/Bar/Dog/C.t |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar.Dog/Cat |
0 |
|
|
|
attachment |
Foo.Bar.Dog/Cat |
|
1 |
|
|
topic, attachment |
Foo.Bar.Dog/C.t |
|
|
|
|
attachment |
PRIVATE ClassMethod _atomiseAsTOM ( $that, $path, $opts ) → $that
Parse a small subset ('static' meta path forms) of
QuerySearch (
VarQUERY)
compatible expressions.
$opts
is a hashref holding default context
'topic'/ ref part is optional;
_atomiseAsTOM()
falls-back to default topic
context supplied in
$opts
otherwise. In other words, both of these forms are
supported:
-
'Web/SubWeb.Topic@3'/META:FIELD[name='Colour'].value
-
META:FIELD[name='Colour'].value
Form |
tompath |
type |
META |
['META'] |
meta |
META:FIELD |
['META', 'FIELD'] |
metatype |
META:FIELD[name='Colour'] |
['META', 'FIELD', {name => 'Colour'}] |
metamember |
META:FIELD[3] |
['META', 'FIELD', 3] |
metamember |
META:FIELD[name='Colour'].value |
['META', 'FIELD', {name => 'Colour'}, 'value'] |
metakey |
META:FIELD[3].value |
['META', 'FIELD', 3, 'value'] |
metakey |
fields |
['META', 'FIELD'] |
metatype |
fields[name='Colour'] |
['META', 'FIELD', {name => 'Colour'}] |
metamember |
fields[3] |
['META', 'FIELD', 3] |
metamember |
fields[name='Colour'].value |
['META', 'FIELD', 3, 'value'] |
metakey |
MyForm |
['META', 'FIELD', {form => 'MyForm'}] |
metatype |
MyForm[name='Colour'] |
['META', 'FIELD', {form => 'MyForm', name => 'Colour'}] |
metamember |
MyForm[name='Colour'].value |
['META', 'FIELD', {form => 'MyForm', name => 'Colour'}, 'value'] |
metakey |
MyForm.Colour |
['META', 'FIELD', {form => 'MyForm', name => 'Colour'}, 'value'] |
metakey |
Colour |
['META', 'FIELD', {name => 'Colour'}, 'value'] |
metakey |
Return a string representation of the address.
The output of
stringify()
is understood by
_parse()
, and vice versa.
EXPERIMENTAL ClassMethod root( [$boolean] ) → $boolean
-
$boolean
- optional, set the hypothetical Foswiki 'root'. Since all Foswiki resources must exist under the root, a false value here basically means the address object is an undefined/invalid state.
Get/set root
This method (and the root
attribute generally)
may be removed before we release Foswiki 2.0. We would rather use web => '/'
ClassMethod
web( [$name] ) → $name
-
$name
- optional, set a new web name
Get/set by web string
ClassMethod
webpath( [\@webpath] ) → \@webpath
-
\@webpath
- optional, set a new webpath arrayref
Get/set the webpath arrayref
ClassMethod
topic( [$name] ) → $name
-
$name
- optional, set a new topic name
Get/set the topic name
ClassMethod
attachment( [$file] ) → $file
-
$file
- optional, set a new file attachment name
Get/set the file attachment name
ClassMethod
rev( [$rev] ) → $rev
-
$rev
- optional, set rev number
Get/set the rev
ClassMethod
tompath( [\@tompath] ) → \@tompath
-
\@tompath
- optional, tompath
specification into the containing topic. The first $tompath->[0]
element in the array should be one of the following
-
'attachment'
: $tompath->[1]
should be a string, Eg. 'Attachment.pdf'
.
-
'META'
: $tompath->[1..3]
identify which META:<type>
or member or member key is being addressed:
-
$tompath->[1]
contains the META:<type>
, Eg. 'FIELD'
-
$tompath->[2]
contains a selector to identify a member of the type:
-
undef
, for singleton types (such as 'TOPICINFO'
)
- integer array index
- hashref
key => 'value'
pairs, Eg. {name => 'Colour'}
. {name => 'Colour', form => 'MyForm'}
is also supported.
-
$tompath->[3]
contains the name of a key on the selected member, Eg. 'value'
-
'SECTION'
: $tompath->[1]
should be a hashref, Eg. {name => 'mysection', type => 'include'}
-
'text'
: addresses the topic text
Get/set the tompath into a topic
ClassMethod
type() → $resourcetype
Returns the resource type name.
ClassMethod
isA([$resourcetype]) → $boolean
Returns true if the address points to a resource of the specified type.
ClassMethod
isValid() → $resourcetype
Returns true if the instance addresses a resource which is one of the following
types:
- webpath, Eg.
Web/SubWeb/
- topic, Eg.
Web/SubWeb.Topic
- attachment, Eg.
Web/SubWeb.Topic/Attachment.pdf
- attachments , Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic/attachment'
- meta, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META
- metatype, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD
- metamember, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD[name='Colour']
or 'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD[0]
- metakey, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD[name='Colour'].value
or 'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/META:FIELD[0].value
- section, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/SECTION[name='something']
- sections, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/SECTION
- text, Eg.
'Web/SubWeb.Topic'/text
ClassMethod
equiv ( $otherAddr ) → $boolean
Return true if this address resolves to the same resource as
$otherAddr