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collective.beaker-1.0b3dev-r239026


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توضیحات

Beaker integration for Zope and Plone
ویژگی مقدار
سیستم عامل -
نام فایل collective.beaker-1.0b3dev-r239026
نام collective.beaker
نسخه کتابخانه 1.0b3dev-r239026
نگهدارنده []
ایمیل نگهدارنده []
نویسنده Martin Aspeli
ایمیل نویسنده optilude@gmail.com
آدرس صفحه اصلی http://pypi.python.org/pypi/collective.beaker
آدرس اینترنتی https://pypi.org/project/collective.beaker/
مجوز BSD
collective.beaker - Beaker integration for Zope 2 and Plone. ============================================================ This package provides a means to configure the `Beaker <http://beaker.groovie.org>`_ session management and caching framework for use within a Zope 2 (and Plone) environment. Ordinarily, Beaker is configured using WSGI middleware. However, Zope 2 does not (yet) run WSGI by default (unless you use ``repoze.zope2``). This package provides an alternative configuration syntax, based in zope.conf. Installation ------------ To use this package, you need to install it. Typically, you would do this via the ``install_requires`` line in your own package's ``setup.py``:: install_requires=[ ... 'collective.beaker', ], You can also install it using the ``eggs`` line in buildout.cfg, e.g.:: [instance] ... eggs = ... collective.beaker If you are on Zope 2.10 (e.g. for Plone 3), you will also need to install the `ZPublisherEventsBackport <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/ZPublisherEventsBackport>`_ package. You can get that as a dependency by depending in the ``[Zope2.10]`` extra, e.g.:: [instance] ... eggs = ... collective.beaker [Zope2.10] If you are in Zope 2.12 or later, the relevant events are included by default, and you should *not* depend on ``ZPublisherEventsBackport`` or the ``[Zope2.10]`` extra. Configuring Beaker ------------------ To configure Beaker, add a section to your ``zope.conf`` like this:: <product-config beaker> cache.type file cache.data_dir /tmp/cache/data cache.lock_dir /tmp/cache/lock cache.regions short, long cache.short.expire 60 cache.long.expire 3600 session.type file session.data_dir /tmp/sessions/data session.lock_dir /tmp/sessions/lock session.key beaker.session session.secret secret </product-config> If you are using buildout and ``plone.recipe.zope2instance`` to generate your ``zope.conf``, you can use the following option:: [instance] ... zope-conf-additional = <product-config beaker> cache.type file cache.data_dir ${buildout:directory}/var/cache/data cache.lock_dir ${buildout:directory}/var/cache/lock cache.regions short, long cache.short.expire 60 cache.long.expire 3600 session.type file session.data_dir ${buildout:directory}/var/sessions/data session.lock_dir ${buildout:directory}/var/sessions/lock session.key beaker.session session.secret secret </product-config> Here, we have also used a buildout substitution to put the cache and session directories inside the buildout directory. You also need to load the configuration for the ``collective.beaker`` package. This can be done with a ZCML line like this:: <include package="collective.beaker" /> This could be in your own ``configure.zcml``, or in a ZCML slug. If you are using buildout and ``plone.recipe.zope2instance``, you can install a slug by adding a ``zcml`` line like:: [instance] ... zcml = collective.beaker The settings within the ``<product-config beaker>`` section are passed directly to Beaker. See the `Beaker configuration documentation <http://beaker.groovie.org/configuration.html>`_ for more details about the available options. Please note that: * All cache settings must be prefixed with ``cache.`` * All session settings must be prefixed with ``session.`` For the session settings, the following defaults apply: * ``invalidate_corrupt=True``, so corrupt sessions are invalidated * ``type=None`` and ``data_dir=None``, thus defaulting to an in-memory session * ``key=beaker.session.id`` - this is the cookie key * ``timeout=None``, so sessions don't time out * ``secret=None``, so session cookies are not encrypted * ``log_file=None``, so there is no logging Using sessions -------------- To obtain a Beaker session from a request, use the following pattern:: >>> from collective.beaker.interfaces import ISession >>> session = ISession(request) See the `Beaker session documentation <http://beaker.groovie.org/sessions.html>`_ for details on the resultant session object. You can more or less treat it as a dictionary with string keys:: >>> session['username'] = currentUserName If you modify the session, you need to manually save it:: >>> session.save() Alternatively, you can set the ``session.auto`` configuration key to ``on``, and sessions will be automatically saved on each request. If you want to delete the session, use:: >>> session.delete() Note that Beaker does not automatically expire/remove sessions, so you may need to do this yourself. If you want to invalidate the session and create a new one, use:: >>> session.invalidate() Note that the session is configured when each request is begun, based on the session settings read from ``zope.conf``. It is possible to override these by registering a utility providing ``ISessionConfig`` from this package. The utility must implement the dict API (you can use a regular dict, or a persistent mapping object, for example). This allows, for example, a site- local utility to provide per-site session data. Using caching ------------- The Beaker documentation illustrates how to create a cache manager as a global variable. The ``CacheManager`` instance provides decorators and functions to use the cache. You can still use this pattern, but this will not use any of the configuration managed by ``collective.beaker`` in zope.conf You can, however, use cache regions, as well as the explicit caching API. At runtime (but *not* in module scope) you can obtain a Beaker ``CacheManager`` that is configured as per ``zope.conf`` like so:: >>> from zope.component import getUtility >>> from collective.beaker.interfaces import ICacheManager >>> cacheManager = getUtility(ICacheManager) You can now use this programmatically as per the Beaker documentation, e.g.:: >>> myCache = cacheManager.get_cache('mynamespace', expire=1800) Refer to the `Beaker caching documentation <http://beaker.groovie.org/caching.html>`_ for details. You can also use caching region decorators, e.g. with:: >>> from beaker.cache import cache_region >>> @cache_region('short') ... def my_function(): ... ... Provided that the 'short' region is configured (as in the ``zope.conf`` example above), this will lazily look up the region settings and use those for caching. To invalidate the cache, you could call:: >>> from beaker.cache import region_invalidate >>> region_invalidate(my_function, 'short') Again, refer to the Beaker documentation for details. Testing ------- If you are writing integration tests for code that uses beaker sessions or caches, you need to ensure that beaker is configured before you call the relevant code. Otherwise, you are liable to get component lookup errors on ``ISessionConfig`` or ``ICacheManager`` layers. This is because integration tests written with ``ZopeTestCase``/``PloneTestCase`` do not read your ``zope.conf`` and so the ``collective.beaker`` configuration code does not have any configuration data when it is loaded. You can deal with this in one of two ways: * Register your own ``ISessionConfig`` and/or ``ICacheManager`` utilities. See ``interfaces.py`` for details. * Provide "fake" ZConfig settings before ZCML processing takes place. You can use the test layer in ``collective.beaker.testing.BeakerConfigLayer`` to do the latter. You need to make sure that this layer is mixed in before any layer that executes ZCML processing. For example:: from colective.beaker.testing import BeakerConfigLayer from Products.PloneTestCase.layer import PloneSiteLayer from Products.PloneTestCase.ptc import PloneTestCase class MyLayer(BeakerConfigLayer, PloneSiteLayer): pass class TestCase(PloneTestCase): layer = MyLayer You can of course add your own ``setUp`` and ``tearDown`` methods to the layer. The important thing is that the ``BeakerConfigLayer`` comes before the ``PloneSiteLayer``, which will configure the site. This setup will use default settings (see ``testing.py`` for the exact values), but you can manipulate these on a per-setting basis. For example:: from zope.component import getUtility from collective.beaker.interfaces import ISessionConfig config = getUtility(ISessionConfig) config['secret'] = 'password' Bear in mind that this is normally a global utility, so any changes will cross test boundaries unless you also tear down your settings properly. Thus, it is probably more appropriate to do this setup in a layer than in an individual test. When writing tests that use Beaker sessions, if you are not performing functional testing using something like ``zope.testbrowser``, you may also need to simulate the request start/end events that ``collective.beaker`` listens to in order to configure the session. For example:: from collective.beaker.session import initializeSession, closeSession ... class TestCase(PloneTestCase): layer = MyLayer def test_something(self): request = self.app.REQUEST initializeSession(request) # perform your test here closeSession(request) In a unit test, it is probably easier to just provide a mock ``ISession`` adapter for the request. There is a mock session implementation in this package which can help you with that:: import unittest import zope.component.testing from zope.component import provideAdapter from collective.beaker.testing import testingSession from collective.beaker.interfaces import ISession from zope.publisher.browser import TestRequest class MyUnitTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): provideAdapter(testingSession) ... def tearDown(self): zope.component.testing.tearDown() def test_something(self): request = TestRequest() session = ISession(request) ... Like the "real" session, the test session is tied to the request, so you should get the same object back each time you look up the adapter on the request. You can also check the following properties to see how the session has been used: * ``_saved`` is True if ``save()`` has been called once. * ``_invalidated`` is True if ``invalidate()`` has been called once. * ``_deleted`` is True if ``delete()`` has been called once. Finally, ``accessed()`` will return True and the ``last_accessed`` attribute will be set to the current date/time when common dictionary operations are used. Changelog for collective.beaker =============================== 1.0b3 (2011-05-11) ------------------ - fixed spelling issue in setup.py [ajung] 1.0b2 (2010-01-23) ------------------ - Fix support for signed cookies (the ``secret`` parameter) in sessions. [optilude] - Provide better testing tools and more resilient test setup. [optilude] - Make the ZCML directive more resilient to configurations where there is no product_config. This can happen in test setup, for example. [optilude] 1.0b1 (2009-12-10) ------------------ - Initial release [optilude]


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نصب پکیج whl collective.beaker-1.0b3dev-r239026:

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نصب پکیج tar.gz collective.beaker-1.0b3dev-r239026:

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