GenericSetup importer and exporter for workflow definitions that uses CSV instead of XML
Project description
by Martin Aspeli <optilude@gmail.com>
This package contains tools for working with DC Workflow definitions via spreadsheets (or rather, CSV format) as well as debugging aids to make it easier to work with security and workflow in Zope 2 and Plone.
It consists of:
A GenericSetup exporter that can dump a workflow definition to a CSV file
A GenericSetup importer that can create a workflow definition from a CSV file
An in-browser tool to sanity-check a workflow
A browser view to dump a workflow in the site to CSV as a one-off
A browser view to show the roles of a user in a given context
- Utility functions to trigger automatic transitions on an object, as well as
on its parent.
CSV import/export
Please note that the CSV format is not completely equivalent to the standard XML-based GenericSetup format to import/export workflow definitions. If you require the full power of DCWorkflow, you should continue to use the XML based format. This is not (just) due to laziness - the CSV format has been simplified to make common operations easy.
For an example CSV file, see
collective/wtf/tests/profiles/testing/test_wf.csv.
To be imported as part of a GenericSetup extension profile, a file like this would normally go in
profiles/default/workflow_csv/wf_name.csv
where wf_name is the name of the workflow in portal_workflow.
Note that if a full workflow definition does exist (e.g. in profiles/default/workflows/my_workflow/definition.xml), the CSV importer will not attempt to run an import, so as not to conflict or overwrite changes.
To download a workflow definition in CSV format as a one-off, type a URL like this into your browser:
http://localhost:8080/Plone/portal_workflow/my_workflow/@@to-csv
Here, “Plone” is the name of the Plone instance and “my_workflow” is the name of your workflow definition. You will be asked to download a CSV file.
Workflow sanity checker
To invoke the sanity checker, type a URL like this into your browser:
http://localhost:8080/Plone/portal_workflow/my_workflow/@@sanity-check
Again, “Plone” is the name of the Plone instance and “my_workflow” is the name of the workflow definition. The output will be written to the browser window in plain text.
Other debugging aids
To view the current roles of a given user in a given context, type a URL like this into your browser when logged in as a Manager user:
http://localhost:8080/Plone/context/@@display-roles-in-context?user=<user>
Again, “Plone” is the name of the Plone instance. “context” could be any object. <user> should be replaced by the login name/id of the user you want to fetch roles for. The output will be written to the browser window in plain text.
CSV file specification
This section details the CSV file format.
General
The CSV file format generally relies on key-value pairs, where keys are in the first column (A) and values in the second column (B). Key names are not case sensitive, may substitute hyphens for spaces, and may optionally contain a trailing colon. For example, the following are all equivalent:
Some key:,some_value some key:,some_value some-key , some_value
The file is sub-divided into sections. A section begins with a row containing the section name in square brackets, and ends with at least one blank row. For example:
[SomeSection] Some key:,some_value Some other key:,another_value [AnotherSection] ...
The various sections are listed below, in more detail.
The [Workflow] section
This is generally the first section in the file. It contains information about the workflow as a whole, with the following keys. Keys marked with a * are required.
Id* – The name of the workflow as it will be installed in portal_workflow.
- Initial state* – The name of the initial state of the workflow. Must match
the id of a [State] section elsewhere in the file.
Title – A human-friendly title for the workflow.
Description – A human-friendly description for the workflow.
- Type – The meta_type of the workflow. Defaults to ‘Workflow’, which is the
standard DCWorkflow definition type. Note that if you have a custom workflow, there is no guarantee that collective.wtf will be able to parse it, so be careful.
- State variable – The workflow variable that holds the current state. For
the primary workflow of a Plone content object, this should be ‘review_state’, which is the default. However, if you are designing a secondary workflow in a multi-workflow chain, it may need a different state variable.
For example:
[Workflow] Id:,test_workflow Title:,Test workflow Description:,Description of workflow Initial state:,state_one
The [State] section
This section defines a single workflow state. It must end with a permissions table - see below.
Id* – A unique name for the state.
Title* – A human-friendly title.
Description – A human-friendly description.
- Transitions – A comma-separated list of transitions. Note that this should
be limited to a single cell. Hence, you will need double quotes around the list, e.g. “transition_1, transition_2”. Each transition listed must match the id of a [Transition] section elsewhere in the file.
- Worklist – The name of a worklist for objects in this state, if one is
required.
Worklist label – A human-friendly label for the worklist.
- Worklist guard permission – The name of a permission used to guard the
worklist, if required.
- Worklist guard expression – A TALES expression used to guard the worklist,
if required.
- Worklist guard role – The name of a role used to guard the workflist, if
required.
For example:
[State] Id:,state_one Title:,State one Description:,Description of state one Transitions:,"to_state_two,to_state_three" Worklist:,State one worklist Worklist label:,Worklist stuff goes here Worklist guard permission:,Review portal content Worklist guard expression:,python:True==True Worklist guard role:,Manager Permissions, Acquire, Manager, Member, Owner View, Y, Y, N, Y Access contents information, Y, Y, N, Y Modify portal content, N, Y, N, N
The permissions table
At the end of a [State] section, before the blank line that signals the end of that section, there must be a table of permissions for this state. The table may look like this:
Permissions, Acquire, Manager, Member, Owner View, Y, Y, N, Y Access contents information, Y, Y, N, Y Modify portal content, N, Y, N, N
Note that the additional whitespace here is purely for readability, and is optional.
The permissions table is created by having the pseudo-key ‘Permissions’ in column A. Column B is used to indicate whether a given permission is acquired from the parent object or not. By convention, the header row should contain the word ‘Acquire’ here. Subsequent rows should contain role names.
Underneath the header row, the first column should contain the names of permissions. Subsequent columns indicate whether the given role has the given permission in this workflow state. A case-insensitive value of ‘Y’, ‘*’, ‘X’ or ‘Yes’ indicates true. Any other value (including blanks, ‘N’ or ‘No’) indicates false.
The [Transition] section
This section defines a transition between two states. It may contain the following keys:
Id* – A unique identifier for the transition
Title – A human-friendly title for the transition.
Description – A human-friendly description for the transition.
- URL – A string containing a URL that will be used when the user clicks
the transition in the workflow menu. May contain the special variables %(portal_url)s, %(folder_url)s, %(content_url)s and %(user_id)s. If not given, the default view will be used.
- Target state – The state that the workflow should move to after this
transition has been executed. If omitted, the transition will not cause a state change. If included, it must match the id of a [State] section defined elsewhere in the file.
- Trigger – One of ‘User’ or ‘Automatic’. Defaults to ‘User’. An automatic
transition is one which is run automatically when the workflow enters a state for which the automatic transition is a valid exit transition. Automatic transitions are often used with transition guards to automatically advance the workflow in certain situations, and/or with transition scripts that execute on the automatic transition.
- Guard permission – The name of a permission that is required before this
transition is made available.
- Guard expression – A TALES expression that must be true before this
transition is made available.
- Guard role – The name of a role that the current user must have before
this transition is made available.
- Script before – A script to execute before the transition effects a state
change. This may either contain a simple string, in which case it must match the id of a [Script] section elsewhere in the file, or a dotted name to an external method, e.g. ‘my.product.Extensions.script_name.function_name’, where ‘my.product’ is the name of a product that contains an Extensions/ folder, ‘script_name’ is the name of a .py file in that Extensions/ folder, and ‘function_name’ is the name of a function in that .py file. The function must take two parameters: self, and a state_change, a StateChangeInfo object. In this case, the importer will create a new External Method with the appropriate module (‘my.product.script_name’) and function (‘function_name’), give it and id based on the script and function name (in this case, ‘script_name.function_name’), and set this as the script before.
- Script after – A script to execute after the transition effects a state
change. This may contain the same values as Script before.
For example:
[Transition] Id:,to_state_one Title:,Make it state one Description:,Make it go to state one Target state:,state_one Trigger:,User Guard permission:,Modify portal content,View Guard expression:,python:True==True Guard role:,Manager Script before:,shared_script Script after:,collective.wtf.Extensions.test_scripts.inline_test_one
The [Script] section
This may be used to define a script explicitly. Only external method scripts are supported. Note that single-use external methods can be defined “inline” using the notation described under ‘The [Transition] section’ above.
Id* – The id of the script
- Type* – Should be ‘External Method’. In the future, other types of script
may be supported.
- Module* – The module where the external method is defined. Note that this
should not contain the ‘Extensions’ directory.
- Function* – The name of the function to execute when the external method
is run.
For example:
[Script] Id:,shared_script Type:,External Method Module:, collective.wtf.test_scripts Function:,script_section_test
Changelog
1.0b9
Don’t make assumptions about the csv dialect on import. Instead, sniff the first 1024 bytes. [mj]
1.0b8
Avoid creating a ghost workflow_csv folder in the current directory. [optilude]
1.0b7
Add CMF 2.2 / Plone 4 support. Note that the new workflow options (like “manager bypass” and “creation guard”) are not (yet) supported. [optilude]
1.0b6
Add support for setting the state variable, with the ‘State variable’ option to the main workflow section. [optilude]
1.0b5
Now imports/exports meta_type, in order to support workflows defined with collective.reactiveworkflow. This uses the option ‘Type’ in the main workflow section. [optildue]
1.0b5
Added utility methods to trigger automatic transitions on self and on the parent, borrowed from Products.ReactiveWorkflow, but made to be useable directly from a script rather than only in an event handler. [optilude]
Improve documentation [optilude]
Add inline script support [optilude]
1.0b4
Add script support [elro]
1.0b2
Add the ability to display roles in any context via a simple browser view [optilude]
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