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diff --git a/doc/todo/fileupload/soc-proposal.mdwn b/doc/todo/fileupload/soc-proposal.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5e4fa2584 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/todo/fileupload/soc-proposal.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +# SoC Proposal for Implementation of a File Upload Interface + +I intend to extend Ikiwiki such that it accepts file uploads, subject to access +control, and displays image collections in a gallery format. Since the latter +component is dependent on the former, I will defer its planning for now. What +follows is a very rough draft of my thoughts on the matter. Comments are +welcomed, either on the discussion page or via e-mail (_me_ at _inelegant.org_). + +I suggest we adopt the Trac/Wikipedia concept of "attaching" files to a given +page. In this scenario, each page for which file upload has been enabled, will +sport an `<input type="file">` construct along with an _Attach_ button. Upon +successfully attaching a file, its name will be appended to an _"Attachments"_ +list at the bottom of the page. The names in the list will link to the +appropriate files. Architecturally, this means that after a file has been attached to a page, the +page will have to be rebuilt. + +## Metadata + +Uploaded files will have at least the following pieces of metadata: + + * Filename + * Upload date + * Page attached to + * Uploader's name + * File size + * File type + +The first three pieces of data are associated with every new page on the wiki by +means of the _.ikiwiki/index_ file (_src_/_dest_, _ctime_, and _link_, +respectively). The next two are stored in the RCS log. + +Ideally, the list of attachments for a given page will detail, at least, each attachment's +type (so the user knows whether they can open it), size (so the user knows +whether it is worth downloading), and potentially a thumbnail of some sort for +images and videos. It is potentially expensive to query the RCS for this data on +every page rebuild, so I propose the addition of two optional fields to the +index file: _mime_, which contains the MIME type of the _dest_ file, and _size_, +which contains the size in bytes of _dest_. + +If a user attached a photograph (_my-cat.png_) to a page (_my-cat_), the +following lines are representative of what _index_ may store: + + mtime=1174347925 ctime=1169220485 src=my-cat.png dest=my-cat.png link=my-cat mime=image/png size=73100 + mtime=1174347927 ctime=1174347927 src=my-cat.mdwn dest=my-cat/index.html link=my-cat.png + +Thus, we define an attachment as file linked from an existing page, with a +non-_text/html_ MIME type. + +## Configuration + +In [[todo/fileupload]] it is specified that the upload feature must be highly +configurable. It is suggested that this configuration be achieved by embedding +directives in the wiki pages directly. + +Consider an ikiwiki for photographers. The admin decides to allow users to +upload their photographs. Using the Pagespec suggestion, he must enforce this +policy on the front page of his wiki (as preferences cascade horizontally +downwards). He must then lock the front page from editing, in order to prevent +his users from reversing his decision. IOW, he is forced to lock a page purely +to register a configuration preference. He will need to repeat this process for +each layer of the hierarchy he wants to apply a different policy to. + +Further, these embedded configuration directives risk overshadowing the content +of the page, and thus confusing users. This would become particularly +problematic for wikis which need to maintain blacklists/whitelists for access +control -- they would need to continually update wiki pages (thus polluting the +RCS logs) just to stem abuse. + +I suspect that we can accommodate most use cases by allowing these options to be +set globally in the _ikiwiki.setup_ file. They can then be optionally set on a +page-by-page basis by use of pagespecs or a reworking of the config system such +that ikiwiki dotfiles can be placed at arbitrary levels of the hierarchy, and +have their directives supersede those set by their parents. Clearly, the first +option is significantly simpler. + +## Operation + +1. File upload forms will be rendered on all wiki pages which have been allowed +in the global configuration file. By default, this will probably be none of +them. +2. The forms will interface with _ikiwiki.cgi_, passing it the filename, the +file contents, and the name of the page to which it is being attached. +3. The CGI will consult the config file and any embedded pagespecs in turn, to +determine whether the access controls permit the upload. If they don't, an error +message will be displayed to the user, and the process will abort. +4. The uploaded file will be saved to the appropriate directory. +5. The uploaded file will be committed to the RCS. +6. _.ikiwiki/index_ will be modified to reflect the new upload (as above). +7. The page to which the file is attached (and any other +affected pages) will be regenerated. + +--Ben |