Is there a way to do this (and to use CRUD, in general) in a scheduled job rather than just the web frontend?
On Feb 13, 1:18 am, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote: > Here is a new feature in trunk. > > Say you have the following table: > > db.define_table('person', > Field('name'), > > Field('created_by',default=auth.user_id,update=auth.user_id,writable=False), > > Field('created_on',default=request.now,update=request.now,writable=False)) > > and you want to store all previous version of this record as it gets > edited. Now you can do: > > 1) create a table where to store them: > > db.define_table('person_archive',Field('current_record',db.person),db.person) > > (the name has to be <table>_archive and it must contain a > 'current_record' field pointing to the actual table, it must also > contain by all fields of the actual table). > > 2) use onaccept=crud.archive in crud.update > > def index(): > form = crud.update(db.person, request.args(0), > onaccept=crud.archive) > return dict(form=form) > > Details: > - actually you do not need step 1, the archive table is created > automatically in step 2. you need step 1 only if/when you want to > access the archive table for other purpose such as retrieving the > data. > - you can change 'person_archive' and 'current_record' by passing > parameters to crud.archive. > - there is nothing special about the fields 'created_by' and > 'created_on', you should have them but can call them as you like. > > Pros: > > - Just adding "onaccept=crud.archive" to crud.update of your current > app makes sure all changes are archived and you have full auditing for > you app. > - references never break (because current_record never changes id). > - It does not slow down the app because current data and archived data > are on different tables > - no unnecessary code since the archive table is defined only when > needed > - works on GAE > > Cons: > - if you delete a record, the last one gets archived but it does not > record who deleted the record. To achieve this you would need an extra > field, for example "active", and set this to false, instead of > deleting the record. Then modify logic of the app to use this "active" > field. Not really a cons actually. This is the only way to do it that > allows users to un-delete records or restore previous revisions > without breaking links. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "web2py-users" group. To post to this group, send email to web...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to web2py+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/web2py?hl=en.