====================
Administration Guide
====================

.. contents::
   :local:

What does Roundup install?
==========================

There's two "installations" that we talk about when using Roundup:

1. The installation of the software and its support files. This uses the
   standard Python mechanism called "distutils" and thus Roundup's core code,
   executable scripts and support data files are installed in Python's
   directories. On Windows, this is typically:

   Scripts
     ``<python dir>\scripts\...``
   Core code
     ``<python dir>\lib\site-packages\roundup\...``
   Support files
     ``<python dir>\share\roundup\...``

   and on Unix-like systems (eg. Linux):

   Scripts
     ``<python root>/bin/...``
   Core code
     ``<python root>/lib-<python version>/site-packages/roundup/...``
   Support files
     ``<python root>/share/roundup/...``

2. The installation of a specific tracker. When invoking the roundup-admin
   "inst" (and "init") commands, you're creating a new Roundup tracker. This
   installs configuration files, HTML templates, detector code and a new
   database. You have complete control over where this stuff goes through
   both choosing your "tracker home" and the ``main`` -> ``database`` variable
   in the tracker's config.ini.


Configuring Roundup's Logging of Messages For Sysadmins
=======================================================

You may configure where Roundup logs messages in your tracker's config.ini
file. Roundup will use the standard Python (2.3+) logging implementation.

Configuration for standard "logging" module:
 - tracker configuration file specifies the location of a logging
   configration file as ``logging`` -> ``config``
 - ``roundup-server`` specifies the location of a logging configuration
   file on the command line
Configuration for "BasicLogging" implementation:
 - tracker configuration file specifies the location of a log file
   ``logging`` -> ``filename``
 - tracker configuration file specifies the level to log to as
   ``logging`` -> ``level``
 - ``roundup-server`` specifies the location of a log file on the command
   line
 - ``roundup-server`` specifies the level to log to on the command line

(``roundup-mailgw`` always logs to the tracker's log file)

In both cases, if no logfile is specified then logging will simply be sent
to sys.stderr with only logging of ERROR messages.


Configuring roundup-server
==========================

The basic configuration file is as follows (taken from the
``roundup-server.ini.example`` file in the "doc" directory)::

  [main]

  # Host name of the Roundup web server instance.
  # If left unconfigured (no 'host' setting) the default
  # will be used.
  # If empty, listen on all network interfaces.
  # If you want to explicitly listen on all
  # network interfaces, the address 0.0.0.0 is a more
  # explicit way to achieve this, the use of an empty
  # string for this purpose is deprecated and will go away
  # in a future release.
  # Default: localhost
  host = localhost

  # Port to listen on.
  # Default: 8080
  port = 8017

  # Path to favicon.ico image file.  If unset, built-in favicon.ico is used.
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  # Default: favicon.ico
  favicon = favicon.ico

  # User ID as which the server will answer requests.
  # In order to use this option, the server must be run initially as root.
  # Availability: Unix.
  # Default: 
  user = roundup

  # Group ID as which the server will answer requests.
  # In order to use this option, the server must be run initially as root.
  # Availability: Unix.
  # Default: 
  group = 

  # don't fork (this overrides the pidfile mechanism)'
  # Allowed values: yes, no
  # Default: no
  nodaemon = no

  # Log client machine names instead of IP addresses (much slower)
  # Allowed values: yes, no
  # Default: no
  log_hostnames = no

  # File to which the server records the process id of the daemon.
  # If this option is not set, the server will run in foreground
  # 
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  # Default: 
  pidfile = 

  # Log file path.  If unset, log to stderr.
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  # Default: 
  logfile = 

  # Set processing of each request in separate subprocess.
  # Allowed values: debug, none, thread, fork.
  # Default: fork
  multiprocess = fork

  # Tracker index template. If unset, built-in will be used.
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  # Default: 
  template = 

  # Enable SSL support (requires pyopenssl)
  # Allowed values: yes, no
  # Default: no
  ssl = no

  # PEM file used for SSL. A temporary self-signed certificate
  # will be used if left blank.
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  # Default: 
  pem = 

  # Roundup trackers to serve.
  # Each option in this section defines single Roundup tracker.
  # Option name identifies the tracker and will appear in the URL.
  # Option value is tracker home directory path.
  # The path may be either absolute or relative
  # to the directory containing this config file.
  [trackers]

  demo = /trackers/demo
  sysadmin = /trackers/sysadmin

Additional notes for each keyword:

**template**
  Specifies a template used for displaying the tracker index when
  multiple trackers are being used. It is processed by TAL and
  the variable "trackers" is available to the template and is a
  dict of all configured trackers.
**ssl**
  Enables the use of SSL to secure the connection to the roundup-server.
  If you enable this, ensure that your tracker's config.ini specifies
  an *https* URL.
**pem**
  If specified, the SSL PEM file containing the private key and certificate.
  If not specified, roundup will generate a temporary, self-signed certificate
  for use.
**trackers** section
  Each line denotes a mapping from a URL component to a tracker home.
  Make sure the name part doesn't include any url-unsafe characters like
  spaces. Stick to alphanumeric characters and you'll be ok.

To generate a config.ini in the current directory (note it will
overwrite an existing file) from the roundup-server command line use::

 roundup_server -p 8017  -u roundup --save-config  demo=/trackers/demo \
    sysadmin=/trackers/sysadmin

Users and Security
==================

Roundup holds its own user database which primarily contains a username,
password and email address for the user. Roundup *must* have its own user
listing, in order to maintain internal consistency of its data. It is a
relatively simple exercise to update this listing on a regular basis, or on
demand, so that it matches an external listing (eg. 
:ref:`unix passwd file<external-authentication>`,
`LDAP <http://www.roundup-tracker.org/cgi-bin/moin.cgi/LDAPLogin>`_, etc.)

Roundup identifies users in a number of ways:

1. Through the web, users may be identified by either HTTP Basic
   Authentication or cookie authentication. If you are running the web
   server (roundup-server) through another HTTP server (eg. apache or IIS)
   then that server may require HTTP Basic Authentication, and it will pass
   the ``REMOTE_USER`` variable through to Roundup. If this variable is not
   present, then Roundup defaults to using its own cookie-based login
   mechanism.
2. In email messages handled by roundup-mailgw, users are identified by the
   From address in the message.

In both cases, Roundup's behaviour when dealing with unknown users is
controlled by Permissions defined in the "SECURITY SETTINGS" section of the
tracker's ``schema.py`` module:

Web Registration
  If granted to the Anonymous Role, then anonymous users will be able to
  register through the web.
Email Registration
  If granted to the Anonymous Role, then email messages from unknown users
  will result in those users being registered with the tracker.

More information about how to customise your tracker's security settings
may be found in the `customisation documentation`_.


Tasks
=====

Maintenance of Roundup can involve one of the following:

1. `tracker backup`_
2. `software upgrade`_
3. `migrating backends`_
4. `moving a tracker`_
5. `migrating from other software`_
6. `adding a user from the command-line`_


Tracker Backup
--------------

The roundup-admin import and export commands are **not** recommended for
performing backup.

Optionally stop the web and email frontends and to copy the contents of the
tracker home directory to some other place using standard backup tools.
This means using
*pg_dump* to take a snapshot of your Postgres backend database, for example.
A simple copy of the tracker home (and files storage area if you've configured
it to be elsewhere) will then complete the backup.


Software Upgrade
----------------

Always make a backup of your tracker before upgrading software. Steps you may
take:

1. Ensure that the unit tests run on your system::

    python run_tests.py

2. If you're using an RDBMS backend, make a backup of its contents now.
3. Make a backup of the tracker home itself.
4. Stop the tracker web and email frontends.
5. Install the new version of the software::

    python setup.py install

6. Follow the steps in the `upgrading documentation`_ for the new version of
   the software in the copied.

   Usually you will be asked to run `roundup_admin migrate` on your tracker
   before you allow users to start accessing the tracker.

   It's safe to run this even if it's not required, so just get into the
   habit.
7. Restart your tracker web and email frontends.

If something bad happens, you may reinstate your backup of the tracker and
reinstall the older version of the sofware using the same install command::

    python setup.py install


Migrating Backends
------------------

1. Stop the existing tracker web and email frontends (preventing changes).
2. Use the roundup-admin tool "export" command to export the contents of
   your tracker to disk. (If you are running on windows see
   `issue1441336 <https://issues.roundup-tracker.org/issue1441336>`_
   on how to use the command line rather than interactive mode to
   exprt data.)
3. Copy the tracker home to a new directory.
4. Delete the "db" directory from the new directory.
5. Set the value of the ``backend`` key under the ``[database]``
   section of the tracker's ``config.ini`` file.
6. Use the roundup-admin "import" command to import the previous export with
   the new tracker home. If non-interactively::
     
     roundup-admin -i <tracker home> import <tracker export dir>

   If interactively, enter 'commit' before exiting.
7. Test each of the admin tool, web interface and mail gateway using the new
   backend.
8. Move the old tracker home out of the way (rename to "tracker.old") and
   move the new tracker home into its place.
9. Restart web and email frontends.


Moving a Tracker
----------------

If you're moving the tracker to a similar machine, you should:

1. install Roundup on the new machine and test that it works there,
2. stop the existing tracker web and email frontends (preventing changes),
3. copy the tracker home directory over to the new machine, and
4. start the tracker web and email frontends on the new machine.

Most of the backends are actually portable across platforms (ie. from Unix to
Windows to Mac). If this isn't the case (ie. the tracker doesn't work when
moved using the above steps) then you'll need to:

1. install Roundup on the new machine and test that it works there,
2. stop the existing tracker web and email frontends (preventing changes),
3. use the roundup-admin tool "export" command to export the contents of
   the existing tracker,
4. copy the export to the new machine,
5. use the roundup-admin "import" command to import the tracker on the new
   machine, and
6. start the tracker web and email frontends on the new machine.


Migrating From Other Software
-----------------------------

You have a couple of choices. You can either use a CSV import into Roundup,
or you can write a simple Python script which uses the Roundup API
directly. The latter is almost always simpler -- see the "scripts"
directory in the Roundup source for some example uses of the API.

"roundup-admin import" will import data into your tracker from a
directory containing files with the following format:

- one colon-separated-values file per Class with columns for each property,
  named <classname>.csv
- one colon-separated-values file per Class with journal information,
  named <classname>-journals.csv (this is required, even if it's empty)
- if the Class is a FileClass, you may have the "content" property
  stored in separate files from the csv files. This goes in a directory
  structure::

      <classname>-files/<N>/<designator>

  where ``<designator>`` is the item's ``<classname><id>`` combination.
  The ``<N>`` value is ``int(<id> / 1000)``.


Adding A User From The Command-Line
-----------------------------------

The ``roundup-admin`` program can create any data you wish to in the
database. To create a new user, use::

    roundup-admin create user

To figure out what good values might be for some of the fields (eg. Roles)
you can just display another user::

    roundup-admin list user

(or if you know their username, and it happens to be "richard")::

    roundup-admin find username=richard

then using the user id you get from one of the above commands, you may
display the user's details::

    roundup-admin display <userid>


Running the Servers
===================

Unix
----

On Unix systems, use the scripts/server-ctl script to control the
roundup-server server. Copy it somewhere and edit the variables at the top
to reflect your specific installation.


Windows
-------

On Windows, the roundup-server program runs as a Windows Service, and
therefore may be controlled through the Services control panel. Note
that you **must** install the pywin32 package to allow roundup to
run as a service. The roundup-server program may also control the
service directly:

**install the service**
  ``roundup-server -C /path/to/my/roundup-server.ini -c install``
**start the service**
  ``roundup-server -c start``
**stop the service**
  ``roundup-server -c stop``

To bring up the services panel:

Windows 2000 and later
  Start/Control Panel/Administrative Tools/Services
Windows NT4
  Start/Control Panel/Services

You will need a server configuration file (as described in
`Configuring roundup-server`_) for specifying tracker homes
and other roundup-server configuration. Specify the name of
this file using the ``-C`` switch when installing the service.

Running the Mail Gateway Script
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The mail gateway script should be scheduled to run regularly on your
Windows server. Normally this will result in a window popping up. The
solution to this is to:

1. Create a new local account on the Roundup server
2. Set the scheduled task to run in the context of this user instead
   of your normal login


.. _`customisation documentation`: customizing.html
.. _`upgrading documentation`: upgrading.html
