NAME HTML::EP::Explorer - Web driven browsing of a filesystem SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION This application was developed for DHW, a german company that wanted to give its users access to files stored on a file server via certain applications defined by an administrator. (See http://www.dhw.de/ if you are interested in the sponsor.) The rough idea is as follows: The users are presented a view similar to that of the Windows Explorer or an FTP servers directory listing. On the top they have a list of so-called actions. The users may select one or more files and then execute an action on them. INSTALLATION The system is based on my embedded HTML system HTML::EP. It should be available at the same place where you found this file, or at any CPAN mirror, in particular ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/perl/CPAN/authors/id/JWIED/ The installation of HTML::EP is described in detail in the README, I won't explain it here. However, in short it is just as installing HTML::EP::Explorer: Assumed you have a file HTML-EP-Explorer-0.1003.tar.gz then you have to execute the following steps: gzip -cd HTML-EP-Explorer-0.1003.tar.gz | tar xf - perl Makefile.PL make # You will be prompted some questions here make test make install Installation will in particular create a file lib/HTML/EP/Explorer/Config.pm which will contain your answers to the following questions: * Install HTML files? If you say *y* here (the default), the installation script will install some HTML files at a location choosed by you. Usually you will say yes, because the system is pretty useless without it's associated HTML files. However, if you already did install the system and modified the HTML files you probably want to avoid overriding them. In that case say *n*. * Directory for installing HTML files? If you requested installing the HTML files, you have to choose a location. By default the program suggests F which is fine on a Red Hat Linux box. Users of other systems will modify this to some path below your your web servers root directory. * Directory for installing CGI binaries? If HTML files are installed, you must install some CGI binaries too. This question allows you to select an installation path, by default the subdirectory cgi within the directory for installing HTML files. Note that you need to configure the httpd so that it treats this directory as a CGI directory. For example Apache users may add the following to srm.conf: ScriptAlias /home/httpd/html/explorer/cgi * UID the httpd is running as? The explorer scripts need write access to some files, in particular the configuration created by the site administrator. To enable write access, these files are owned by the Unix user you enter here, by default the user *nobody*. In most cases this will be the same user that your httpd is running as, but it might be different, for example if your Apache is using the suexec feature. Contact your webmaster for details. If you didn't already do so, configure your web server for feeding files with extension *.ep* into the CGI binary *ep.cgi* or into the mod_perl module *Apache::EP*. The README of HTML::EP tells you how. See the HTML::EP(3) manpage. That's it! Assuming the directory /home/httpd/html/explorer is reachable as /explorer in your browser, point it to http://localhost/explorer/ You should now see a directory listing. If so, proceed to the CONFIGURATION manpage. CONFIGURATION Besides the questions you already answered when installing the explorer, the system is configurable via any Web browser. Assuming the Explorer is reachable below http://localhost/explorer/, Point your browser to http://localhost/explorer/admin/prefs.ep Security considerations The first thing you probably notice is that you need not supply a password for accessing this page. This should be changed. A typical configuration requests that only the user root can visit this page. For example, with Apache, you could insert the following into your httpd.conf: AuthUserFile /etc/passwd AuthName "Explorer Administration" AuthTyoe basic require user root (Of course one can discuss whether this is a secure thing, as it could allow deducing the root password by using some sort of crack mechanism. On the systems where I use it there ary typically lots of other possibilities for doing the same ... :-) E-Mail address of the administrator From time to time the system will use this address for sending emails to you. Actions This is the explorers heart. Actions are merely shell scripts, to which the files will be fed, that your users have selected. To create an action, fill out the following fields: Name This is some short text that your users will see on the web frontend. For example, it could be *Printing on the LaserJet*. Icon This (optional) entry means that the explorer will use the named image file to display it instead of the name above. For example, this could be a small gif with the word *LaserJet* on it. You must supply an URL here. If you are using Apache, then a lot of nice icons are accessible in your httpd's icons directory. See the README file. Script This is a shell command that the explorer will execute for performing the action. The command may use the variables *file* (the filename) or *user* (the users name). For example, one could use lpr -Plaserjet -U $user $file The user name is deduced by looking at the environment variable *REMOTE_USER*: If your directory */explorer* is password protected, then this variable will contain the users name as set by the web server. If the variable is empty, then the user name *anonymous* is used. Don't try to protect the user or file name with quotes: The Explorer will use Perl's *quotemeta* function to secure these variables. For example, if your tricky users supply a file name `rm -rf /` then the Explorer will run the command lpr -Plaserjet -U anonymous \`rm\ -rf \/\` which is safe. See the perlsec manpage for more details on security considerations with Perl. If your script command is able to process multiple files with one command, then you may prefer lpr -Plaserjet -U $user $files The Explorer will detect that you are using $files and not $file and will run a single command. Status script Similar to the action script, this one will try to guess the current status. A typical command might be lpq -Plaserjet -U $user The status script is suggested to produce output looking like that of lpq. Logfile Path of a logfile to view Note that you see only one (empty) action at the start: If you fill it out and hit *Save settings*, then a second (empty) row will appear automatically. To be precise, you will always have one empty row at the bottom. Actions can be removed by just blanking out the name and hitting *Save settings*. Status cache To save CPU time, you might like to make use of the Status cache. By setting this variable to a certain number of seconds, say 300, the Explorer will not always run the status script. Instead it will create a cache file in the subdirectory status and save the status script's output there. When the status is queried the next time, this cache file will be used, unless the cache file's modification time is more that the given number of seconds in the past. In that case a new cache file will be created by running the status script again. Initial directories In most cases you are not interested in giving your users access to the whole directory tree. For example, if your users use a Samba server to place files on your machine, than the Explorer should probably restrict your users to the Samba servers files. To create an initial directory, fill out the following fields: Name This is a verbose name that your users will see instead of the directory path. For example, it could be a Samba share name. Directory The real directory path. By default your users will still be able to access files outside of the initial directories and these paths are only suggestions. This can be changed by disabling *Allow access to other directories*. Again, you will always see one empty directory at the bottom of the list. To create a new directory just fill this out and hit *Save Settings*. Wipe out the name for removing an existing directory. File types People are used to see only certain files when selecting them for actions. For example, when opening an existing document in Microsoft Word, then you will by default see only files with extension *.doc*. A file type can be created by filling out the following fields: Name This is a description of the file type, that your users will see. For example, it could be PostScript files (*.ps) or All Files (*) Icon This is an (optional) icon to use for showing the file type. For example, it could be /icons/ps.gif or /icons/unknown.gif (Note that these are indeed meaningful settings with any default Apache installation, because Apache has a lot of icons included. See the file icons/README from the Apache distribution.) Regular Expression This is a Perl Regular Expression which files must match in order to be of this type. For example it could be \.ps$ \.pdf$ \.(?:ps|pdf)$ .* for PostScript files, PDF files, PostScript or PDF files or all files. See the perlre(3) manpage for details on Perl's regular expressions. MODIFYING THE EXPLORER When modifying the explorer, you should know about the following methods: Initializing the Explorer Probably any HTML page using the explorer system should contain the following: The *_ep_explorer_init* method is initializing the users cookie. First it verifies, whether the user already has an explorer cookie set. If not, the user will be redirected to the *prefs.ep* page, unless the attribute *noprefs* is set. This page will allow him to fix his personal settings and return to the calling page. The explorer class is a subclass of both *HTML::EP::Locale* and *HTML::EP::Session*. That means that the locale settings are still valid in the *ep-package* call (in particular the *accept* attribute that tells this page is ready for either german, aka de, or english). Likewise the attributes of *ep-session* are valid in the *ep-explorer-init* call. the HTML::EP(3) manpage. the HTML::EP::Session(3) manpage. Reading and/or writing the admin settings Within admin/prefs.ep and some other pages, you find the following call: which read the admin settings from an external file, by default config.pm. The settings will instead be read from the CGI input and saved into the same file, if the CGI variable *save* and the attribute *maysafe* are true. (The latter should happen within the amdin dirctory only.) The method will set the following EP variables: $config$ The config hash ref, as read from the file config.pm. $actions$ The list of actions. Shortcut for $config->actions$. An action looks like { 'name' => 'Print to lp', 'icon' => '/icons/lp.gif', # May be undef 'script' => 'lpr -Plp -U $user $file' } $directories$ The list of directories. Shortcut for $self->{'config'}- >{'directories'}. A directory looks like { 'name' => 'Root directory', 'dir' => '/' } $filetypes$ The list of file types. Shortcut for $self->{'config'}- >{'filetypes'}. A file type looks like { 'name' => 'PostScript files (*.ps)' 'icon' => '/icons/ps.gif', # May be undef 're' => '\.ps$' } $num_directories$ The number of elements in $self->{'directories'}. May be 0. Reading and/or writing the users settings The users settings can be read and/or written by calling This will call *_ep_explorer_init* internally, by setting the *noprefs* attribute to true. If either of the CGI variables *save* or *save_and_return* is set, it will read the users new settings from the CGI environment by running $self->ReadPrefs and store the session (that is, return a cookie) by calling *ep- session-store*. If the current oage is called from another page (that is, the CGI variable *return_to* is set to the calling page) and the CGI variable *save_and_return* is set, then the calling page is included with *ep-include*. Setting the Explorers current directory The method will read the users current directory from the session or CGI variable *basedir*. The current directory will be compared against the list of initial directories and the following EP variables will be set: $basedir$ The selected current directory. If this is different from $session-basedir> then the latter will be modified and $modified$ will be set. $in_top_dir$ True, if the current directory is one of the initial directories or in /, False otherwise. $in_base_dir$ If the current directory is below one of the initial directories, then this variable will contain the associated element from the directory list. That is $in_base_dir->name$ is set to the name of this initial directory and $in_base_dir->dir$ the path. Otherwise the variable is set to undef. If this is the case and the administrator has set "Allow access outside initial directories" to True, then a system error is triggered. $display_dir$ If $in_base_dir$ is set, then this variable is set to the current directories path, relative to the directory from $in_base_dir$. For example, if you are in /usr/local/bin and the initial directory is /usr/local, then the display directory is /bin. Setting the sorting mode The method attempts to guess the requested sorting mode from the CGI or session variable *sortby*. The guessed mode (by default *name*) will be stored in $sortby$. If this is different from $session- >sortby$, then the latter becomes set to the new value and $modified$ is set. Setting the file type The method attempts to guess the file type that the user requests (That is, whether the user wants to see only certain files.) by looking at the CGI or session variable *filetype*. By default the first file type from the list $filetypes$ is choosen. If no list is set, then all files become selected. If a file type was choosen, the file type is stored in $filetype$. and $filetype->selected$ is set to true. (Note, you must not call *ep-explorer-config* later!) If $filetype->name$ is different from $session->filetype$, then the latter is modified and $modified$ is set to true. Creating the directory listing The listing becomes created with The method is calling *ep-explorer-basedir*, *ep-explorer- filetype* and *ep-explorer-sortby* internally. Then a directory listing is created and sorted, according to these methods results. Finally, HTML code is generated for any item in the list by using the templates $dir_template$ or $file_template$, depending on the items type. Performing an action The method

I will execute the following command:

        
      
Here you can see the output:
        
      
performs an action, as requested by the user. The method is reading an action name from the CGI variable *faction* or the attribute *faction*. The corresponding action, if any, is stored in $action$. If no action is found, a system error is triggered. Then the method is looking for either of the CGI variable *files* or the attribute *files*. If this is set, it is treated as a blank separated list of file names. (Tab, Carriage return etc. are counting as blanks.) Otherwise the method expects a single file name in the CGI variable *file* or the attribute *file*. If neither is set, a system error is triggered. If the attribute *execute* is set to false, then no commands are executed. Instead the method returns the commands being executed. Otherwise the command is executed and the output returned. AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT This module is Copyright (C) 1998-1999 Jochen Wiedmann Am Eisteich 9 72555 Metzingen Germany Phone: +49 7123 14887 Email: joe@ispsoft.de All rights reserved. You may distribute this module under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file. SEE ALSO the HTML::EP(3) manpage, the HTML::EP::Session(3) manpage