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authortravis%sedsystems.ca <>2005-01-19 01:25:01 +0000
committertravis%sedsystems.ca <>2005-01-19 01:25:01 +0000
commit00aa5409017d6e0f6607e09502c8d0d470077473 (patch)
treef8fd960d30150e7e605f51715599fda1d47f49e3
parent014b25fed9a4a44963c63582b177fd8ac0ea438f (diff)
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Bug 179451 : Move order-by generation from buglist.cgi into search.pm
Patch by Max K-A <mkanat@kerio.com> r=Joel Peshkin <bugreport@peshkin.net> a=myk
-rw-r--r--Bugzilla/Search.pm109
-rwxr-xr-xbuglist.cgi18
2 files changed, 112 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/Bugzilla/Search.pm b/Bugzilla/Search.pm
index 9756a428d..10d9d907a 100644
--- a/Bugzilla/Search.pm
+++ b/Bugzilla/Search.pm
@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
# Andreas Franke <afranke@mathweb.org>
# Myk Melez <myk@mozilla.org>
# Michael Schindler <michael@compressconsult.com>
+# Max Kanat-Alexander <mkanat@kerio.com>
use strict;
@@ -43,17 +44,32 @@ use Bugzilla::Constants;
use Date::Format;
use Date::Parse;
+# Some fields are not sorted on themselves, but on other fields.
+# We need to have a list of these fields and what they map to.
+# Each field points to an array that contains the fields mapped
+# to, in order.
+our %specialorder = (
+ 'bugs.target_milestone' => [ 'ms_order.sortkey','ms_order.value' ]
+);
+
+# When we add certain fields to the ORDER BY, we need to then add a
+# table join to the FROM statement. This hash maps input fields to
+# the join statements that ned to be added.
+our %specialorderjoin = (
+ 'bugs.target_milestone' => 'LEFT JOIN milestones AS ms_order ON ms_order.value = bugs.target_milestone AND ms_order.product_id = bugs.product_id'
+);
+
# Create a new Search
# Note that the param argument may be modified by Bugzilla::Search
sub new {
my $invocant = shift;
my $class = ref($invocant) || $invocant;
- my $self = { @_ };
+ my $self = { @_ };
bless($self, $class);
-
+
$self->init();
-
+
return $self;
}
@@ -63,8 +79,13 @@ sub init {
my $params = $self->{'params'};
my $user = $self->{'user'} || Bugzilla->user;
+ my $orderref = $self->{'order'} || 0;
+ my @inputorder;
+ @inputorder = @$orderref if $orderref;
+ my @orderby;
+
my $debug = 0;
-
+
my @fields;
my @supptables;
my @wherepart;
@@ -1231,6 +1252,26 @@ sub init {
}
}
}
+
+ # The ORDER BY clause goes last, but can require modifications
+ # to other parts of the query, so we want to create it before we
+ # write the FROM clause.
+ foreach my $orderitem (@inputorder) {
+ BuildOrderBy($orderitem, \@orderby);
+ }
+ # Now JOIN the correct tables in the FROM clause.
+ # This is done separately from the above because it's
+ # cleaner to do it this way.
+ foreach my $orderitem (@inputorder) {
+ # Grab the part without ASC or DESC.
+ my @splitfield = split(/\s+/, $orderitem);
+ if ($specialorderjoin{$splitfield[0]}) {
+ push(@supptables, $specialorderjoin{$splitfield[0]});
+ }
+ # FIXME: Some DBs require ORDER BY items to also
+ # be in GROUP BY.
+ }
+
my %suppseen = ("bugs" => 1);
my $suppstring = "bugs";
my @supplist = (" ");
@@ -1255,7 +1296,7 @@ sub init {
# Make sure we create a legal SQL query.
@andlist = ("1 = 1") if !@andlist;
-
+
my $query = "SELECT " . join(', ', @fields) .
" FROM $suppstring" .
" LEFT JOIN bug_group_map " .
@@ -1288,6 +1329,10 @@ sub init {
$query .= " HAVING " . join(" AND ", @having);
}
+ if (@orderby) {
+ $query .= " ORDER BY " . join(',', @orderby);
+ }
+
if ($debug) {
print "<p><code>" . value_quote($query) . "</code></p>\n";
exit;
@@ -1475,4 +1520,58 @@ sub IsValidQueryType
}
return 0;
}
+
+# BuildOrderBy - Private Subroutine
+# This function converts the input order to an "output" order,
+# suitable for concatenation to form an ORDER BY clause. Basically,
+# it just handles fields that have non-standard sort orders from
+# %specialorder.
+# Arguments:
+# $orderitem - A string. The next value to append to the ORDER BY clause,
+# in the format of an item in the 'order' parameter to
+# Bugzilla::Search.
+# $stringlist - A reference to the list of strings that will be join()'ed
+# to make ORDER BY. This is what the subroutine modifies.
+# $reverseorder - (Optional) A boolean. TRUE if we should reverse the order
+# of the field that we are given (from ASC to DESC or vice-versa).
+#
+# Explanation of $reverseorder
+# ----------------------------
+# The role of $reverseorder is to handle things like sorting by
+# "target_milestone DESC".
+# Let's say that we had a field "A" that normally translates to a sort
+# order of "B ASC, C DESC". If we sort by "A DESC", what we really then
+# mean is "B DESC, C ASC". So $reverseorder is only used if we call
+# BuildOrderBy recursively, to let it know that we're "reversing" the
+# order. That is, that we wanted "A DESC", not "A".
+sub BuildOrderBy {
+ my ($orderitem, $stringlist, $reverseorder) = (@_);
+
+ my @twopart = split(/\s+/, $orderitem);
+ my $orderfield = $twopart[0];
+ my $orderdirection = $twopart[1] || "";
+
+ if ($reverseorder) {
+ # If orderdirection is empty or ASC...
+ if (!$orderdirection || $orderdirection =~ m/asc/i) {
+ $orderdirection = "DESC";
+ } else {
+ # This has the minor side-effect of making any reversed invalid
+ # direction into ASC.
+ $orderdirection = "ASC";
+ }
+ }
+
+ # Handle fields that have non-standard sort orders, from $specialorder.
+ if ($specialorder{$orderfield}) {
+ foreach my $subitem (@{$specialorder{$orderfield}}) {
+ # DESC on a field with non-standard sort order means
+ # "reverse the normal order for each field that we map to."
+ BuildOrderBy($subitem, $stringlist, $orderdirection =~ m/desc/i);
+ }
+ return;
+ }
+
+ push(@$stringlist, $orderfield . ' ' . $orderdirection);
+}
1;
diff --git a/buglist.cgi b/buglist.cgi
index 8abfc6869..2e14c6427 100755
--- a/buglist.cgi
+++ b/buglist.cgi
@@ -23,6 +23,7 @@
# Stephan Niemz <st.n@gmx.net>
# Andreas Franke <afranke@mathweb.org>
# Myk Melez <myk@mozilla.org>
+# Max Kanat-Alexander <mkanat@kerio.com>
################################################################################
# Script Initialization
@@ -706,20 +707,17 @@ $db_order =~ s/$aggregate_search/actual_time/g;
$aggregate_search = quotemeta($columns->{'percentage_complete'}->{'name'});
$db_order =~ s/$aggregate_search/percentage_complete/g;
+# Now put $db_order into a format that Bugzilla::Search can use.
+# (We create $db_order as a string first because that's the way
+# we did it before Bugzilla::Search took an "order" argument.)
+my @orderstrings = split(',', $db_order);
+
# Generate the basic SQL query that will be used to generate the bug list.
my $search = new Bugzilla::Search('fields' => \@selectnames,
- 'params' => $params);
+ 'params' => $params,
+ 'order' => \@orderstrings);
my $query = $search->getSQL();
-# Extra special disgusting hack: if we are ordering by target_milestone,
-# change it to order by the sortkey of the target_milestone first.
-if ($db_order =~ /bugs.target_milestone/) {
- $db_order =~ s/bugs.target_milestone/ms_order.sortkey,ms_order.value/;
- $query =~ s/\sWHERE\s/ LEFT JOIN milestones ms_order ON ms_order.value = bugs.target_milestone AND ms_order.product_id = bugs.product_id WHERE /;
-}
-
-$query .= " ORDER BY $db_order " if ($order);
-
if ($::FORM{'limit'} && detaint_natural($::FORM{'limit'})) {
$query .= " LIMIT $::FORM{'limit'}";
}