NAME App::Dochazka::REST - Dochazka REST server VERSION Version 0.090 Development status Dochazka is currently a Work In Progress (WIP). Do not expect it to do anything useful. SYNOPSIS This is the top-level module of the Dochazka REST server. use App::CELL qw( $CELL $log $meta $site ); use App::Dochazka::REST qw( $REST ); use Carp; my $status = $REST->init( sitedir => '/etc/dochazka' ); croak( $status->text ) unless $status->ok; Read on for documentation. DESCRIPTION This is `App::Dochazka::REST', the Perl module that implements the REST interface, data model, and underlying database of Dochazka, the open-source Attendance/Time Tracking (ATT) system. Dochazka as a whole aims to be a convenient, open-source ATT solution. Its reference implementation runs on the Linux platform. Dochazka architecture There is more to Dochazka than `App::Dochazka::REST', of course. Dochazka REST is the "server component" of Dochazka, consisting of a Plack/PSGI web server (implemented using Web::Machine) and a data model. Once `App::Dochazka::REST' is installed, configured, and running, a client will be need in order to actually use Dochazka. Though no client yet exists, two are planned: a command-line interface (App::Dochazka::CLI) and a web front-end (App::Dochazka::WebGUI). Stand-alone report generators and other utilities that may or may not ever be implemented can also be thought of as clients. REST INTERFACE App::Dochazka::REST presents a *REST* interface to potential clients. In practice, this means that communications between client and server use the HTTP(S) protocol. The idea is that the client will send HTTP(S) requests (usually `GET' and `POST') to a well-known hostname and port where an App::Dochazka::REST (server) instance is listening. The server processes incoming HTTP requests and sends back HTTP responses. Simpler requests can be made using the GET method with the details of the request specified in the URL itself (e.g., http://dochazka.site/employee/Dolejsi). More complex requests need to be encoded in JSON and handed to the server by the POST method. If the server generates a response body, it will be in JSON unless the client specifically asks for HTML. How requests are handled When a request comes in, it is subjected to a number of tests according to the HTTP Activity Diagram. Request syntax Request syntax is defined and documented in App::Dochazka::REST::Dispatch. DATA MODEL This section describes the `App::Dochazka::REST' data model. Conceptually, Dochazka data can be seen to exist in the following classes of objects: * Policy (parameters set when database is first created) * Employee (an individual employee) * Privhistory (history of changes in an employee's privilege level) * Schedule (a schedule) * Schedhistory (history of changes in an employee's schedule) * Activities (what kinds of work are recognized) * Intervals ("work", "attendance", and/or "time tracked") * Locks (determining whether a reporting period is locked or not) These classes are described in the following sections. Policy Dochazka is configurable in a number of ways. Some configuration parameters are set once at installation time and, once set, can never be changed -- these are referred to as "site policy" parameters. Others, referred to as "site configuration parameters" or "site params", are set in configuration files such as `Dochazka_SiteConfig.pm' (see SITE CONFIGURATION) and can be changed more-or-less at will. The key difference between site policy and site configuration is that site policy parameters cannot be changed, because changing them would compromise the referential integrity of the underlying database. Site policy parameters are set at installation time and are stored, as a single JSON string, in the `SitePolicy' table. This table is rendered effectively immutable by a trigger. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Policy. Employee Dochazka is an Attendance and Time Tracking application. To simplify the matter, "Attendance and Time" can be replaced by the word "Work". We could also call Dochazka a "Work Tracking" application. Because "work" is usually done by "employees", all users of Dochazka are referred to as "employees" regardless of their actual legal status. You could even say that "employee" is the Dochazka term for "user". Employees are distinguished by an internal employee ID number (EID), which is assigned by Dochazka itself when the employee record is created. Other than the EID, Dochazka need not record any other employee identification data. That said, Dochazka has three optional employee identification fields (full name, nick, email address), which some sites may wish to use, but these can be left blank if needed or desired by the site. Dochazka does not verify the contents of these fields. Dochazka doesn't care about the employee's identification information for two principal reasons: first, "Dochazka is not an address book" (there are other, better systems -- such as LDAP -- for that); and second, privacy. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Employee. Privhistory Dochazka has four privilege levels: `admin', `active', `inactive', and `passerby': * `admin' -- employee can view, modify, and place/remove locks on her own attendance data as well as that of other employees; she can also administer employee accounts and set privilege levels of other employees * `active' -- employee can view her own profile, attendance data, modify her own unlocked attendance data, and place locks on her attendance data * `inactive' -- employee can view her own profile and attendance data * `passerby' -- employee can view her own profile Dochazka's `privhistory' object is used to track changes in an employee's privilege level over time. Each time an employee's privilege level changes, a Dochazka administrator (i.e., an employee whose current privilege level is 'admin'), a record is inserted into the database (in the `privhistory' table). Ordinary employees (i.e. those whose current privilege level is 'active') can read their own privhistory. Thus, with Dochazka it is possible not only to determine not only an employee's current privilege level, but also to view "privilege histories" and to determine employees' privilege levels for any date (timestamp) in the past. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Privhistory and When history changes take effect. Schedule In addition to actual attendance data, Dochazka sites may need to store schedules. Dochazka defines the term "schedule" as a series of non-overlapping "time intervals" (or "timestamp ranges" in PostgreSQL terminology) falling within a single week. These time intervals express the times when the employee is "expected" or "supposed" to work (or be "at work") during the scheduling period. Example: employee "Barb" is on a weekly schedule. That means her scheduling period is "weekly" and her schedule is an array of non-overlapping time intervals, all falling within a single week. In its current form, Dochazka is only capable of handling weekly schedules only. Some sites, such as hospitals, nuclear power plants, fire departments, and the like, might have employees on more complicated schedules such as "one week on, one week off", alternating day and night shifts, "on call" duty, etc. Dochazka can still be used to track attendance of such employees, but if their work schedule cannot be expressed as a series of non-overlapping time intervals contained within a contiguous 168-hour period (i.e. one week), then their Dochazka schedule should be set to NULL. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Schedule. Schedhistory The `schedhistory' table contains a historical record of changes in the employee's schedule. This makes it possible to determine an employee's schedule for any date (timestamp) in the past, as well as (crucially) the employee's current schedule. Every time an employee's schedule is to change, a Dochazka administrator must insert a record into this table. (Employees who are not administrators can only read their own history; they do not have write privileges.) For more information on privileges, see AUTHORIZATION. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Schedhistory. Activity While on the job, employees "work" -- i.e., they engage in various activities that are tracked using Dochazka. The `activities' table contains definitions of all the possible activities that may be entered in the `intervals' table. The initial set of activities is defined in the site install configuration (`DOCHAZKA_ACTIVITY_DEFINITIONS') and enters the database at installation time. Additional activities can be added later (by administrators), but activities can be deleted only if no intervals refer to them. Each activity has a code, or short name (e.g., "WORK") -- which is the primary way of referring to the activity -- as well as an optional long description. Activity codes must be all upper-case. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Activity. Interval Intervals are the heart of Dochazka's attendance data. For Dochazka, an interval is an amount of time that an employee spends doing an activity. In the database, intervals are represented using the `tsrange' range operator introduced in PostgreSQL 9.2. Optionally, an interval can have a `long_desc' (employee's description of what she did during the interval) and a `remark' (admin remark). For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Interval. Lock In Dochazka, a "lock" is a record in the "locks" table specifying that a particular user's attendance data (i.e. activity intervals) for a given period (tsrange) cannot be changed. That means, for intervals in the locked tsrange: * existing intervals cannot be updated or deleted * no new intervals can be inserted Employees can create locks (i.e., insert records into the locks table) on their own EID, but they cannot delete or update those locks (or any others). Administrators can insert, update, or delete locks at will. How the lock is used will differ from site to site, and some sites may not even use locking at all. The typical use case would be to lock all the employee's attendance data within the given period as part of pre-payroll processing. For example, the Dochazka client application may be set up to enable reports to be generated only on fully locked periods. "Fully locked" means either that a single lock record has been inserted covering the entire period, or that the entire period is covered by multiple locks. Any attempts (even by administrators) to enter activity intervals that intersect an existing lock will result in an error. Clients can of course make it easy for the employee to lock entire blocks of time (weeks, months, years . . .) at once, if that is deemed expedient. For details, see App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Lock. CAVEATS Weekly schedules only Unfortunately, the weekly scheduling period is hard-coded at this time. Dochazka does not care what dates are used to define the intervals -- only that they fall within a contiguous 168-hour period. Consider the following contrived example. If the scheduling intervals for EID 1 were defined like this: "[1964-12-30 22:05, 1964-12-31 04:35)" "[1964-12-31 23:15, 1965-01-01 03:10)" for Dochazka that would mean that the employee with EID 1 has a weekly schedule of "WED/22:05-THU/04:35" and "THU/23:15-FRI/03:10", because the dates in the ranges fall on a Wednesday (1964-12-30), a Thursday (1964-12-31), and a Friday (1964-01-01), respectively. When history changes take effect The `effective' field of the `privhistory' and `schedhistory' tables contains the effective date/time of the history change. This field takes a timestamp, and a trigger ensures that the value is evenly divisible by five minutes (by rounding). In other words, '1964-06-13 14:45' is a valid `effective' timestamp, while '2014-01-01 00:00:01' will be rounded to '2014-01-01 00:00'. INSTALLATION Installation is the process of creating (setting up, bootstrapping) a new Dochazka instance, or "site" in Dochazka terminology. It entails the following steps: * Server preparation Dochazka REST needs hardware (either physical or virtualized) to run on. The hardware will need to have a network connection, etc. Obviously, this step is entirely beyond the scope of this document. * Software installation Once the hardware is ready, the Dochazka REST software and all its dependencies are installed on it. This could be accomplished by downloading and unpacking the tarball (or running `git clone') and following the installation instructions, or, more expediently, by installing a packaged version of Dochazka REST if one is available (see https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/home:smithfarm/perl-App-Dochazka -REST). * PostgreSQL setup -- One of Dochazka REST's principal dependencies is PostgreSQL server (version 9.2 or higher). This needs to be installed (should happen automatically when using the packaged version of App::Dochazka::REST). Steps to enable it: # chkconfig postgresql on # systemctl start postgresql.service # su - postgres $ psql postgres postgres-# ALTER ROLE postgres WITH PASSWORD 'mypass'; ALTER ROLE At this point, we exit `psql' and, still as the user `postgres', we edit `pg_hba.conf'. Using our favorite editor, we change the METHOD entry for `local' so it looks like this: # TYPE DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD local all all password Then, as root, we restart the postgresql service: # systemctl restart postgresql.service * Site configuration -- Before the Dochazka REST database can be initialized, we will need to tell App::Dochazka::REST about the PostgreSQL superuser password that we set in the previous step. First, create a sitedir: # mkdir /etc/dochazka And a file therein: # cat << EOF > /etc/dochazka/Dochazka_SiteConfig.pm set( 'DBINIT_CONNECT_AUTH', 'mypass' ); EOF # (NOTE: Strictly speaking, this sitedir setup is only needed for database initialization. During normal operation, App::Dochazka::REST connects to the database using the default user `dochazka' and password `dochazka'. These are taken from the site parameters `DOCHAZKA_DBUSER' and `DOCHAZKA_DBPASS'.) * Syslog setup -- It is much easier to administer a Dochazka instance if `syslog' is running and configured properly to place Dochazka's log messages into a separate file in a known location. In the future, App::Dochazka::REST might provide a `syslog_test' script to help the administrator complete this step. * Database initialization -- In the future, there might be a nifty `dochazka-dbinit' script to make this process less painful, but for now the easiest way to initialize the database is to clone the git repo from SourceForge and run the test suite: # cd ~/src # git clone git://git.code.sf.net/p/dochazka/code dochazka ... # cd dochazka # perl Build.PL # ./Build test Assuming the previous steps were completed correctly, all the tests should complete without errors. * Service start -- The last step is to start the Dochazka REST service. Maybe, in the future, this will be possible using a command like `systemctl start dochazka.service'. Right now, though, an executable is run, as root, manually from the bash prompt: # dochazka-rest --host [HOST] --port 80 --access-log /var/log/dochazka-rest.log or, as any user: $ dochazka-rest * Take it for a spin Point your browser to the hostname you entered in the previous step, or to http://0:5000/ if you didn't enter a hostname. The above procedure only includes the most basic steps. Sites with reverse proxies, firewalls, load balancers, connection pools, etc. will need to set those up, as well. STARTING THE SERVER Once App::Dochazka::REST is installed, the server is started like this: $ dochazka-rest AUTHENTICATION Since employees do not access the database directly, but only via the `App::Dochazka::REST' web server, the web server needs to tie all incoming requests to an EID. Current implementation At the moment, this is accomplished via Web::Machine using HTTP Basic Authentication with a single hardcoded username/password combination `demo/demo'. This allows us to use, e.g., `curl' like this: $ curl http://demo:demo@0:5000/ Possible future implementation This is done when the session is established (see Session management). In the site configuration, the administrator associates an LDAP field with either EID or nick. When an employee initiates a session by contacting the server, `App::Dochazka::REST' first looks up the employee in the LDAP database and determines her EID, either directly or via the employee's nick. If the EID is valid, the password entered by the employee is checked against the password stored in the LDAP database. Alternatively, `App::Dochazka::REST' can be configured to authenticate employees against passwords stored in the Dochazka database. When the REST server registers an incoming request, it first checks to see if it is associated with an active session. If it is, the request is processed. If it is not, the incoming request is authenticated. Authentication consists of: * a check against Dochazka's own list (database) of employees * an optional, additional check against an LDAP database Depending on how the REST server is configured, one of these will include a password check. The server will send the client a session key, etc. REPORTING Reporting is a core functionality of Dochazka: for most sites, the entire point of keeping attendance records is to generate reports, at regular (or irregular) intervals, based on those records. One obvious use case for such reports is payroll. That said, the REST server and its underlying database are more-or-less "reporting neutral". In other words, care was taken to make them as general as possible, to enable Dochazka to be useful in many different site and reporting scenarios. Thus, in Dochazka a report generator is always implemented either a separate client or as part of a client. Never as part of the server. SITE CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS Dochazka REST recognizes the following site configuration parameters: ... EXPORTS This module provides the following exports: * `$REST' App::Dochazka::REST singleton object METHODS AND ROUTINES init Load site configuration, set up logging, and connect to the database. init_no_db Load site configuration and set up logging. Intended for use from the `init' method as well as from App::Dochazka::REST unit tests that need to connect to the pristine database using `connect_db_pristine'. Takes an optional PARAMHASH which is passed to `$CELL->load'. The App::Dochazka::REST distro sharedir is loaded as the first sitedir, before any sitedir specified in the PARAMHASH is loaded. Call examples: my $status = $REST->init_no_db; my $status = $REST->init_no_db( verbose => 1 ); my $status = $REST->init_no_db( sitedir => '/etc/fooapp' ); connect_db_pristine Connect to a pristine database. This function should be used only for newly created databases. Takes a PARAMHASH with 'dbname', 'dbuser', and 'dbpass'. For username and password, DBINIT_CONNECT_USER and DBINIT_CONNECT_AUTH are used. connect_db Connect to a pre-initialized database and initialize site params. This is the function that should be used in production. Takes database name. For username and password, DOCHAZKA_DBUSER and DOCHAZKA_DBPASS are used. reset_db Drop and re-create a Dochazka database. Takes database name. Do not call when connected to an existing database. Be very, _very_, _VERY_ careful when calling this function. create_tables Execute all the SQL statements contained in DBINIT_CREATE param eid_of_root Instance method. Returns EID of the 'root' employee. GLOSSARY OF TERMS In Dochazka, some commonly-used terms have special meanings: * employee -- Regardless of whether they are employees in reality, for the purposes of Dochazka employees are the folks whose attendance/time is being tracked. Employees are expected to interact with Dochazka using the following functions and commands. * administrator -- In Dochazka, administrators are employees with special powers. Certain REST/CLI functions are available only to administrators. * CLI client -- CLI stands for Command-Line Interface. The CLI client is the Perl script that is run when an employee types `dochazka' at the bash prompt. * REST server -- REST stands for ... . The REST server is a collection of Perl modules running on a server at the site. * site -- In a general sense, the "site" is the company, organization, or place that has implemented (installed, configured) Dochazka for attendance/time tracking. In a technical sense, a site is a specific instance of the Dochazka REST server that CLI clients connect to. AUTHOR Nathan Cutler, `' BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to `bug-dochazka-rest at rt.cpan.org', or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=App-Dochazka-REST. The author will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as he makes changes. SUPPORT The full documentation comes with the distro, and can be comfortable perused at metacpan.org: https://metacpan.org/pod/App::Dochazka::REST You can also read the documentation for individual modules using the perldoc command, e.g.: perldoc App::Dochazka::REST perldoc App::Dochazka::REST::Model::Activity Other resources: * RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here) http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=App-Dochazka-REST * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation http://annocpan.org/dist/App-Dochazka-REST LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2014, SUSE LLC All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. 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