etiquette/README.md
Ethan Dalool e186653e36 Use shutil.which to discover ffmpeg.
How did I miss such an easy solution for so long??
So glad I did not go the env var route.
2018-03-18 17:03:11 -07:00

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Etiquette
=========
I am currently running a demonstration copy of Etiquette at http://etiquette.voussoir.net where you can browse around. This is not yet permanent.
### What am I looking at
Etiquette is a tag-based file organization system with a web front-end.
Documentation is still a work in progress. In general,
- You must make the `etiquette` package importable by placing it in one of your lib paths because I have not made a setup.py yet. Rather than actually moving the folder I just use filesystem junctions.
- Run `python etiquette_flask_launch.py [port]` to launch the flask server. Port defaults to 5000 if not provided.
- Run `python -i etiquette_repl_launch.py` to launch the Python interpreter with the PhotoDB pre-loaded into a variable called `P`. Try things like `P.new_photo` or `P.digest_directory`.
- Note: Do not `cd` into the frontends folder. Stay wherever you want the photodb to be created, and start the frontend by specifying full file path of the launch file.
### Project stability
You may notice that Etiquette doesn't have a version number anywhere. That's because I don't think it's ready for one. I am using this project to learn and practice, and breaking changes are very common.
### Project structure
Here is a brief overview of the project to help you learn your way around:
- `etiquette`
The core backend package.
- `objects`
Definition of the Etiquette data objects like Photos and Tags.
- `photodb`
Definition of the PhotoDB class and its Mixins.
- `frontends`
Ideally, the backend should be frontend-agnostic. Even though the Flask interface is my primary interest, it should not feel like it must be the only one. Therefore I place it in this folder to indicate that other frontends are possible too. Every folder here is essentially a completely separate project.
- `etiquette_flask`
This folder represents the flask server as somewhat of a black box, in the sense that you can move it around and just run the contained launch file. Subfolders contain the HTML templates, static files, and site code.
- `etiquette_flask`
The package that contains the site's actual API code.
- `etiquette_repl`
Preloads a few variables into the interpreter so you can quickly test functions within the Python REPL itself.
- `utilities`
For other scripts that will be used with etiquette databases, but are not part of the library itself.
### Contributing
If you are interested in helping, please raise an issue before making any pull requests!
### To do list
- Make the wording between "new", "create", "add"; and "remove", "delete" more consistent.
- User account system, permission levels, private pages.
- Improve the "tags on this page" list. Maybe add separate buttons for must/may/forbid on each.
- Some way for the database to re-identify a file that was moved / renamed (lost & found). Maybe file hash of the first few mb is good enough.
- Debate whether the `UserMixin.login` method should accept usernames or I should standardize the usage of IDs only internally.
- Ability to access user photos by user's ID, not just username.
- Should album size be cached on disk?
- Replace columns like area, ratio, bitrate by using expression indices or views (`width * height` etc).
- Add a `Photo.merge` to combine duplicate entries.
- Generate thumbnails for vector files without falling victim to bombs.
- Allow photos to have nonstandard, orderby-able properties like "release year". How?
- Improve the appearance of album page. Too many section headers and the "Create album" interface should allow giving a title immediately.
- When users have '%' or '#', etc. in their username, it is difficult to access their /user/ URL. I would prefer to fix it without simply blacklisting those characters.
- Currently, the Jinja templates are having a tangling influence on the backend objects, because Jinja cannot import my other modules like bytestring, but it can access the methods of the objects I pass into the template. As a result, the objects have excess helper methods. Consider making them into Jinja filters instead. Which is also kind of ugly but will move that pollution out of the backend at least.
- Perhaps instead of actually deleting objects, they should just have a `deleted` flag, to make easy restoration possible. Also consider regrouping the children of restored Groupables if those children haven't already been reassigned somewhere else.
- Add a new table to store permanent history of add/remove of tags on photos, so that accidents or trolling can be reversed.
- Fix album size cache when photo reload metadata and generally improve that validation.
- Better bookmark url validation.
- Create a textbox which gives autocomplete tag names.
- Consider if the "did you commit too early" warning should actually be an exception.
### To do list: User permissions
Here are some thoughts about the kinds of features that need to exist within the permission system. I don't know how I'll actually manage it just yet. Possibly a `permissions` table in the database with `user_id | permission` where `permission` is some reliably-formatted string.
- Preventing logged out users from viewing any page except root and /login.
- Uploading photos (`can_upload`)
- File extension restrictions
- Add / remove tags from photo
- My own photos (`can_tag_own`)
- Explicit individual allow / deny (`can_tag_photo:<photo_id>`)
- General allow / deny (`can_tag`)
- Deleting photos
- etc
- Creating albums
- As children of my own albums
- Add / remove photos from album, edit title / desc.
- My own albums (`can_edit_album_own`)
- Explicit (`can_edit_album:<album_id>`)
- General (`can_edit_album`)
- Deleting albums
- etc
- Creating tags (`can_create_tag`)
- Deleting tags (`can_delete_tag`)
- Only those that I have created (`can_delete_tag_own`)
- Any time vs. only if they are not in use (`can_delete_tag_in_use`)
### Changelog
- **[addition]** A new feature was added.
- **[bugfix]** Incorrect behavior was fixed.
- **[change]** An existing feature was slightly modified or parameters were renamed.
- **[cleanup]** Code was improved, comments were added, or other changes with minor impact on the interface.
- **[removal]** An old feature was removed.
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