Signed-off-by: Chris Nighswonger <cnighswonger@foundations.edu>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <katrin.fischer@bsz-bw.de>
http://bugs.koha-community.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9987
Signed-off-by: Kyle M Hall <kyle@bywatersolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
The issue: If you try to check in an item with a non existent barcode,
the application will exploded with a software error:
"Can't bless non-reference at .../ItemType.pm Line 64".
It's caused by:
commit 7431f8cfe2
Bug 11944: Fix encoding issue in C4::ItemType
and the following change:
@@ -105,9 +104,6 @@ sub get {
my $data = $dbh->selectrow_hashref(
"SELECT * FROM itemtypes WHERE itemtype = ?", undef, $itemtype
);
- if ( $data->{description} ) {
- $data->{description} = Encode::encode('UTF-8', $data->{description});
- }
because of the following:
my $s;
$s->{foo} = "bar" if $s->{foo};
use Data::Dumper;warn Dumper $s;
=> {} # not undef
So later,
bless $opts => $class;
will fail because $opts is undef and was not (i.e. {}) before.
More explicit test plan:
1) Log in to staff client
2) Circulation -> Check in
3) Type a non-existent barcode into 'Enter item barcode:' textbox
4) Click 'Submit'
-- Should receive nasty error.
5) apply patch
6) repeat steps 2-4
-- Should be told 'No item with barcode: {what you typed}'
7) prove -v t/ItemType.t
-- All tests should run successfully.
7) run koha qa test tools
Note: Having tried to create and use an itemtype '0', this only
demonstrates a lack of validation on the itemtype creation
screen. Unable to use it without tweaking back end.
That is beyond the scope of this bug.
Note for QA: C4::ItemType->get is only uses in circ/return.pl. So even
if the behavior is changed, it should not introduce any regression
somewhere else.
Signed-off-by: Josef Moravec <josef.moravec@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
Works as expected. Fixes the problem and no regressions found.
It even has regression tests :-D
Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <katrin.fischer.83@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
There is no need to encode strings coming from DB.
To reproduce:
go on admin/item_circulation_alerts.pl
The headers contain bad encoded characters.
Signed-off-by: Dobrica Pavlinusic <dpavlin@rot13.org>
Signed-off-by: Martin Renvoize <martin.renvoize@ptfs-europe.com>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
See the wiki page for the explanation.
Signed-off-by: Paola Rossi <paola.rossi@cineca.it>
Signed-off-by: Bernardo Gonzalez Kriegel <bgkriegel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dobrica Pavlinusic <dpavlin@rot13.org>
Signed-off-by: Martin Renvoize <martin.renvoize@ptfs-europe.com>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
This patch adds a new column to item types. Text in this column is
displayed as a warning when an item of the given type is checked in.
The type of message can also be chosen, affecting how the message is
displayed.
Use case: Items that are on inter-library loan can have a separate
item type, and when items of this type are checked in a message
saying something like "ILL! Remember to return it to the owning
library!" can be displayed.
To test:
- Apply the patch
- Go to Home > Administration > Item types administration
- Check that there is a new column, called "Check in message"
- Edit an item type and add a check in message
- Check that the check in message you added is displayed in the table
- Check in an item with an item type that has a check in message
- Check that the message is displayed
- Repeat the steps above, but select "Alert" instead of the default
"Message" as the "Check in message type". Check that the message
is displayed in a yellow alert box, not a blue message box.
- Check in an item with an item type that does *not* have a check
in message, and make sure no false messages are displayed
- Create a new item type from scratch and check that it works
the way it is supposed to
- Run the tests in t/ItemType.t, which are updated by this patch
This patch also removes backticks around column names in the
itemtypes table in installer/data/mysql/kohastructure.sql
UPDATE 2013-07-22
- Rebased on current master (no changes)
- Added "AFTER summary" to the SQL statement in updatedatabase.pl
- Added another placeholder on line 170 of admin/itemtypes.pl
Thanks Katrin!
UPDATE 2013-07-29
- Make this message independent of all other messages - thanks Owen!
- Make it possible to choose the type of message ("alert" or
"message")
Sponsored-by: Kultur i Halland - Regionbibliotek
Signed-off-by: Owen Leonard <oleonard@myacpl.org>
Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <Katrin.Fischer.83@web.de>
Fixed some tabs to make the QA script happy.
All old and new tests pass.
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmc@esilibrary.com>
In current implementation (mostly commented out in this patch)
uses heuristic to guess which strings need decoding from utf-8
to binary representation and doesn't support utf-8 characters
in templates and has problems with utf-8 data from database.
With this changes, Koha perl code always uses utf-8 encoding
correctly. All incomming data from database is allready
correctly marked as utf-8, and decoding of utf8 is required
only from Zebra and XSLT transfers which don't set utf-8 flag
correctly.
For output, standard perl :encoding(utf8) handler is used
so it also removes various "wide character" warnings as side-effect.
Test scenario:
1. make sure that you have utf-8 characters in your biblio
records, patrons, categories etc.
2. try to search records on intranet and opac which contain
utf-8 characters
3. install language which has utf-8 characters, e.g. uk-UA
dpavlin@koha-dev:/srv/koha/misc/translator(bug_6554) $
PERL5LIB=/srv/koha/ perl translate install uk-UA
4. switch language to uk-UA and verify that templates
display correctly
5. test search and Z39.50 search and verify that caracters
are correct
Signed-off-by: Owen Leonard <oleonard@myacpl.org>
I followed the test plan, adding utf-8 characters to library names,
patron categories, titles, and authorized values. I tried the uk-UA
translation and everything looked good.
When performing Z39.50 searches for titles containing utf-8 characters I
got results which were still occasionally contaminated with dummy
characters [?] but I assume this is Z39.50's fault not the patch's.
Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>
Signed-off-by: Bernardo Gonzalez Kriegel <bgkriegel@gmail.com>
Already signed, add mine.
Signed-off-by: Jared Camins-Esakov <jcamins@cpbibliography.com>
In several places, C4::ItemType module is used to retrieve item types
and their description. If the description text contains non-ASCII
characters, those characters are not properly displayed.
This bug can be seen in:
- 4xx plugin of a UNIMARC DB
- Home > Admin > Item circulation alerts
- others?...
Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <Katrin.Fischer.83@web.de>
- Fixes display probems in circulation alerts and 4xx UNIMARC plugin
- display in other places looks ok with and without patch
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
- C4::Letters:EnqueueLetter() is aware of new fields in message_queue table
- C4::Circulation::SendCirculationAlert() actually works
- C4::Category cleanup
- C4::ItemType cleanup
- C4::Message is a new module.
It presents yet another way to interact with the message_queue.
You can now take messages that have already been queued and modify
their contents before they're sent out.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Sweeney <daniel.sweeney@liblime.com>
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <galen.charlton@liblime.com>
* C4::Category
- patron categories as objects
- an all() method to return all the categories as a list
* C4::ItemType
- itemtypes as objects
- an all() method to return all the item types as a list
* C4::ItemCirculationAlertPreference
- wrapper around the item_circulation_alert_preference table
- create() and delete() methods for easy manipulation of the preferences
- I regret giving it such a long name.
- The item_type column should've been named itemtype to make it
more similar to pre-existing tables. Oh well.
(C4::Category and C4::ItemType were made so that I wouldn't have to
write SQL inside my CGI scripts.
Their main purpose is to provide an easy way to get a list of
patron categories and item types.
Do not be fooled by the amount of POD.
There's actually very little code in these modules.)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Sweeney <daniel.sweeney@liblime.com>
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <galen.charlton@liblime.com>