Bareword file handle opened at line 558, column 17. See pages 202,204 of PBP. (Severity: 5)
Two-argument "open" used at line 558, column 17. See page 207 of PBP. (Severity: 5)
http://bugs.koha-community.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6679
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Druart <jonathan.druart@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Vujicic <aleksa@catalyst.net.nz>
Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>
Amended to replace some copy-and-paste comments only with consent of MJR.
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Step to reproduce :
- export default framework as SQL
- create new framework
- Import the exported SQL file into this new framework.
Go to default framework :
It disappeared.
If some libraries want to share default frameworks, then it is a major bug.
This patch fixes the test in order to cope with 0 character framework name.
Signed-off-by: François Charbonnier <francois.charbonnier@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Function _export_table_csv modified to remove CR/LF in the data
from the database to built a correct csv file.
Function _import_table_csv modified to deal with CR/LF in the data
field. When a line is found with an unproper end (a data field has not
end quote), it's concatenated to a temporary buffer until the next
line ends ok and then it's proccessed.
Signed-off-by: Nicole C. Engard <nengard@bywatersolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Walls <ian.walls@bywatersolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
Module to Import/Export a Framework structure to CSV/Excel-xml/ODS/SQL in Intranet Administration - MARC Frameworks section.
There are two new links: "Export" to export to a format; and "Import" to import from a file.
The data exported/imported is the one stored in the MySQL tables marc_tag_structure, marc_subfield_structure.
Exported works as follows:
1) CSV: As this format only allows one worksheet, the data from the tables is splitted with a row with #-# cells or with the
names of the fields of the next MySQL table. Each row has as much cells as fields has the MySQL table. The first row contains the
field names, the remaining holds the data.
2) Excel: Excel xml 2003 format. Each MySQL table has its own worksheet in the spreadsheet. Rows and cells data as CSV.
3) ODS: OpenDocument Spreadsheet compressed format, creates a temporary directory to generate the files needed to create the zip file.
Each MySQL table has its own worksheet in the spreadsheet. Rows and cells data as CSV.
4) SQL: Text file, the first row for each table is a delete and the remaining are inserts.
Importing reads the rows from the spreadsheet/text-file as follows:
1) CSV: Each row inserts or updates the associated MySQL table for this framework. At the end of the importing for a MySQL table, deletes the rows in the database that don't possess a correspondence with the spreadsheet.
2) Excel: Imports each worksheet to the associated MySQL table. Works as the CSV for each worksheet.
3) ODS: Creates a temporary directory to decompress and read the content.xml. This file has the data needed to import.
Works as the CSV for each worksheet.
4) Executes the SQL file.
If the file imported has a different frameworkcode that the framework importing, the framecode is changed along the process.
The Csv format will be the default.
It uses perl module Archive::Zip or zip/unzip system command to process ODS files.
To parse the sql files when importing it uses SQL::Statement or homemade parsing.
Signed-off-by: Nicole C. Engard <nengard@bywatersolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>