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5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
9d6d641d1f Bug 17600: Standardize our EXPORT_OK
On bug 17591 we discovered that there was something weird going on with
the way we export and use subroutines/modules.
This patch tries to standardize our EXPORT to use EXPORT_OK only.

That way we will need to explicitely define the subroutine we want to
use from a module.

This patch is a squashed version of:
Bug 17600: After export.pl
Bug 17600: After perlimport
Bug 17600: Manual changes
Bug 17600: Other manual changes after second perlimports run
Bug 17600: Fix tests

And a lot of other manual changes.

export.pl is a dirty script that can be found on bug 17600.

"perlimport" is:
git clone https://github.com/oalders/App-perlimports.git
cd App-perlimports/
cpanm --installdeps .
export PERL5LIB="$PERL5LIB:/kohadevbox/koha/App-perlimports/lib"
find . \( -name "*.pl" -o -name "*.pm" \) -exec perl App-perlimports/script/perlimports --inplace-edit --no-preserve-unused --filename {} \;

The ideas of this patch are to:
* use EXPORT_OK instead of EXPORT
* perltidy the EXPORT_OK list
* remove '&' before the subroutine names
* remove some uneeded use statements
* explicitely import the subroutines we need within the controllers or
modules

Note that the private subroutines (starting with _) should not be
exported (and not used from outside of the module except from tests).

EXPORT vs EXPORT_OK (from
https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2010/06/perl-exporter-examples/)
"""
Export allows to export the functions and variables of modules to user’s namespace using the standard import method. This way, we don’t need to create the objects for the modules to access it’s members.

@EXPORT and @EXPORT_OK are the two main variables used during export operation.

@EXPORT contains list of symbols (subroutines and variables) of the module to be exported into the caller namespace.

@EXPORT_OK does export of symbols on demand basis.
"""

If this patch caused a conflict with a patch you wrote prior to its
push:
* Make sure you are not reintroducing a "use" statement that has been
removed
* "$subroutine" is not exported by the C4::$MODULE module
means that you need to add the subroutine to the @EXPORT_OK list
* Bareword "$subroutine" not allowed while "strict subs"
means that you didn't imported the subroutine from the module:
  - use $MODULE qw( $subroutine list );
You can also use the fully qualified namespace: C4::$MODULE::$subroutine

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Druart <jonathan.druart@bugs.koha-community.org>
2021-07-16 08:58:47 +02:00
f1f9c6dc74 Bug 26384: Fix executable flags
.pm must not have -x
.t must have -x
.pl must have -x

Test plan:
Apply only the first patch, run the tests and confirm that the failures
make sense
Apply this patch and confirm that the test now returns green

Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Druart <jonathan.druart@bugs.koha-community.org>
2020-09-11 09:56:56 +02:00
64242cabea Bug 14334: Remove AutoCommit from tests
And use a DBIx transaction instead.

Test plan:
prove that the test files modified by this patch are passing

Signed-off-by: Josef Moravec <josef.moravec@gmail.com>

Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>

Signed-off-by: Nick Clemens <nick@bywatersolutions.com>
2018-12-14 13:42:37 +00:00
666cbed5e1 Bug 20144: [sql_modes] Fix GROUP BY clause in GetLetters
This subroutine is wrong and must be rewritten using
Koha::Notice::Templates.
Mainly because the DB structure is bad.
Meanwhile we remove the branchcode from the SELECT to get correct
results, it was not used by callers anyway.

Fix for:
'koha_kohadev.letter.module' isn't in GROUP BY

t/db_dependent/Letters.t

Signed-off-by: Josef Moravec <josef.moravec@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Julian Maurice <julian.maurice@biblibre.com>

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Druart <jonathan.druart@bugs.koha-community.org>
2018-02-13 13:58:54 -03:00
Jonathan Druart
6f599652b1 Bug 13215: The same letter code can be used for several libraries
This patch fixes a major issue introduced by the
commit 5c4fdcf Bug 11742: A letter code should be unique.

The interface should let the possibility to create a default template
letter and some specific ones, with the same letter code (letter.code).

The patches submitted on bug 11742 tried to fix an issue based on a
(very bad) assumption: letter.code should be considered as a primary key and
should be uniq.

This patch reintroduces this behavior.
Note that the interface will block a letter code used in different
module (this is consistent not to have the same letter code used for different
needs).

This patch is absolutely not perfect, it just tries to change as less
change as possible and to use new tested subroutines.

Test plan:
1/ Verify that the problem raised on bug 11742 does not appears anymore.
2/ Verify there are no regression on adding, editing, copying, deleting
letters.
3/ Verify you are allowed to create a default letter template with a letter
code and to reuse for a specific letter (i.e. for a given library).

Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chris@bigballofwax.co.nz>

Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <katrin.fischer.83@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
2014-11-27 11:42:14 -03:00