ed0ff59152
* Extends login screen to pass along #hash * Adds JSONP support to C4::Service * Extends humanmsg to allow per-message classes * Adds proper charset to results of svc/bib Test plan: 1. C4/Auth.pm and .../intranet/.../auth.tt: verify that login/usage works as expected, despite the change to pass on the fragment (...#blah) from the URL. 2. C4/Service.pm and humanmsg.js: verify that editing system preferences (the main user of these modules) works correctly despite updates. 3. svc/bib: verify that records can be correctly downloaded with the change of character set. This can be done in a Firebug/Chrome Devtools console by running `$.get('/cgi-bin/koha/svc/bib/1')` and inspecting the results (possibly replacing 1 with a different valid biblionumber). Signed-off-by: Nick Clemens <nick@quecheelibrary.org> Signed-off-by: Katrin Fischer <katrin.fischer.83@web.de> Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@theke.io>
276 lines
7.5 KiB
Perl
276 lines
7.5 KiB
Perl
package C4::Service;
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#
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# Copyright 2008 LibLime
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#
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# This file is part of Koha.
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#
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# Koha is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# Koha is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with Koha; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses>.
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=head1 NAME
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C4::Service - functions for JSON webservices.
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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my ( $query, $response) = C4::Service->init( { circulate => 1 } );
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my ( $borrowernumber) = C4::Service->require_params( 'borrowernumber' );
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C4::Service->return_error( 'internal', 'Frobnication failed', frobnicator => 'foo' );
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$response->param( frobnicated => 'You' );
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C4::Service->return_success( $response );
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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This module packages several useful functions for JSON webservices.
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=cut
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use strict;
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use warnings;
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use CGI qw ( -utf8 );
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use C4::Auth qw( check_api_auth );
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use C4::Output qw( :ajax );
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use C4::Output::JSONStream;
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use JSON;
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our $debug;
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BEGIN {
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$debug = $ENV{DEBUG} || 0;
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}
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our ( $query, $cookie );
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sub _output {
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my ( $response, $status ) = @_;
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binmode STDOUT, ':encoding(UTF-8)';
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if ( $query->param( 'callback' ) ) {
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output_with_http_headers $query, $cookie, $query->param( 'callback' ) . '(' . $response->output . ');', 'js';
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} else {
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output_with_http_headers $query, $cookie, $response->output, 'json', $status;
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}
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}
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=head1 METHODS
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=head2 init
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our ( $query, $response ) = C4::Service->init( %needed_flags );
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Initialize the service and check for the permissions in C<%needed_flags>.
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Also, check that the user is authorized and has a current session, and return an
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'auth' error if not.
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init() returns a C<CGI> object and a C<C4::Output::JSONStream>. The latter can
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be used for both flat scripts and those that use dispatch(), and should be
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passed to C<return_success()>.
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=cut
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sub init {
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my ( $class, %needed_flags ) = @_;
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our $query = new CGI;
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my ( $status, $cookie_, $sessionID ) = check_api_auth( $query, \%needed_flags );
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our $cookie = $cookie_; # I have no desire to offend the Perl scoping gods
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$class->return_error( 'auth', $status ) if ( $status ne 'ok' );
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return ( $query, new C4::Output::JSONStream );
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}
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=head2 return_error
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C4::Service->return_error( $type, $error, %flags );
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Exit the script with HTTP status 400, and return a JSON error object.
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C<$type> should be a short, lower case code for the generic type of error (such
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as 'auth' or 'input').
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C<$error> should be a more specific code giving information on the error. If
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multiple errors of the same type occurred, they should be joined by '|'; i.e.,
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'expired|different_ip'. Information in C<$error> does not need to be
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human-readable, as its formatting should be handled by the client.
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Any additional information to be given in the response should be passed as
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param => value pairs.
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=cut
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sub return_error {
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my ( $class, $type, $error, %flags ) = @_;
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my $response = new C4::Output::JSONStream;
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$response->param( message => $error ) if ( $error );
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$response->param( type => $type, %flags );
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_output( $response, '400 Bad Request' );
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exit;
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}
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=head2 return_multi
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C4::Service->return_multi( \@responses, %flags );
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return_multi is similar to return_success or return_error, but allows you to
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return different statuses for several requests sent at once (using HTTP status
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"207 Multi-Status", much like WebDAV). The toplevel hashref (turned into the
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JSON response) looks something like this:
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{ multi => JSON::true, responses => \@responses, %flags }
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Each element of @responses should be either a plain hashref or an arrayref. If
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it is a hashref, it is sent to the browser as-is. If it is an arrayref, it is
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assumed to be in the same form as the arguments to return_error, and is turned
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into an error structure.
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All key-value pairs %flags are, as stated above, put into the returned JSON
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structure verbatim.
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=cut
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sub return_multi {
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my ( $class, $responses, @flags ) = @_;
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my $response = new C4::Output::JSONStream;
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if ( !@$responses ) {
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$class->return_success( $response );
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} else {
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my @responses_formatted;
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foreach my $response ( @$responses ) {
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if ( ref( $response ) eq 'ARRAY' ) {
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my ($type, $error, @error_flags) = @$response;
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push @responses_formatted, { is_error => JSON::true, type => $type, message => $error, @error_flags };
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} else {
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push @responses_formatted, $response;
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}
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}
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$response->param( 'multi' => JSON::true, responses => \@responses_formatted, @flags );
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_output( $response, '207 Multi-Status' );
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}
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exit;
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}
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=head2 return_success
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C4::Service->return_success( $response );
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Print out the information in the C<C4::Output::JSONStream> C<$response>, then
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exit with HTTP status 200.
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=cut
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sub return_success {
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my ( $class, $response ) = @_;
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_output( $response );
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}
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=head2 require_params
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my @values = C4::Service->require_params( @params );
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Check that each of of the parameters specified in @params was sent in the
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request, then return their values in that order.
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If a required parameter is not found, send a 'param' error to the browser.
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=cut
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sub require_params {
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my ( $class, @params ) = @_;
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my @values;
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for my $param ( @params ) {
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$class->return_error( 'params', "Missing '$param'" ) if ( !defined( $query->param( $param ) ) );
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push @values, $query->param( $param );
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}
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return @values;
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}
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=head2 dispatch
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C4::Service->dispatch(
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[ $path_regex, \@required_params, \&handler ],
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...
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);
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dispatch takes several array-refs, each one describing a 'route', to use the
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Rails terminology.
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$path_regex should be a string in regex-form, describing which methods and
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paths this route handles. Each route is tested in order, from the top down, so
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put more specific handlers first. Also, the regex is tested on the request
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method, plus the path. For instance, you might use the route [ 'POST /', ... ]
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to handle POST requests to your service.
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Each named parameter in @required_params is tested for to make sure the route
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matches, but does not raise an error if one is missing; it simply tests the next
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route. If you would prefer to raise an error, instead use
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C<C4::Service->require_params> inside your handler.
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\&handler is called with each matched group in $path_regex in its arguments. For
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example, if your service is accessed at the path /blah/123, and you call
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C<dispatch> with the route [ 'GET /blah/(\\d+)', ... ], your handler will be called
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with the argument '123'.
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=cut
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sub dispatch {
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my $class = shift;
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my $path_info = $query->path_info || '/';
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ROUTE: foreach my $route ( @_ ) {
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my ( $path, $params, $handler ) = @$route;
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next unless ( my @match = ( ($query->request_method . ' ' . $path_info) =~ m,^$path$, ) );
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for my $param ( @$params ) {
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next ROUTE if ( !defined( $query->param ( $param ) ) );
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}
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$debug and warn "Using $path";
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$handler->( @match );
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return;
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}
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$class->return_error( 'no_handler', '' );
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}
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1;
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__END__
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=head1 AUTHORS
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Koha Development Team
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Jesse Weaver <jesse.weaver@liblime.com>
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