Anatomy of a request
This is a description of how EPrints and Apache handle an incoming request. Understanding this flow helps understand how an Access Control layer can be added to the system.
I will assume that you know how to locate a perl module file from the module name (e.g. EPrints::Apache::Rewrite
will probably be ~/perl_lib/EPrints/Apache/Rewrite.pm
, although this is not always the case!).
Below are relevant parts of config files and perl modules that are used with when processing a request:
- Apache core config
~/cfg/apache.conf
PerlSwitches -I/home/eprints/eprints-3.3.12/perl_lib
PerlModule EPrints
PerlPostConfigHandler +EPrints::post_config_handler
The post_config_handler does some sanity checks on the EPrints setup (e.g. is Apache listening to the ports that the repositories are configured to work under) See: http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/user/handlers/server.html#C_PerlPostConfigHandler_ for more info about the post_config_handler
- Apache repository config
~/cfg/apache/ARCHIVEID.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
...
PerlTransHandler +EPrints::Apache::Rewrite
</VirtualHost>
This leads us to the backbone of EPrints - the Rewrite module - where URL_REWRITE_* triggers are called; content negotiation can happen, as well as many other wonderous things!
EPrints::Apache::Rewrite
module
'TODO:
- Explain flow of Rewrite
- triggers
- cgi
- content negotiation
- CRUD
- ???
- permit on DataObj
- can_request_view / can_user_view
- summary pages (content neg/ URL rewrite)
- DOI - 5 metadata elements
- 40x handling
Access Control Layer | ||