Labyrinth-Demo

Labyrinth Website Management Framework - Demo Website


License
Artistic-2.0

Documentation

Labyrinth-Demo
==============

Documentation overview for the Demo Website of the Labyrinth Website Management
Framework.

Labyrinth began life in 2002, with a small set of plugins to enable various 
features of web site management. This demo website uses the core set of plugins 
to provide an example of a website management system.

These plugins provide the functionality to manipulate core aspects of the data 
used within Labyrinth. Several of these plugins only provide administration 
features.


ADDITIONAL FILES
----------------

In order for your website to work with Labyrinth, some additional files are 
required. This package provides the standard set of files to enable Labyrinth 
and the Core plugins to work with a blank canvas. These files consist of SQL, 
template and configuration files, together with some basic CSS and Javascript 
files.

Install these into the website structure and edit as necessary to implement 
the layout and functionality you require for your purposes.

Please note that included with this distribution are files designed and 
developed by other people. Notable are the following:

   PixelGreen
       Version 1.2

       CSS Layout and Design by Erwin Aligam, release under the Creative
       Commons Attribution 2.5 License -
       http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/

       See http://www.styleshout.com/ for more details.

   TinyMCE
       Version 3.211

       A Javascript WYSIWYG Content Editor by Moxiecode Systems AB, released
       under the GNU Leseer General Public License (LGPL) -
       http://tinymce.moxiecode.com/js/tinymce/jscripts/tiny_mce/license.txt

       See http://tinymce.moxiecode.com/ for more details.


INSTALLATION
------------
For more complete installtion instructions, please see the INSTALL file.

To set up the Demo Website, install via a CPAN client to ensure you install 
all the required prerequisites. Then copy the directory contents under the 
'vhost' directory into your web server directory. For this example the path
to these files and directories is assumed to be '/var/www/demo'. If you wish 
to change this, please update the file paths used in 'cgi-bin/pages.cgi' and
'cgi-bin/config/settings.ini'

If you use Apache, include the configuration snippet contained in the file 
'vhosts.conf', in the appropriate Apache configuration file. Directions for 
other web servers will be included at a later date.

Create a MySQL database called 'demo' and use the base file
'cgi-bin/db/demo-base.sql' as a starting point. If you wish to specify a fixed
user to access the database, you may wish to review the 'grant.sql' file or 
amend the 'settings.ini' as appropriate.

You should now be able to start your Apache instance. Update your hosts file as
necessary to point to your new virtual host.


LABYRINTH DIRECTORY STRUCTURE
-----------------------------

    ./cgi-bin
        /config         - contains top level configuration files
           /requests    - contains despatch tables
        /db                     - database dumps
        /lib
           /Labyrinth   - Labyrinth Core modules
              /Plugin   - Labyrinth Plugin modules
        /templates              - Template Toolkit templates
    ./html
        /cache          - cache where reports are produced
        /css            - website CSS files
        /images         - website image files
        /js                     - website JavaScript files
           /tiny_mce    - Tiny MCE JavaScript application files
    ./toolkit

As mentioned included in the package is the vhost entry from an Apache
configuration file. This file contains the rewrite rules that translate
user friendly URLs to the local CGI call. However, it is not necessary
to have rewrite rules, in the event you are unable to use them, and the
application can quite happily function with full 'cgi-bin/' type paths.

The './cgi-bin/pages.cgi' file is the core startup script, that simply
passes the settings file, and initiates Labyrinth. The 'act' CGI
parameter contains the primary action required. Throughout the duration
of a request, the current action may change several times, with each
referencing the despatch tables to load and run the correct functions
and render the correct templates. Each user has a nominated "realm",
which is the section of the site they are given access to. The realm
despatch table is used to load and run and default functions, and can
thus be used to render different skins and/or layout templates.

The CGI parameters are validated against the
'./cgi-bin/config/parserules.ini' file. The rules are built from these
entries and passed to Data::FormValidator.  Each entry's fields refer
to parameter name, whether mandatory, default value, preprocessing
function, constraint function and finally the regular expression.  If a
constraint is provided the regular expression is ignored. Where the
parameter name looks like ':^LISTED', this is a regular expression
match against the parameter name (where the ':' character is removed).
This enables parameters which have a changeable suffix, can apply the
same constraint or regular expression against each matching parameter's
value.

All SQL statements are called using a Phrasebook Design Pattern. As
such the './cgi-bin/config/phrasebook.ini' file contains all each
phrase and associated SQL as used within the application. To aid
readability SQL can be split onto multiple lines, using the '\'
character as the last entry on a line to continue onto the next.

Templates are built from the given layout, see the appropriate realm
entry in the despatch table, incorporating other templates as required,
including the 'content' template as specified by the last action
command. See the appropriate despatch table to reference the
appropriate content template.

Tiny MCE is used by Labyrinth where appropriate for text area input.
However, this is only activated on the pages where it is appropriate.

The set of scripts within the toolkit directory typically provide ad-
hoc or timed (e.g. via cron) functionality. The scripts are not
intended to be run via the web server, but often provide support
functionality, such as creating static pages or running periodic
cleanup tasks.


DEMO WEBSITE
------------

To see a working example of this distribution, please see the following link:

  <http://demo.missbarbell.co.uk>


ADDITION INFORMATION
--------------------

Although Labyrinth has long been in development, documentation has not been a 
priority. As such much of the documentation you may need to understand how to
use Labyrinth is the code itself. If you have the inclination, documentation 
patches would be very gratefully received.

The Labyrinth website [1] will eventually feature a documentation site, wiki 
and other features which are intended to provide you with the information to 
use and extend Labyrinth as you wish.

  [1] http://labyrinth.missbarbell.co.uk


SEE ALSO
--------

  Labyrinth, Labyrinth-Plugin-Core

  http://labyrinth.missbarbell.co.uk


AUTHOR
------

  Barbie, <barbie@missbarbell.co.uk> for Miss Barbell Productions,
  <http://www.missbarbell.co.uk/>


COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
-------------------

  Copyright (C) 2002-2014 Barbie for Miss Barbell Productions
  All Rights Reserved.

  This distribuion is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
  modify it under the Artistic License 2.0.