Site Manager Developer Manual / Version 2110
Table Of Contents
The Site Manager is configured with XML files. It is possible to define
special configuration files for distinct groups or users of the CoreMedia system. To configure the usage of
special configuration files you may adapt the following properties in the editor.properties
file
(see chapter "Defining XML Files for Configuration" in the Administration and Operation
Manual for details):
editor.startup.configuration
editor.configuration
group.configuration
user.configuration
If you only use group.configuration
, you can define one specific configuration file for each group.
To have multiple configuration files for one group, you may configure the set of files and in which order they
are parsed in editor-startup.xml
(default) or in the file configured by
editor.startup.configuration
. Mind that group configuration in editor-startup.xml
overrides the mechanism one configuration file per group which especially means: If users are not member of any
group configured in <ConfigGroups>
no group configurations are applied to these users.
In both cases, that is either with one configuration file per group or with multiple configuration files per
group you have to set the property group.configuration
to point to configuration files with a path
relative to <CoreMediaHome>
or to the URL where to find the files. The path/URL defined has
to contain a wildcard {0}
which will be replaced either by the group name or by the names as
defined in the <Configuration>
element (see below).
Example:
group.configuration=properties/corem/editor-{0}.xml
The Content Server will look in the properties/corem
directory
for a file called editor-<PlaceHolder>.xml
where <PlaceHolder>
will be
replaced by the values of the name
attribute of the <Configuration>
element
described below or by the group name if no <ConfigGroups>
element is used.
If a user is member of more than one group, the exact behavior reading group configuration files is undetermined.
If multiple matching <ConfigGroup>
exist, one of them is chosen by random. If
<ConfigGroups>
configuration is not used but direct mapping groups to configuration files all
matching configuration files are read but in an undetermined order. To determine the exact behavior you have to
implement your own selection scheme. Proceed as follows:
Extend GenericEditor
Override the
getConfigurationGroupNames(UserModel user)
method which is inherited from AbstractEditor with your own selection scheme. The default implementation of the method either returns the configuration file names as configured in the<Configuration>
element (first case) and if no<ConfigGroups>
element is used the unordered list of groups a user is member of. You might want to use the convenience methodgetUserConfigGroups(UserModel user)
to create your own implementation. For further reference see the Javadoc.Add your class to the
class
attribute of the<Editor>
element in theeditor-startup.xml
file.
<ConfigGroups>
Child elements: <ConfigGroup>
Parent elements: <Editor>
<Editor> <ConfigGroups> . . </ConfigGroups> </Editor>
This element combines the elements for the group configuration.
The element has no attributes. If <ConfigGoups>
is not used but
group.configuration
is set, only the general editor configuration file (default:
editor.xml
) and the matching group specific configuration files will be applied. See the
Site Manager chapter in the Administration and
Operations Manual for details.
<ConfigGroup>
Child elements: <Configuration>
Parent elements: <ConfigGroup>
<ConfigGroups> <ConfigGroup name="editor" domain="main"> . . </ConfigGroup> </ConfigGroups>
This element defines for which group and domain the configuration should be used. It groups the
<Configuration>
elements.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
name | The name of an existing group in the CoreMedia user management for which the configuration will be used. |
domain | The domain of the group. |
Table 5.45. Attributes of the <ConfigGroup> element
<Configuration>
Child elements:
Parent elements: <ConfigGroup>
<ConfigGroups> <ConfigGroup name="editor"> <Configuration name="common"/> <Configuration name="special"/> </ConfigGroup> </ConfigGroups>
This element defines the name with which the placeholder in group.configuration
will be replaced
and the order in which multiple configuration files are applied. In the example above the placeholder will first
be replaced with "common" and then with "special", if the user is member of the "editor" group. This especially
means that in case of conflicting settings the settings from the special file will override the settings in the
common file.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
name | Name which will replace the placeholder in the
group.configuration property of editor.properties . In
general, this is not the name of an existing group, but it can be. |
Table 5.46. Attribute of the <Configuration> element