This describes how to embed the FCK editor and enable image uploading.
First you need to edit fckconfig.js to change the image upload
URL to point to some URL inside your server.
FCKConfig.ImageUploadURL = "/myapp/root/imageUploader";
This will point to the server relative URL to receive the upload.
FCK will send the uploaded file to that handler using the CGI variable
name "NewFile" encoded using multipart/form-data. Unfortunately you
will have to implement /myapp/root/imageUploader, because I don't think
the FCK distribution stuff can be easily adapted to other frameworks.
The imageUploader should extract the NewFile and store it
somewhere on the server.
The response generated by /myapp/root/imageUploader should emulate
the HTML constructed in /editor/.../fckoutput.py.
Something like this (whiff template format)
{{env
whiff.content_type: "text/html",
whiff.headers: [
["Expires","Mon, 26 Jul 1997 05:00:00 GMT"],
["Cache-Control","no-store, no-cache, must-revalidate"],
["Cache-Control","post-check=0, pre-check=0"],
["Pragma","no-cache"]
]
/}}
<script>
//alert("!! RESPONSE RECIEVED");
errorNumber = 0;
fileUrl = "fileurl.png";
fileName = "filename.png";
customMsg = "";
window.parent.OnUploadCompleted(errorNumber, fileUrl, fileName, customMsg);
</script>
The {{env ...}} stuff at the top indicate the content type and
recommended HTTP headers to send. The fileUrl should be the Url to
use to find the image on the server.
Here are the basic steps to get the html fragment which
generates the FCK editor widget. The only tricky part is you have to put the
right client indentification into the os.environ -- it's ugly
but that's the way the FCK library works right now (I filed a bug
report).
import fckeditor # you must have the fck editor python support installed to use this module
import os
inputName = "myInputName" # the name to use for the input element in the form
basePath = "/server/relative/path/to/fck/installation/" # the location of FCK static files
if basePath[-1:]!="/":
basePath+="/" # basepath must end in slash
oFCKeditor = fckeditor.FCKeditor(inputName)
oFCKeditor.BasePath = basePath
oFCKeditor.Height = 300 # the height in pixels of the editor
oFCKeditor.Value = "<h1>initial html to be editted</h1>"
os.environ["HTTP_USER_AGENT"] = "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U;..." # or whatever
# there must be some way to figure out the user agent in Django right?
htmlOut = oFCKeditor.Create()
# insert htmlOut into your page where you want the editor to appear
return htmlOut
The above is untested, but it's based on the below which is tested.
Here is how to use FCK editor using mod-wsgi:
Technically it uses a couple features of WHIFF (see
WHIFF.sourceforge.net),
-- in fact it is part of the WHIFF distribution --
but
the WHIFF features are easily removed.
I don't know how to install it in Django, but if
Django allows wsgi apps to be installed easily, you
should be able to do it.
NOTE: FCK allows the client to inject pretty much anything
into HTML pages -- you will want to filter the returned value for evil
attacks.
(eg: see whiff.middleware.TestSafeHTML middleware for
an example of how to do this).
"""
Introduce an FCK editor input element. (requires FCKeditor http://www.fckeditor.net/).
Note: this implementation can generate values containing code injection attacks if you
don't filter the output generated for evil tags and values.
"""
import fckeditor # you must have the fck editor python support installed to use this module
from whiff.middleware import misc
import os
class FCKInput(misc.utility):
def __init__(self,
inputName, # name for input element
basePath, # server relative URL root for FCK HTTP install
value = ""): # initial value for input
self.inputName = inputName
self.basePath = basePath
self.value = value
def __call__(self, env, start_response):
inputName = self.param_value(self.inputName, env).strip()
basePath = self.param_value(self.basePath, env).strip()
if basePath[-1:]!="/":
basePath+="/"
value = self.param_value(self.value, env)
oFCKeditor = fckeditor.FCKeditor(inputName)
oFCKeditor.BasePath = basePath
oFCKeditor.Height = 300 # this should be a require!
oFCKeditor.Value = value
# hack around a bug in fck python library: need to put the user agent in os.environ
# XXX this hack is not safe for multi threaded servers (theoretically)... need to lock on os.env
os_environ = os.environ
new_os_env = os_environ.copy()
new_os_env.update(env)
try:
os.environ = new_os_env
htmlOut = oFCKeditor.Create()
finally:
# restore the old os.environ
os.environ = os_environ
start_response("200 OK", [('Content-Type', 'text/html')])
return [htmlOut]
__middleware__ = FCKInput
def test():
env = {
"HTTP_USER_AGENT":
"Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X; en-US; rv:1.8.1.14) Gecko/20080404 Firefox/2.0.0.14"
}
f = FCKInput("INPUTNAME", "/MY/BASE/PATH", "THE HTML VALUE TO START WITH")
r = f(env, misc.ignore)
print "test result"
print "".join(list(r))
if __name__=="__main__":
test()
See this working, for example, at
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1500.whyIsWhiffCool.
btw: thanks. I needed to look into this anyway.