GNUrc
GNUrc is the GNU Remote Control software. That's the software that aids in the maintenance of your thermostats. For other projects see projects.
Status
v1.1 released, v2.0 under development.
Motivation
To seek operational efficiencies in air-conditioners thereby saving electricity and improving comfort.
Administration
Contributors
Members who have contributed to this project. Newest on top.
All contributors have agreed to the terms of the Contributor License Agreement. This excludes any upstream contributors who tend to have different administrative frameworks.
Upstream (GNU) contributors: GNU Remote Control Contributors
Copyright
Copyright 2015, Contributors.
License
Licensed under the AGPL.
Resources
Downloads
See the home page for downloads.
Source code
See the home page for source code.
Links
- www.gnurc.com, the GNUrc developer portal
Jargon
Following are definitions for abbreviations and acronyms that we use:
- i18n
- intl
- Internationalization/translation
Functional specification
The functional specification describes what the project does.
Administration dashboard
The administration dashboard is an administrator's home page. From the administration dashboard an administrator can access:
- User administration
- Language administration
- Group administration
- Error reporting
User administration
Language administration
Group administration
Error reporting
Error logging
Error log testing
Role-based security
We use role-based security to limit system functions to particular classes of users. There are three user roles and any given user can be in any combination of the roles:
- Administrator
- Translator
- Standard
Administrators have access to administration functions. Non-administrators do not have access to administration functions. Translators have access to translation functions. Non-translators do not have access to translation functions. All users have access to the standard functions.
Technical specification
The technical specification describes how the project works.
Model-view-controller
GNUrc 2.0 implements the Model-view-controller (MVC) design pattern.
Software layers
The GNUrc software is layered:
Layer | Directory | MVC role |
---|---|---|
modules | /src/1-lib | function libraries |
objects | /src/2-obj | Model/View |
Data Access Layer (DAL) | /src/3-dal | Model |
Object/Relational Mapping (ORM) | /src/4-orm | Model |
Business Object Model (BOM) | /src/5-bom | Model |
views | /src/6-view | View |
ajax | /src/7-ajax | Controller |
controllers | /web | Controller |
Each level depends on (up to) all of the previous levels. So controllers use views, BOM, ORM, DAL, objects, and modules. Views use BOM, ORM, DAL, objects, and modules. The BOM uses the ORM, DAL, objects, and modules. And so on. Generally controllers should call on the services of the BOM rather than calling on the services of the DAL directly, so the BOM encapsulates business logic and mediates it into the DAL. If higher layers can encapsulate functionality in lower layers that is a good thing to do.
Software modules
In order to facilitate a team of developers working on the code base at the same time we implement a software module pattern in order to expand capabilities.
The idea of software modules is to split functionality into parts which can be managed by one developer at a time. For example consider the Data Access Layer (DAL). We could have one DAL object that had methods for manipulating thermostats, users, and groups. The problem is that if Miguel is working on thermostats and Federico is working on users, if they both edit the single DAL class then they run the risk of overwriting each others' work. By splitting functionality for thermostats, users, and groups into DAL modules each of our developers can work on their modules without interfering with code used by other developers.
Directory structure
The software has the following directory structure starting in the base:
/
The base directory is /path/to/your/gnurc.
- .svn-ignore -- files for Subversion (svn) to ignore
- e.g.: $ svn propset svn:ignore -RF .svn-ignore .
- config.example.php -- an example config file
- config.php -- the production config file
- e.g.: $ cp config.example.php config.php; vim config.php
/dat
The /dat directory is for data files.
- lang.dat -- the language subtag registry
- lang.ser -- the serialized PHP data-structure of the processed lang.dat file.
/etc
The /etc directory is for miscellaneous scripts.
- download-language-data.sh -- downloads the lang.dat file
/etc/dbscripts
The /etc/dbscripts directory is an svn:externals for the database scripts:
svn://svn.sv.gnu.org/remotecontrol/branches/development/dbscripts
- .svn-ignore -- files for Subversion (svn) to ignore
- .svn-ignore.sh -- a script to apply the svn-ignore settings.
- README.md -- the README file for the dbscripts.
- gnurc-db.sql -- a script to create a "gnurc" database.
- gnurc-schema.sql -- a script to apply the GNUrc schema to the 'current' database.
- gnurc-data.sql -- a script to insert default/global data.
- gnurc-test.sql -- a script to load test data.
- make-db.sh -- a script to create/upgrade a GNUrc database.
/src
The /src directory is for most of the source code.
- include.php -- the main include file for loading the GNUrc software components.
- test.php -- the main include file for use by PHPUnit unit tests.
/src/1-lib
The /src/1-lib directory contains function modules.
- 01-api.php -- an API for singletons and helper methods.
- 02-constants.php -- constants definitions.
- 20-array.php -- functions for working with arrays.
- 25-types.php -- functions for determining data types.
- 29-conversion.php -- functions for converting values.
- 30-formatting.php -- functions for formatting data.
- 35-validation.php -- functions for validating data.
- 37-defaults.php -- default settings.
- 40-late-constants.php -- late message and error definitions.
- 45-intl.php -- i18n helper functions/API.
- 55-calc.php -- functions for calculating.
- 60-html.php -- functions for working with HTML.
- 65-http.php -- functions for working with HTTP.
- 70-comparison.php -- comparison functions.
- 75-logic.php -- miscellaneous program logic.
- 80-datetime.php -- functions for working with dates and times.
- 98-handlers.php -- functions for error and exception handling.
- 99-screen.php -- global program logic.
/src/2-obj
The /src/2-obj directory contains PHP classes used by GNUrc that do not fit in another category.
- GrcDataPage.php -- represents and manipulates pagination settings.
- GrcDataSort.php -- represents and manipulates sorting settings.
- GrcError.php -- the API for declaring and raising software errors.
- GrcHtmlComposite.php -- an object to contain a list of HTML elements.
- GrcHtmlElement.php -- a class to model a HTML element. The global arrays in this file describe the various support for HTML by HTML4, XHTML and HTML5.
- GrcHtmlView4.php -- a class for rendering HTML 4.
- GrcHtmlView5.php -- a class for rendering HTML 5.
- GrcHtmlViewX.php -- a class for rendering XHTML.
- GrcIntl.php -- a class to support an internationalization (i18n) API.
- GrcListShuffler.php -- an object for shuffling a list, i.e. remove/first/previous/next/last.
- GrcMessage.php -- a class for declaring system messages (and aiding their translation).
- GrcPageLinks.php -- a class for modelling page links, e.g. first/last/next/previous/size=N/etc.
- GrcTableView.php -- a class for rendering tabular data as HTML.
- GrcUrl.php -- an API for modelling URLs.
- GrcValidation.php -- an API for data validation.
/src/3-dal
The /src/3-dal directory contains data access layer facilities.
- GrcDal.php -- the include file for the Data Access Layer; defaults to MySQL/PDO API.
/src/3-dal/mysql-pdo
The /src/3-dal/mysql-pdo directory contains data access layer facilities for the MySQL/PDO database connectivity.
/src/3-dal/mysql-pdo/feature
The /src/3-dal/mysql-pdo/feature directories contain DAL modules.
/src/4-orm
/src/5-bom
/src/6-view
/src/7-ajax
The /src/7-ajax directory contains AJAX controllers.
/web
Managing errors
The error management subsystem is comprised of the /src/2-obj/GrcError.php class and the 'err' and 'Error' functions in /src/1-lib/01-api.php 01-api.php.
Errors are managed in to modes. First they are 'declared' and second they are 'raised'.
Declaring error numbers
To declare a possible error call the err()->define function. The first argument is the name of the error known as the error const. The error const has up to 6 parts separated by double-underscore:
- 'ERROR'
- type (e.g. 'LIB', 'OBJ', etc.)
- module/class (e.g. 'API', 'VALIDATION')
- function name
- variable name
- state (e.g. 'NOT_NULL', 'INVALID')
The second argument is the error message. The error messages will be translated if necessary and can include variables using the '%variable%' notation of the i18n subsystem.
Raising particular errors
After you have declared an error like this:
err()->define( 'ERROR__LIB__EXAMPLE', 'An error with %param% occurred.' );
you can raise it like this:
throw Error( ERROR__LIB__EXAMPLE, 'param', 'value', intl_context, previous_exception );
where intl_context is an i18n translation context and previous_exception is a previous exception if any.
Security features
In addition to role-based security we protect from XSRF and SQL-injection attacks.
XSRF protection
To prevent XSRF attacks we configure a session token that must be included in all HTTP POST submissions.
SQL-injection protection
To prevent SQL injection attacks we take care to escape inputs when building SQL strings and/or use parameters with our database API.
Character encoding
All textual content is encoded and transmitted as UTF-8.
Web interface
admin-home.php
The admin-home.php
Notes
Notes for implementers
If you are interested in incorporating this software into your project, here's what you need to know:
Notes for developers
If you're looking to set up a development environment for this project here's what you need to know:
Tasks
TODO
Things to do, in rough order of priority:
- Document system design
- Generate task list
- Allocate tasks to developers
Done
Stuff that's done. Latest stuff on top.
- JE 2015-04-01: created project page