Version 11 (modified by 9 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
---|
Contents
Trac plugins
Trac is extensible with plugins. Plugin functionality is based on the component architecture, with special cases described in the plugin development page.
Plugin discovery
From the user's point of view, a plugin is either a standalone .py file or an .egg package. Trac looks for plugins in Python's site-packages
directory, the global shared plugins
directory and the project environment plugins
directory. Components defined in globally-installed plugins must be explicitly enabled in the [components] section of the trac.ini
file. Components defined in the plugins
directory of the project environment are enabled, unless explicitly disabled in the [components]
section of the trac.ini
file.
Requirements for Trac eggs
To use egg-based plugins in Trac, you need to have setuptools (version >= 0.6) installed.
To install setuptools
, download the bootstrap module ez_setup.py and execute it as follows:
$ python ez_setup.py
If the ez_setup.py
script fails to install the setuptools release, you can download it from [pypi:setuptools PyPI] and install it manually.
Plugins can also consist of a single .py
file dropped directly into either the project's or the shared plugins
directory.
Installing a Trac plugin
For a single project
Plugins are typically packaged as Python eggs. That means they are .zip archives with the file extension .egg
.
If you have downloaded a source distribution of a plugin, and want to build the .egg
file:
- Unpack the source. It should provide
setup.py
. - Run:
$ python setup.py bdist_egg
You should now have an *.egg file. Examine the output of running Python to find where this was created.
Once you have the plugin archive, copy it into the plugins
directory of the project environment. Also, make sure that the web server has sufficient permissions to read the plugin egg. Then restart the web server. If you are running as a "tracd" standalone server, restart tracd, ie kill the process and run again.
To uninstall a plugin installed this way, remove the egg from the plugins
directory and restart the web server.
Note: the Python version that the egg is built with must match the Python version with which Trac is run. For example, if you are running Trac under Python 2.6, but have upgraded your standalone Python to 2.7, the eggs won't be recognized.
Note: in a multi-project setup, a pool of Python interpreter instances will be dynamically allocated to projects based on need; since plugins occupy a place in Python's module system, the first version of any given plugin to be loaded will be used for all projects. In other words, you cannot use different versions of a single plugin in two projects of a multi-project setup. It may be safer to install plugins for all projects (see below), and then enable them selectively on a project-by-project basis.
For all projects
With an .egg file
Some plugins, such as SpamFilter, are downloadable as an .egg
file that can be installed with easy_install
or pip
:
$ easy_install TracSpamFilter $ pip install TracSpamFilter
If easy_install
is not on your system, see the Requirements section above to install it. Windows users will need to add the Scripts
directory of their Python installation (for example, C:\Python27\Scripts
) to their PATH
environment variable, or use the full path to easy_install
(for example, C:\Python27\Scripts\easy_install.py
). See easy_install Windows notes for more information.
pip
is included in Python 2.7.9. In earlier versions of Python it can be installed through the package manager of your OS (e.g. apt-get install python-pip
) or using the get_pip.py.
If Trac reports permission errors after installing a zipped egg, and you would rather not bother providing an egg cache directory writable by the web server, you can get around it by simply unzipping the egg. Just pass --always-unzip
to easy_install
:
$ easy_install --always-unzip TracSpamFilter-0.4.1_r10106-py2.6.egg
You should end up with a directory having the same name as the zipped egg, complete with .egg
extension, and containing its uncompressed contents.
Trac also searches for plugins installed in the shared plugins directory, see TracIni#GlobalConfiguration. This is a convenient way to share the installation of plugins across several, but not all, environments.
From source
easy_install
makes installing from source a snap. Just give it the URL to either a Subversion repository or a tarball/zip of the source:
$ easy_install http://svn.edgewall.com/repos/trac/plugins/0.12/spam-filter-captcha
Enabling the plugin
Unlike plugins installed per environment, you'll have to explicitly enable globally installed plugins via trac.ini. This also applies to plugins installed in the shared plugins directory, ie the path specified in the [inherit] plugins_dir
configuration option.
This is done in the [components]
section of the configuration file trac.ini
. For example:
[components] tracspamfilter.* = enabled
The name of the option is the Python package of the plugin. This should be specified in the documentation of the plugin, but can also be easily discovered by looking at the source: look for a top-level directory that contains a file named __init__.py
.
After installing the plugin, you must restart your web server.
Uninstalling
Neither easy_install
nor python setup.py
have an uninstall feature. However, it is usually trivial to remove a globally installed egg and reference:
- Do
easy_install -m [plugin name]
to remove references from$PYTHONLIB/site-packages/easy-install.pth
when the plugin installed by setuptools. - Delete executables from
/usr/bin
,/usr/local/bin
, orC:\\Python*\Scripts
. To find what executables are involved, refer to the[console-script]
section ofsetup.py
. - Delete the .egg file or folder from where it's installed, usually inside
$PYTHONLIB/site-packages/
. - Restart the web server.
If you are uncertain about the location of the egg file, you can try to locate it by replacing myplugin
with whatever namespace the plugin uses (as used when enabling the plugin):
>>> import myplugin >>> print myplugin.__file__ /opt/local/python24/lib/site-packages/myplugin-0.4.2-py2.4.egg/myplugin/__init__.pyc
Setting up the plugin cache
Some plugins will need to be extracted by the Python egg's runtime (pkg_resources
), so that their contents are actual files on the file system. The directory in which they are extracted defaults to .python-eggs
in the home directory of the current user, which may or may not be a problem. You can, however, override the default location using the PYTHON_EGG_CACHE
environment variable.
To do this from the Apache configuration, use the SetEnv
directive:
SetEnv PYTHON_EGG_CACHE /path/to/dir
This works whether you're using the CGI or the mod_python front-end. Put this directive next to where you set the path to the Trac environment, ie in the same <Location>
block.
For example for CGI:
<Location /trac> SetEnv TRAC_ENV /path/to/projenv SetEnv PYTHON_EGG_CACHE /path/to/dir </Location>
Or for mod_python:
<Location /trac> SetHandler mod_python ... SetEnv PYTHON_EGG_CACHE /path/to/dir </Location>
Note: SetEnv requires the mod_env
module, which needs to be activated for Apache. In this case the SetEnv directive can also be used in the mod_python
Location block.
For FastCGI, you'll need to -initial-env
option, or whatever is provided by your web server for setting environment variables.
Note: if you already use -initial-env to set the project directory for either a single project or parent, you will need to add an additional -initial-env directive to the FastCgiConfig directive:
FastCgiConfig -initial-env TRAC_ENV=/var/lib/trac -initial-env PYTHON_EGG_CACHE=/var/lib/trac/plugin-cache
About hook scripts
If you have set up some Subversion hook scripts that call the Trac engine, such as the post-commit hook script provided in the /contrib
directory, make sure you define the PYTHON_EGG_CACHE
environment variable within these scripts as well.
Web-based plugin administration
The WebAdmin interface offers limited support for plugin configuration through the web to users with TRAC_ADMIN
permission:
- en/disabling installed plugins
- installing plugins by uploading them as eggs
If you wish to disable the second function for security reasons, add the following to your trac.ini
file:
[components] trac.admin.web_ui.PluginAdminPanel = disabled
This disables the whole panel, so the first function will no longer be available either.
Troubleshooting
Is setuptools properly installed?
Try this from the command line:
$ python -c "import pkg_resources"
If you get no output, setuptools is installed. Otherwise, you'll need to install it before plugins will work in Trac.
Did you get the correct version of the Python egg?
Python eggs have the Python version encoded in their filename. For example, MyPlugin-1.0-py2.5.egg
is an egg for Python 2.5, and will not be loaded if you're running a different Python version (such as 2.4 or 2.6).
Also, verify that the egg file you downloaded is indeed a .zip archive. If you downloaded it from a Trac site, chances are you downloaded the HTML preview page instead.
Is the plugin enabled?
If you install a plugin globally, ie not inside the plugins
directory of the Trac project environment, you must explicitly enable it in trac.ini. Make sure that:
- you actually added the necessary line(s) to the
[components]
section. - the package/module names are correct and do not contain typos.
- the value is "enabled", not "enable" or "Enable".
- the section name is "components", not "component".
Check the permissions on the .egg file
Trac must be able to read the .egg file.
Check the log files
Enable logging and set the log level to DEBUG
, then watch the log file for messages about loading plugins.
Verify you have the proper permissions
Some plugins require you have special permissions in order to use them. WebAdmin, for example, requires the user to have TRAC_ADMIN
permissions for it to show up on the navigation bar.
Is the wrong version of the plugin loading?
If you put your plugins inside plugins directories, and certainly if you have more than one project, you need to make sure that the correct version of the plugin is loading. Here are some basic rules:
- Only one version of the plugin can be loaded for each running Trac server, ie each Python process. The Python namespaces and module list will be shared, and it cannot handle duplicates. Whether a plugin is
enabled
ordisabled
makes no difference. - A globally installed plugin (typically
setup.py install
) will override any version in the global or project plugins directories. A plugin from the global plugins directory will be located before any project plugins directory. - If your Trac server hosts more than one project (as with
TRAC_ENV_PARENT_DIR
setups), having two versions of a plugin in two different projects will give unpredicatable results. Only one of them will load, and the one loaded will be shared by both projects. Trac will load the first plugin found, usually from the project that receives the first request. - Having more than one version listed inside Python site-packages is fine, ie installed with
setup.py install
, because setuptools will make sure you get the version installed most recently. However, don't store more than one version inside a global or project plugins directory: neither the version number nor the installed date will matter at all. There is no way to determine which one will be located first when Trac searches the directory for plugins.
If all of the above failed
Okay, so the logs don't mention plugins, the egg is readable, the Python version is correct, and the egg has been installed globally (and is enabled in trac.ini)... and it still doesn't work or give any error messages or any other indication as to why. Hop on the IrcChannel and ask away!
See also TracGuide, plugin list, component architecture.