Chen Jian

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from:https://doc.openerp.com/trunk/mail/mail_openchatter_howto/

A small my_task model will be used as example to explain how to use the OpenChatter feature. Being simple, it has only the following fields :

  • a name

  • a task responsible

  • a related project

class my_task(osv.osv):
  _name = "my.task"
  _description = "My Task"
  _columns = {
    'name': fields.char('Name', required=True, size=64),
    'user_id':fields.many2one('res.users', string='Responsible',
      ondelete='cascade', required=True, select=1),
    'project_id':fields.many2one('project.project', string='Related project',
      ondelete='cascade', required=True, select=1),
  }

Two-lines feature integration

Make your module inheriting from the mail.thread class.

class my_task(osv.osv):
  _name = "my.task"
  _description = "My Task"
  # inherit from mail.thread allows the use of OpenChatter
  _inherit = ['mail.thread']

Use the thread viewer widget inside your form view by using the mail_thread widget on the message_ids field inherited from mail.thread.

<record model="ir.ui.view" id="my_task_form_view">
  <field name="name">My Task</field>
  <field name="model">my.task</field>
  <field name="priority">1</field>
  <field name="arch" type="xml">
    <form>
    [...]
    <field name="message_ids" colspan="4" widget="mail_thread" nolabel="1"/>
    </form>
  </field>
</record>

Send notifications

When sending a notification is required in your workflow or business logic, use the message_post method. This method is a shortcut to the message_append method that takes all mail.message fields as arguments. This latter method calls message_create that

  • creates the message

  • parses the body to find users you want to push the message to (finding and parsing @login in the message body)

  • pushes a notification to users following the document and requested users of the latetr step

You should therefore not worry about subscriptions or anything else than sending the notification. Here is a small example of sending a notification when the do_something method is called :

def do_something(self, cr, uid, ids, context=None):
  [...]
  self.do_something_send_note(cr, uid, ids, context=context)
  [...]
  return res

def do_something_send_note(self, cr, uid, ids, context=None):
  self.message_post(cr, uid, ids, _('My subject'),
  _("has received a <b>notification</b> and is happy for it."), context=context)

Notifications guidelines

Here are a few guidelines that you should keep in mind during the addition of system notifications :

  • avoid unnecessary content; if a message has no interest, do not implement it

  • use short sentences

  • do not include the document name, as it is managed by the thread widget

  • use a simple and clean style

    • html tags are supported: use <b> or <em> mainly

    • put main word(s) in bold

    • avoid fancy styles that will break the OpenERP look and feel

  • create a separate method for sending your notification

    • use a method name like original_method_name_send_note, that allow to easily spot notification methods in the code

Subscription management

There are a few default subscription tricks that you should know before playing with subscription:

  • users that click on 'follow' follow the document. An entry in mail.subscription is created.

  • users that click on 'unfollow' are no longer followers to the document. The related entry in mail.subscription is created.

  • users that create or update a document automatically follow it. An entry in mail.subscription is created.

If you want to override this default behavior, you should avoid doing it manualle. You should instead override the message_get_subscribers method from mail.thread. The default implementation looks in the mail.suscription table for entries matching user_id=uid, res_model=self._name, res_id=current_record_id. You can add subscribers by overriding the message_get_subscribers and adding user ids to the returned list. This means that they will be considered as followers even if they do not have an entry in the mail.subscription table.

As an exemple, let us say that you want to automatically add the my_task responsible along with the project manager to the list of followers. The method could look like:

def message_get_subscribers(self, cr, uid, ids, context=None):
  # get the followers from the mail.subscription table
  sub_ids = self.message_get_subscribers_ids(cr, uid, ids, context=context);
  # add the employee and its manager if specified to the subscribed users
  for obj in self.browse(cr, uid, ids, context=context):
    if obj.user_id:
      sub_ids.append(obj.user_id)
    if obj.project_id and obj.project_id.user_id:
      sub_ids.append(obj.project_id.user_id)
  return self.pool.get('res.users').read(cr, uid, sub_ids, context=context)

This method has the advantage of being able to implement a particular behavior with as few code addition as possible. Moreover, when changing the task responsible of the project manager, the subscribers are always correct. This allows to avoid to implement complex corner cases that could obfuscate the code.

The drawback of this method is that it is no longer possible to those subscribers to unfollow a document. Indeed, as user ids are added directly in a list in message_get_subscribers, it is not possible to unsubscribe to a document. However, this drawback is mitigated by

  • only important users shoudl be added using this method. Important users should not unsubscribe from their documents.

  • users can hide the notifications on their Wall

Messages display management

By default, the mail_thread widget shows all messages related to the current document beside the document, in the History and comments section. However, you may want to display other messages in the widget. For example, the OpenChatter on res.users model shows

  • messages related to the user, as usual (messages with model = res.users, res_id = current_document_id)

  • messages directly pushed to this user (containing @login)

The best way to direct the messages that will be displayed in the OpenChatter widget is to override the message_load method. For example, the following method fetches messages as usual, but also fetches messages linked to the task project that contain the task name. Please refer to the API for more details about the arguments.

def message_load(self, cr, uid, ids, limit=100, offset=0, domain=[], ascent=False, root_ids=[False], context=None):
  msg_obj = self.pool.get('mail.message')
  for my_task in self.browse(cr, uid, ids, context=context):
    # search as usual messages related to the current document
    msg_ids += msg_obj.search(cr, uid, ['|', '&', ('res_id', '=', my_task.id), ('model', '=', self._name),
      # add: search in the current task project messages
      '&', '&', ('res_id', '=', my_task.project_id.id), ('model', '=', 'project.project'),
      # ... containing the task name
      '|', ('body', 'like', '%s' % (my_task.name)), ('body_html', 'like', '%s' % (my_task.name))
      ] + domain, limit=limit, offset=offset, context=context)
  # if asked: add ancestor ids to have complete threads
  if (ascent): msg_ids = self._message_add_ancestor_ids(cr, uid, ids, msg_ids, root_ids, context=context)
  return msg_obj.read(cr, uid, msg_ids, context=context)
posted on 2014-01-04 14:33  Chen Jian  阅读(289)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报