2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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<?php
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abstract class PhabricatorSearchEngineAPIMethod
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extends ConduitAPIMethod {
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abstract public function newSearchEngine();
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public function getApplication() {
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$engine = $this->newSearchEngine();
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$class = $engine->getApplicationClassName();
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return PhabricatorApplication::getByClass($class);
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}
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public function getMethodStatus() {
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return self::METHOD_STATUS_UNSTABLE;
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}
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public function getMethodStatusDescription() {
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return pht('ApplicationSearch methods are highly unstable.');
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}
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final protected function defineParamTypes() {
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return array(
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'queryKey' => 'optional string',
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'constraints' => 'optional map<string, wild>',
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'order' => 'optional order',
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) + $this->getPagerParamTypes();
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}
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final protected function defineReturnType() {
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return 'map<string, wild>';
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}
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final protected function execute(ConduitAPIRequest $request) {
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$engine = $this->newSearchEngine()
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->setViewer($request->getUser());
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return $engine->buildConduitResponse($request);
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}
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final public function getMethodDescription() {
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2015-12-13 11:45:08 +01:00
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$viewer = $this->getViewer();
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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$engine = $this->newSearchEngine()
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->setViewer($viewer);
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$query = $engine->newQuery();
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$out = array();
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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This is a standard **ApplicationSearch** method which will let you list, query,
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or search for objects.
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EOTEXT
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);
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Prebuilt Queries
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----------------
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You can use a builtin or saved query as a starting point by passing it with
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`queryKey`. If you don't specify a `queryKey`, the query will start with no
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constraints.
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For example, many applications have builtin queries like `"active"` or
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`"open"` to find only active or enabled results. To use a `queryKey`, specify
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it like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"queryKey": "active",
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...
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}
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```
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2015-12-13 11:45:08 +01:00
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You can use these keys to select builtin queries and your configured saved
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queries:
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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EOTEXT
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);
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$head_querykey = pht('Query Key');
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$head_name = pht('Name');
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$head_builtin = pht('Builtin');
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$named_queries = $engine->loadAllNamedQueries();
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$table = array();
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$table[] = "| {$head_querykey} | {$head_name} | {$head_builtin} |";
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$table[] = '|------------------|--------------|-----------------|';
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foreach ($named_queries as $named_query) {
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$key = $named_query->getQueryKey();
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$name = $named_query->getQueryName();
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$builtin = $named_query->getIsBuiltin()
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? pht('Builtin')
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: pht('Custom');
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$table[] = "| `{$key}` | {$name} | {$builtin} |";
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}
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$table = implode("\n", $table);
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$out[] = $table;
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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You can also use **any** query you run via the web UI as a starting point. You
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can find the key for a query by examining the URI after running a normal
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search.
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EOTEXT
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);
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Custom Constraints
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------------------
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You can add custom constraints to the basic query by passing `constraints`.
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This will let you filter results (for example, show only results with a
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certain state, status, or owner).
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Specify constraints like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"constraints": {
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"authorPHIDs": ["PHID-USER-1111", "PHID-USER-2222"],
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"statuses": ["open", "closed"]
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},
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...
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}
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```
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If you specify both a `queryKey` and `constraints`, the basic query
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configuration will be applied first as a starting point, then any additional
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values in `constraints` will be applied, overwriting the defaults from the
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original query.
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This API endpoint supports these constraints:
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EOTEXT
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);
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$head_key = pht('Key');
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$head_label = pht('Label');
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$head_type = pht('Type');
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$head_desc = pht('Description');
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2015-12-13 01:25:51 +01:00
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$desc_ids = pht('Search for specific objects by ID.');
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$desc_phids = pht('Search for specific objects by PHID.');
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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$fields = $engine->getSearchFieldsForConduit();
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$table = array();
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$table[] = "| {$head_key} | {$head_label} | {$head_type} | {$head_desc} |";
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$table[] = '|-------------|---------------|--------------|--------------|';
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$table[] = "| `ids` | **IDs** | `list<int>` | {$desc_ids} |";
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$table[] = "| `phids` | **PHIDs** | `list<phid>` | {$desc_phids} |";
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foreach ($fields as $field) {
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2015-12-13 12:53:15 +01:00
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$key = $field->getConduitKey();
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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$label = $field->getLabel();
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2015-12-13 12:53:15 +01:00
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$type_object = $field->getConduitParameterType();
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if ($type_object) {
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$type = '`'.$type_object->getTypeName().'`';
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$description = $field->getDescription();
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2015-12-13 12:53:15 +01:00
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} else {
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$type = '';
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$description = '//'.pht('Not Supported').'//';
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}
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$table[] = "| `{$key}` | **{$label}** | {$type} | {$description}";
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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}
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$table = implode("\n", $table);
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$out[] = $table;
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Result Order
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------------
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Use `order` to choose an ordering for the results. Either specify a single
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key from the builtin orders (these are a set of meaningful, high-level,
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human-readable orders) or specify a list of low-level columns.
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To use a high-level order, choose a builtin order from the table below
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and specify it like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"order": "newest",
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...
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}
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```
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These builtin orders are available:
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EOTEXT
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);
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$head_builtin = pht('Builtin Order');
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$head_label = pht('Label');
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$head_columns = pht('Columns');
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$orders = $query->getBuiltinOrders();
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$table = array();
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$table[] = "| {$head_builtin} | {$head_label} | {$head_columns} |";
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$table[] = '|-----------------|---------------------|-----------------|';
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foreach ($orders as $key => $order) {
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$name = $order['name'];
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$columns = implode(', ', $order['vector']);
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$table[] = "| `{$key}` | {$name} | {$columns} |";
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}
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$table = implode("\n", $table);
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$out[] = $table;
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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You can choose a low-level column order instead. This is an advanced feature.
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In your custom order: each column may only be specified once; each column may
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be prefixed with "-" to invert the order; the last column must be unique; and
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no column other than the last may be unique.
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To use a low-level order, choose a sequence of columns and specify them like
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this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"order": ["color", "-name", "id"],
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...
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}
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```
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These low-level columns are available:
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EOTEXT
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);
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$head_column = pht('Column Key');
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$head_unique = pht('Unique');
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$columns = $query->getOrderableColumns();
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$table = array();
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$table[] = "| {$head_column} | {$head_unique} |";
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$table[] = '|----------------|----------------|';
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foreach ($columns as $key => $column) {
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$unique = idx($column, 'unique')
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? pht('Yes')
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: pht('No');
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$table[] = "| `{$key}` | {$unique} |";
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}
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$table = implode("\n", $table);
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$out[] = $table;
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Result Format
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-------------
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The result format is a dictionary with several fields:
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- `data`: Contains the actual results, as a list of dictionaries.
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- `query`: Details about the query which was issued.
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- `cursor`: Information about how to issue another query to get the next
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(or previous) page of results. See "Paging and Limits" below.
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EOTEXT
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);
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Fields
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------
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The `data` field of the result contains a list of results. Each result has
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some metadata and a `fields` key, which contains the primary object fields.
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For example, the results may look something like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"data": [
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{
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"id": 123,
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"phid": "PHID-WXYZ-1111",
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"fields": {
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"name": "First Example Object",
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"authorPHID": "PHID-USER-2222"
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}
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},
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{
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"id": 124,
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"phid": "PHID-WXYZ-3333",
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"fields": {
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"name": "Second Example Object",
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"authorPHID": "PHID-USER-4444"
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}
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},
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...
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]
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...
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}
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```
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This result structure is standardized across all search methods, but the
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available fields differ from application to application.
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These are the fields available on this object type:
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EOTEXT
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);
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2015-12-13 16:29:05 +01:00
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$head_key = pht('Key');
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$head_type = pht('Type');
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$head_description = pht('Description');
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2015-12-11 17:45:56 +01:00
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$specs = $engine->getAllConduitFieldSpecifications();
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$table = array();
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$table[] = "| {$head_key} | {$head_type} | {$head_description} |";
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$table[] = '|-------------|--------------|---------------------|';
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foreach ($specs as $key => $spec) {
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$type = idx($spec, 'type');
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$description = idx($spec, 'description');
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$table[] = "| `{$key}` | `{$type}` | {$description} |";
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}
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$table = implode("\n", $table);
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$out[] = $table;
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$out[] = pht(<<<EOTEXT
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Paging and Limits
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-----------------
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Queries are limited to returning 100 results at a time. If you want fewer
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results than this, you can use `limit` to specify a smaller limit.
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If you want more results, you'll need to make additional queries to retrieve
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more pages of results.
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The result structure contains a `cursor` key with information you'll need in
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order to fetch the next page. After an initial query, it will usually look
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something like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"cursor": {
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"limit": 100,
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"after": "1234",
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"before": null,
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"order": null
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}
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...
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}
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```
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The `limit` and `order` fields are describing the effective limit and order the
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query was executed with, and are usually not of much interest. The `after` and
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`before` fields give you cursors which you can pass when making another API
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call in order to get the next (or previous) page of results.
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To get the next page of results, repeat your API call with all the same
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parameters as the original call, but pass the `after` cursor you received from
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the first call in the `after` parameter when making the second call.
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If you do things correctly, you should get the second page of results, and
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a cursor structure like this:
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```lang=json
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{
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...
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"cursor": {
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"limit": 5,
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"after": "4567",
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"before": "7890",
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"order": null
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}
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...
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}
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```
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You can now continue to the third page of results by passing the new `after`
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cursor to the `after` parameter in your third call, or return to the previous
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page of results by passing the `before` cursor to the `before` parameter. This
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might be useful if you are rendering a web UI for a user and want to provide
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"Next Page" and "Previous Page" links.
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|
|
If `after` is `null`, there is no next page of results available. Likewise,
|
|
|
|
if `before` is `null`, there are no previous results available.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EOTEXT
|
|
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$out = implode("\n\n", $out);
|
|
|
|
return $out;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
}
|