I decided it would be useful to add this section to the top of the README, while things are moving around a lot. Here is what is working, and what is being worked on:
NOTE First, please note that Weathermap will require PHP 5.6 or above, from 1.0.0 onwards (including the current dev version).
NOTE2 For dev version, READ THIS FILE FIRST, before installing. Especially if you are thinking of installing on your production Cacti server.
By the time 1.0.0 is done, near enough everything will have had some kind of rewrite work, even it's just tidying up the naming. A lot of it will have significantly more change, including stuff that was originally written before 0.98 a few years ago, and never used. The aim of all of that is to break the code up between the UI, the map-drawing, and data-collecting parts, and make it a generally more pleasant place for someone to work, in the hopes of getting some additional contributors.
To make it easier to deal with multiple contributors, automated testing is pretty essential. You should be able to quickly tell if your changes have broken anything. Lots of code has been pulled into smaller testable classes to make that easier (and tests written!). Previously, most of the stuff that appeared on a web page was not at all easy to test, and that's improving now. The editor has tests for the first time, for example, and a lot of the database manipulation that used to be buried in the cacti plugin does, too.
-
Core - should be working OK. passing all tests. All code modified to use namespaces and autoloader, one class per file, most PSR-2 standards.
-
CLI - should be working OK. Rewritten to avoid PEAR dependency. There's also a
weathermap-new
which needs testing, but is intended to replace the oldweathermap
(all the business is in a class, not the script) -
Editor - should be working OK. Re-implemented class/template-based version of editor (same UI).
-
Cacti 0.8 Plugin - broken UI, working poller. Code has all been moved, poller run, UI not tested.
-
Cacti 1.0 Plugin - broken UI, working poller. Code has all been moved, poller run, UI not tested.
This git repo deliberately DOES NOT contain third party libraries (and if it does now, it won't soon).
Dependencies are managed with bower npm. If you have never used it before, you will need to:
- Install nodejs (and npm - which should come with it)
- Install composer
- Go to the weathermap checkout directory
- Make sure that directory is called
weathermap
and notnetwork-weathermap
(which git will default to) or Cacti will not recognise it properly. npm install
should install all the necessary javascript dependencies to the node_modules/ directory.composer update
will grab the PHP dependencies for both the runtime and testing environments The release process collects up these files and puts them in the zip file, via the packing.list file(s). You only need to do this if you are working with the current development code.
If you aren't intending to do any development, run the tests, or contribute patches (why not? It's fun!) then you can use composer update --no-dev
above, and reduce the number of PHP packages installed significantly.
-
Move to namespaces - PHP Namespaces help keep our code out of your code. Especially important for something that sits inside other software -
Remove dependency on PEAR - CLI uses a Composer module now for options -
Move to React for Cacti UI, with only JSON/API type stuff in the PHP code
-
Management
- Add A Map (with multiples, directly into correct group)
- Delete A Map
- Enable/Disable Map
- Add Group
- Update Map (properties page)
- Move to new group
- Alter schedule
- Alter debugging
- (Alter archiving)
Edit map- Create map (create a blank, ready to edit)
- SET Settings editor for global, group and map
- Access editor for (group) and map
- App Settings editor (for Cacti/host-app settings)
-
User
Show ThumbnailsShow full size maps- "Overlib" replacement for popup graphs
- Cycle mode
- Cycle mode fullscreen
-
-
Update Editor to use same UI classes as Cacti (input validation, one method per 'command', testability) -
Update Editor Data Picker to use same UI classes as Cacti (input validation, one method per 'command', testability)
-
Weathermap management only shows after the second click on the Weathermap menu option? Something to do with relative URLs and Cacti's partial loading
-
Bower is deprecated. Need to move to using npm directly -
Judging from the memory logging, there's a memory leak (300-500KB per map).
-
Break down 'monster methods' into simpler ones. Identify groups within the larger classes for refactoring (e.g. plugin-related stuff in Map)
- Poller - a single runMaps() function currently does almost everything. Replace with Poller class for general environment setup, which
asks MapManager for the maps to run.
Use a MapRuntime class per-map to contain all the knowledge needed to run that map.
- Poller - a single runMaps() function currently does almost everything. Replace with Poller class for general environment setup, which
asks MapManager for the maps to run.
-
Dependency Injection - there's some ugly stuff especially with logging and global variables. Switch to a real logger (planning on monolog), wrapped in a simple class to manage things like muting certain messages, and switching between debug and normal logging. Then find a better way (DI container?) to have that one logger object shared between the places that want to use it. This also has some side benefits - monolog can log to lots of destinations (syslog etc), in lots of formats (json, text, pretty coloured text), and can automatically do things like tag on memory usage and function call info for debug logs.
-
Move as much generic database-related stuff out of the Cacti plugin and into MapManager - MapManager is testable, whereas the Cacti plugin is not (easily). Also, MapManager is currently a literal collection of every query that was in the 0.8.8 plugin, which turns out to be quite a few. Breaking that down into global, map, and group objects would be a good thing.
-
Make an abstraction layer for things likeread_config_option
in the UI, so it doesn't depend on Cacti being underneath. When someone wants to make a plugin/integration for a new application, it'll be a lot 'thinner' this way, too. This is done as Weathermap\Integration\ApplicationInterface -
Map object: really, this is several different things:
-
A container for the nodes, links, & scales, and some management functions used by the editor mainly to access them (addNode, getNode etc). Also processString, which lives here because it looks inside everything else (does it still?).
-
For no particular reason, the home of title and timestamps (which should be their own objects with their draw() method)
-
A manager for the map drawing and data collection process - there could definitely be a DataManager for readData(), preprocessTargets() etc.
-
Global data for the map
-
The imagemap and z-layer information, which are just another couple of managed lists used for draw.
-
Some functions to draw overlays that are only used by the editor. There should be some mechanism to provide a delegate to draw these, supplied by the editor.
-
-
Create a MapTitle and MapTimestamp class (from #2 above)
-
Create a MapDataManager class (#3 above)
-
As much as possible make the draw function in Map generically call the draw() functions in each map item.
-
Other map items: These have a mix of concerns between the drawing off the item, and the data related to it. Most of the data stuff is in MapDataItem these days though.
-
In all cases, the way configs are built up for getConfig() (aka the editor) is quite cumbersome, and adds a lot of complexity to the classes, as it effectively reverse-engineers the config from scratch. Some kind of DOM-style structure produced by readConfig(), and simply read back by getConfig() would make the world a lot simpler.
This is PHP Network Weathermap, version 1.0.0 by Howard Jones ([email protected])
See the docs sub-directory for full HTML documentation, FAQ and example config.
See CHANGES for the most recent updates, listed by version.
See LICENSE for the license under which php-weathermap is released.
There is much more information, tutorials and updates available at: http://www.network-weathermap.com/
For news and updates, see http://www.network-weathermap.com/ (also twitter @netweathermap and Facebook)
For issue tracking and bug reports use the Github issue tracker: https://github.com/howardjones/network-weathermap/issues
I'm trying managing feature requests with FeatHub. You can add features here, and vote for them too:
PHP Weathermap contains components from other software developers:
overlib.js is part of Overlib 4.21, copyright Erik Bosrup 1998-2004. All rights reserved. See http://www.bosrup.com/web/overlib/?License
The Bitstream Vera Open Source fonts (Vera*.ttf) are copyright Bitstream, Inc. See http://www.bitstream.com/font_rendering/products/dev_fonts/vera.html
The manual uses the Kube CSS Framework - http://imperavi.com/kube/ and ParaType's PT Sans font: http://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/PT-Sans
jquery-latest.min.js is the jQuery javascript library - written by John Resig and collaborators. http://docs.jquery.com/Licensing
Some of the icons used in the editor, and also supplied in the images/ folder are from the excellent Fam Fam Fam Silk icon collection by Mark James: http://www.famfamfam.com/lab/icons/silk/ These are released under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/
Other libraries in the vendor/ directory are provided by third-parties. composer info
will
provide licensing information per component for php components.