Jifty::Plugin::Comment::Model::Comment - comments attached to anything
# to customize... package App::Model::Comment; use base qw/ Jifty::Plugin::Comment::Model::Comment /; use Jifty::DBI::Schema; use App::Record schema { # Add a reference to the current user that creates this comment column by_user => references App::Model::User, ; }; # make it so that any logged user can comment, but anyone can view, except # that we don't really want everyone seeing all those personal bits... sub current_user_can { my $self = shift; my ($right, %args) = @_; if ($right eq 'create') { return 1 if $self->current_user->id; } if ($right eq 'read') { return $self->published unless $args{column} =~ /^ (?: email | status | ip_addr | http_refer | http_user_agent ) $/x; } # otherwise only superuser gets in return $self->SUPER::current_user_can(@_); }
This model is the repository for all comments in your application, if you use the Jifty::Plugin::Comment plugin.
This is the title of the comment.
This is the body of the comment.
This is the timestamp of when the comment was created.
This is the name the author of the comment has claimed.
This is the name of the web site the author claims as her own.
This is the email address the author is claiming.
This is a boolean flag indicating whether the comment should be shown or not when viewed.
This is a flag containing one of two values: "spam" or "ham". It indicates whether the comment has been evaluated as spam or not by Net::Akismet.
This is the IP address of the remote client of the author that made the comment.
This is the HTTP referer that was sent by the browser when the author made the comment.
This is the HTTP user agent that was sent by the browser when the author made the comment.
Returns the database table name for the comments table.
It is assumed that your comments will be made available for create with very little restriction. This trigger is used to perform aggressive cleanup on the data stored and will attempt to check to see if the comment is spam by using Net::Akismet.
This trigger is called when changing the status of the message. If Net::Akismet is in use, this trigger will notify Akismet that this message is being marked as spam or as ham, depending upon the new value.
This method is not actually implemented by this class, but you will either want to implementt this method in your application or add a before_access trigger that grants access. Otherwise, your comments won't be very interesting to anyone but a superuser.
before_access
See the "SYNOPSIS" for a recommended implementation.
Andrew Sterling Hanenkamp <hanenkamp@cpan.org>
<hanenkamp@cpan.org>
Copyright 2007 Boomer Consulting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This program is free software and may be modified and distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.
To install Jifty::Plugin::Comment, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Jifty::Plugin::Comment
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Jifty::Plugin::Comment
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.