Software Prerequisites.

Structure

The directory boinc/py/Boinc contains the Boinc module. This means if you have boinc/py/ in your python path you can write for example:
from Boinc.setup_project import *
To ensure boinc/py/ is in your python path:
import boinc_path_config
This is a special module that configure places in relevant directories which then modifies sys.path appropriately.

Project-specific settings

The module boinc_project_path is imported to get the paths for config.xml and run_state.xml. The default paths for these are the parent directory of the invocation script. You can override these defaults
  1. modify this file directly (if you have only one project on your server or have separate copies for each)
  2. create a new boinc_project_path.py and place it earlier in PYTHONPATH than the default one
  3. define environment variables
Example boinc_project_path.py
  config_xml_filename = '/etc/boinc/yetiathome/config.xml'
  run_state_xml_filename = '/var/lib/boinc/yetiathome/run_state.xml'
See the source of file boinc/py/Boinc/boinc_project_path.py for details.

Directories containing python scripts

"; list_start(); list_item( "boinc/py/Boinc/*.py", "Main BOINC python modules" ); list_item( "boinc/sched/start", "BOINC start / Super Cron program" ); list_item( "boinc/tools/xadd", " Adds objects to the database" ); list_item( "boinc/tools/make_project", "Creates a project" ); list_item( "boinc/tools/update_versions", "Adds all relevant core client and application executables to download directory and database" ); list_item( "boinc/test/test*.py
cgiserver.py
", "Test scripts: see the testing framework." ); list_end(); echo "

Python modules in boinc/py/Boinc/

"; list_start(); list_item( "boinc_path_config.py.in", "Configure puts boinc_path_config.py in all directories that need it; see above" ); list_item( "boinc_project_path.py", "sets where config.xml et al can be found; see above." ); list_item( "configxml.py", "reads and writes config.xml and run_state.xml - see its pydoc for more information" ); list_item( "boinc_db.py", "auto-generated file that contains database constant definitions, e.g. RESULT_OUTCOME_SUCCESS = 1" ); list_item( "setup_project.py", "internal module for creating a project. See make_project and test scripts." ); list_item( "database.py", "defines database backend functions and database operations; see below." ); list_item( "db_mid.py", " 'middle-end': optional mix-in to ease debugging by allowing printing of database objects directly" ); list_item( "util.py", "miscellaneous functions" ); list_item( "version.py.in", "version and platform-specific definitions snarfed by configure" ); list_end(); echo "

Python database access

Database.py defines database backend library and database table and object relationships to allow easy data manipulation.

All database tables have a corresponding class and its rows have classes, where each column is a member of that class. Ids are automatically translated to and from objects. To begin, import the database module:

  from Boinc import database
Connect to the database:
  database.connect_default_config()
Table classes can be indexed using the [ ] operator to retrieve an object by id; e.g.
  # executes 'select * from project where id=1'.
  # exception is raised if project is not found
  project_with_id_1 = database.Projects[1]
Table classes have a find function that builds and executes a MySQL query based on its arguments:
  # this could return any number (0, 1, 2, ...) of platforms
  # executes \"select * from platform where user_friendly_name='commodore 64'\"
  list_of_platforms_called_c64 = database.Platforms.find(
      user_friendly_name = 'Commodore 64')
Find can take any number of arguments; they are ANDed. For more advanced usage such as custom SQL queries (anything is possible :) see the pydoc.
  all_apps = database.Apps.find()
  finished_yeti_wus = database.Workunits.find(
      app = database.Apps.find(name='YETI@home')[0],
      assimilate_state = ASSIMILATE_DONE)
Objects (table rows) have their column data as members so you can access and modify them directly.
  user_quarl = database.users.find(email_addr='quarl@quarl.org')[0]
  print 'name =', user_quarl.name
  user_quarl.postal_code = 97404
To create a new database object, create a Python object and give all values as parameters to the initializer:
  new_app = database.App(name='SPAGHETTI@home',
                         min_version=1,
                         create_time=time.time())
To commit any changes (including a new object), call commit() (the tool boinc/tools/add.py is a command-line interface to this):
  user_quarl.commit()  # executes an UPDATE
  new_app.commit()     # executes an INSERT
To remove an object, call remove():
  team_eric_test = database.Teams(name=\"Eric's Test Team\")[0]
  team_eric_test.remove()
  #                        OR
  for team in database.Teams(name=\"Eric's Test Team\"):
      team.remove()
  #                        OR
  map(database.Team.remove,database.Teams(name=\"Eric's Test Team\"))
To access objects related by id, access the field name without \"id\" suffix: (the result table has columns 'workunitid' and 'hostid'; the host table has column userid)
  wu_1234 = database.Workunits.find(name='1234.wu')[0]
  results_of_wu_1234 = database.Results.find(workunit=wu_1234)
  for result in results_of_wu_1234:
      os.system(\"echo 'you are crunching %s' | mail '%s'\" %(
                 result.name, result.host.user.email_addr))
TablePython table objectPython row object class
projectProjectsProject
platformPlatformsPlatform
core_versionCoreVersionsCoreVersion
appAppsApp
app_versionAppVersionsAppVersion
userUsersUser
teamTeamsTeam
hostHostsHost
workunitWorkunitsWorkunit
resultResultsResult
workseqWorkseqsWorkseq
"; page_tail(); ?>