Information | Actions |
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Support Status | Full Support |
Architecture Information | Platform Architecture |
Description | An Action is a discrete unit of work that can be invoked repeatedly. It can be invoked from a number of SkyVault features, such as Folder Rules, Workflows, Web Scripts, and Scheduled Jobs. The following are examples of out-of-the-box actions: Check-Out, Check-In, Update, Add Aspect, Copy, Cut, Paste, Send Email, Move, Specialize Type, Edit, and Delete. An action can contain both a back-end part (business logic) and a front-end part (UI widgets). The back-end implementation is usually done by extending the SkyVault.war with what is known as a Repository Action. This Extension Point documentation describes the back end. The front-end implementation is usually achieved by extending the SkyVault share.war with a Document Library Action. Actions are Spring beans that act upon a content node. You develop actions using Java and register them with the repository through a Spring configuration file. Actions provide the ideal place to put your common, highly reusable business logic. You can then call these actions from within the repository for any number of content objects. You can perform operations on the SkyVault Repository where those operations are implemented as actions. For example, you might create a folder rule that automatically sends an email with incoming content as an attachment. The rule triggers an action. You must implement one method that tells the action what to do. Your method is given the action parameters as well as the node upon which the action is being called. An example implementation of a Send-As-Email action that can handle email attachments is as follows: public class SendAsEmailActionExecuter extends ActionExecuterAbstractBase { private static Log logger = LogFactory.getLog(SendAsEmailActionExecuter.class); public static final String PARAM_EMAIL_TO_NAME = "to"; public static final String PARAM_EMAIL_SUBJECT_NAME = "subject"; public static final String PARAM_EMAIL_BODY_NAME = "body_text"; /** * The SkyVault Service Registry that gives access to all public content services in SkyVault. */ private ServiceRegistry serviceRegistry; public void setServiceRegistry(ServiceRegistry serviceRegistry) { this.serviceRegistry = serviceRegistry; } @Override protected void addParameterDefinitions(List<ParameterDefinition> paramList) { for (String s : new String[]{PARAM_EMAIL_TO_NAME, PARAM_EMAIL_SUBJECT_NAME, PARAM_EMAIL_BODY_NAME}) { paramList.add(new ParameterDefinitionImpl(s, DataTypeDefinition.TEXT, true, getParamDisplayLabel(s))); } } @Override protected void executeImpl(Action action, NodeRef actionedUponNodeRef) { if (serviceRegistry.getNodeService().exists(actionedUponNodeRef) == true) { // Get the email properties entered via Share Form String to = (String) action.getParameterValue(PARAM_EMAIL_TO_NAME); String subject = (String) action.getParameterValue(PARAM_EMAIL_SUBJECT_NAME); String body = (String) action.getParameterValue(PARAM_EMAIL_BODY_NAME); // Get document filename Serializable filename = serviceRegistry.getNodeService().getProperty( actionedUponNodeRef, ContentModel.PROP_NAME); if (filename == null) { throw new SkyVaultRuntimeException("Document filename is null"); } String documentName = (String) filename; try { // Create mail session Properties mailServerProperties = new Properties(); mailServerProperties = System.getProperties(); mailServerProperties.put("mail.smtp.host", "localhost"); mailServerProperties.put("mail.smtp.port", "2525"); Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(mailServerProperties, null); session.setDebug(false); // Define message Message message = new MimeMessage(session); String fromAddress = "training@alfresco.com"; message.setFrom(new InternetAddress(fromAddress)); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); message.setSubject(subject); // Create the message part with body text BodyPart messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); messageBodyPart.setText(body); Multipart multipart = new MimeMultipart(); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Create the Attachment part // // Get the document content bytes byte[] documentData = getDocumentContentBytes(actionedUponNodeRef, documentName); if (documentData == null) { throw new SkyVaultRuntimeException("Document content is null"); } // Attach document messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); messageBodyPart.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(new ByteArrayDataSource( documentData, new MimetypesFileTypeMap().getContentType(documentName)))); messageBodyPart.setFileName(documentName); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Put parts in message message.setContent(multipart); // Send mail Transport.send(message); // Set status on node as "sent via email" Map<QName, Serializable> properties = new HashMap<QName, Serializable>(); properties.put(ContentModel.PROP_ORIGINATOR, fromAddress); properties.put(ContentModel.PROP_ADDRESSEE, to); properties.put(ContentModel.PROP_SUBJECT, subject); properties.put(ContentModel.PROP_SENTDATE, new Date()); serviceRegistry.getNodeService().addAspect(actionedUponNodeRef, ContentModel.ASPECT_EMAILED, properties); } catch (MessagingException me) { me.printStackTrace(); throw new SkyVaultRuntimeException("Could not send email: " + me.getMessage()); } } } private byte[] getDocumentContentBytes(NodeRef documentRef, String documentFilename) { ... } } Repository Action implementations should extend the org.alfresco.repo.action.executer.ActionExecuterAbstractBase base class. Many action implementations will need some input data and this is handled via parameter definitions. The addParameterDefinitions method is used to indicate to the system what parameters an action requires. In the case of this "Send-As-Email" action address, subject, and body text needs to be passed into the action. The executeImpl method is the main method where the action logic is implemented. This method takes an Action object, which can be used to get to the passed in parameters, and a NodeRef pointing to the content node (file or folder) that the action was applied to. Once the action implementation is finished it needs to be registered via a Spring bean before it can be used and recognized in the UI. Here is how you can register the "Send-As-Email" action: <beans> <bean id="send-as-email" class="org.alfresco.tutorial.repoaction.SendAsEmailActionExecuter" parent="action-executer"> <property name="serviceRegistry"> <ref bean="ServiceRegistry" /> </property> </bean> </beans> The important part of the Spring bean definition is the id, which will be the identifier this action will be known by. Then the bean needs to have the action-executer bean as parent. Note here the use of ServiceRegistry, which is the best practice approach to get to the SkyVault public services, such as the NodeService. You can now invoke this action from, for example, a snippet of JavaScript code like this (useful if the action should be invoked from a Rule): var document = space.childByNamePath("/somefile.txt"); var sendAsEmailAction = actions.create("send-as-email"); sendAsEmailAction.parameters["to"] = "fred.blogs@alfresco.com"; sendAsEmailAction.parameters["subject"] = "Doc " + document.name; sendAsEmailAction.parameters["body_text"] = "A copy of the " + document.name + " is attached"; sendAsEmailAction.execute(document); In SkyVault JavaScript the special root object actions are used to invoke an action. We can also invoke actions from custom Java code: public void sendEmailWithDoc(String to, String subject, String bodyText, NodeRef docNodeRef) { boolean executeAsync = true; Map<String, Serializable> aParams = new HashMap<String, Serializable>(); aParams.put("to", to); aParams.put("subject", subject); aParams.put("body_text", bodyText); Action a = serviceRegistry.getActionService().createAction("send-as-email", aParams); if (a != null) { serviceRegistry.getActionService().executeAction(a, docNodeRef, true, executeAsync); } else { throw new RuntimeException("Could not create send-as-email action"); } } The ActionService is used to both create and invoke the action. Note here that it is possible to execute an action asynchronously in the background, as in the above Java code that sets executeAsync to true. So you can see that Repository Actions are useful in many different situations, such as when you want to:
Important: There is already an out-of-the-box mail
action, which can be used to send an email. However, it does not support
sending an attachment.
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Deployment - App Server | A Repository Action is usually implemented in Java, which is not suitable for manual installation into a SkyVault installation. Use a Repo AMP project instead. |
Deployment - SDK Project |
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More Information | |
Sample Code | |
Tutorials |
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SkyVault Developer Blogs | None |
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Actions
Repository Actions are reusable units of work that can be invoked from the
User Interface (UI). Examples include Workflow and Web Scripts. Much of the functionality
in the Share UI is backed by an Action.
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