# Paperclip allows file attachments that are stored in the filesystem. All graphical # transformations are done using the Graphics/ImageMagick command line utilities and # are stored in Tempfiles until the record is saved. Paperclip does not require a # separate model for storing the attachment's information, instead adding a few simple # columns to your table. # # Author:: Jon Yurek # Copyright:: Copyright (c) 2008-2009 thoughtbot, inc. # License:: MIT License (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php) # # Paperclip defines an attachment as any file, though it makes special considerations # for image files. You can declare that a model has an attached file with the # +has_attached_file+ method: # # class User < ActiveRecord::Base # has_attached_file :avatar, :styles => { :thumb => "100x100" } # end # # user = User.new # user.avatar = params[:user][:avatar] # user.avatar.url # # => "/users/avatars/4/original_me.jpg" # user.avatar.url(:thumb) # # => "/users/avatars/4/thumb_me.jpg" # # See the +has_attached_file+ documentation for more details. require 'tempfile' require 'paperclip/upfile' require 'paperclip/iostream' require 'paperclip/geometry' require 'paperclip/processor' require 'paperclip/thumbnail' require 'paperclip/storage' require 'paperclip/interpolations' require 'paperclip/attachment' if defined? RAILS_ROOT Dir.glob(File.join(File.expand_path(RAILS_ROOT), "lib", "paperclip_processors", "*.rb")).each do |processor| require processor end end # The base module that gets included in ActiveRecord::Base. See the # documentation for Paperclip::ClassMethods for more useful information. module Paperclip VERSION = "2.2.9.1" class << self # Provides configurability to Paperclip. There are a number of options available, such as: # * whiny: Will raise an error if Paperclip cannot process thumbnails of # an uploaded image. Defaults to true. # * log: Logs progress to the Rails log. Uses ActiveRecord's logger, so honors # log levels, etc. Defaults to true. # * command_path: Defines the path at which to find the command line # programs if they are not visible to Rails the system's search path. Defaults to # nil, which uses the first executable found in the user's search path. # * image_magick_path: Deprecated alias of command_path. def options @options ||= { :whiny => true, :image_magick_path => nil, :command_path => nil, :log => true, :log_command => false, :swallow_stderr => true } end def path_for_command command #:nodoc: if options[:image_magick_path] warn("[DEPRECATION] :image_magick_path is deprecated and will be removed. Use :command_path instead") end path = [options[:command_path] || options[:image_magick_path], command].compact File.join(*path) end def interpolates key, &block Paperclip::Interpolations[key] = block end # The run method takes a command to execute and a string of parameters # that get passed to it. The command is prefixed with the :command_path # option from Paperclip.options. If you have many commands to run and # they are in different paths, the suggested course of action is to # symlink them so they are all in the same directory. # # If the command returns with a result code that is not one of the # expected_outcodes, a PaperclipCommandLineError will be raised. Generally # a code of 0 is expected, but a list of codes may be passed if necessary. # # This method can log the command being run when # Paperclip.options[:log_command] is set to true (defaults to false). This # will only log if logging in general is set to true as well. def run cmd, params = "", expected_outcodes = 0 command = %Q<#{%Q[#{path_for_command(cmd)} #{params}].gsub(/\s+/, " ")}> command = "#{command} 2>#{bit_bucket}" if Paperclip.options[:swallow_stderr] Paperclip.log(command) if Paperclip.options[:log_command] output = `#{command}` unless [expected_outcodes].flatten.include?($?.exitstatus) raise PaperclipCommandLineError, "Error while running #{cmd}" end output end def bit_bucket #:nodoc: File.exists?("/dev/null") ? "/dev/null" : "NUL" end def included base #:nodoc: base.extend ClassMethods unless base.respond_to?(:define_callbacks) base.send(:include, Paperclip::CallbackCompatability) end end def processor name #:nodoc: name = name.to_s.camelize processor = Paperclip.const_get(name) unless processor.ancestors.include?(Paperclip::Processor) raise PaperclipError.new("Processor #{name} was not found") end processor end # Log a paperclip-specific line. Uses ActiveRecord::Base.logger # by default. Set Paperclip.options[:log] to false to turn off. def log message logger.info("[paperclip] #{message}") if logging? end def logger #:nodoc: ActiveRecord::Base.logger end def logging? #:nodoc: options[:log] end end class PaperclipError < StandardError #:nodoc: end class PaperclipCommandLineError < StandardError #:nodoc: end class NotIdentifiedByImageMagickError < PaperclipError #:nodoc: end class InfiniteInterpolationError < PaperclipError #:nodoc: end module ClassMethods # +has_attached_file+ gives the class it is called on an attribute that maps to a file. This # is typically a file stored somewhere on the filesystem and has been uploaded by a user. # The attribute returns a Paperclip::Attachment object which handles the management of # that file. The intent is to make the attachment as much like a normal attribute. The # thumbnails will be created when the new file is assigned, but they will *not* be saved # until +save+ is called on the record. Likewise, if the attribute is set to +nil+ is # called on it, the attachment will *not* be deleted until +save+ is called. See the # Paperclip::Attachment documentation for more specifics. There are a number of options # you can set to change the behavior of a Paperclip attachment: # * +url+: The full URL of where the attachment is publically accessible. This can just # as easily point to a directory served directly through Apache as it can to an action # that can control permissions. You can specify the full domain and path, but usually # just an absolute path is sufficient. The leading slash *must* be included manually for # absolute paths. The default value is # "/system/:attachment/:id/:style/:filename". See # Paperclip::Attachment#interpolate for more information on variable interpolaton. # :url => "/:class/:attachment/:id/:style_:filename" # :url => "http://some.other.host/stuff/:class/:id_:extension" # * +default_url+: The URL that will be returned if there is no attachment assigned. # This field is interpolated just as the url is. The default value is # "/:attachment/:style/missing.png" # has_attached_file :avatar, :default_url => "/images/default_:style_avatar.png" # User.new.avatar_url(:small) # => "/images/default_small_avatar.png" # * +styles+: A hash of thumbnail styles and their geometries. You can find more about # geometry strings at the ImageMagick website # (http://www.imagemagick.org/script/command-line-options.php#resize). Paperclip # also adds the "#" option (e.g. "50x50#"), which will resize the image to fit maximally # inside the dimensions and then crop the rest off (weighted at the center). The # default value is to generate no thumbnails. # * +default_style+: The thumbnail style that will be used by default URLs. # Defaults to +original+. # has_attached_file :avatar, :styles => { :normal => "100x100#" }, # :default_style => :normal # user.avatar.url # => "/avatars/23/normal_me.png" # * +whiny+: Will raise an error if Paperclip cannot post_process an uploaded file due # to a command line error. This will override the global setting for this attachment. # Defaults to true. This option used to be called :whiny_thumbanils, but this is # deprecated. # * +convert_options+: When creating thumbnails, use this free-form options # field to pass in various convert command options. Typical options are "-strip" to # remove all Exif data from the image (save space for thumbnails and avatars) or # "-depth 8" to specify the bit depth of the resulting conversion. See ImageMagick # convert documentation for more options: (http://www.imagemagick.org/script/convert.php) # Note that this option takes a hash of options, each of which correspond to the style # of thumbnail being generated. You can also specify :all as a key, which will apply # to all of the thumbnails being generated. If you specify options for the :original, # it would be best if you did not specify destructive options, as the intent of keeping # the original around is to regenerate all the thumbnails when requirements change. # has_attached_file :avatar, :styles => { :large => "300x300", :negative => "100x100" } # :convert_options => { # :all => "-strip", # :negative => "-negate" # } # NOTE: While not deprecated yet, it is not recommended to specify options this way. # It is recommended that :convert_options option be included in the hash passed to each # :styles for compatability with future versions. # * +storage+: Chooses the storage backend where the files will be stored. The current # choices are :filesystem and :s3. The default is :filesystem. Make sure you read the # documentation for Paperclip::Storage::Filesystem and Paperclip::Storage::S3 # for backend-specific options. def has_attached_file name, options = {} include InstanceMethods write_inheritable_attribute(:attachment_definitions, {}) if attachment_definitions.nil? attachment_definitions[name] = {:validations => []}.merge(options) after_save :save_attached_files before_destroy :destroy_attached_files define_callbacks :before_post_process, :after_post_process define_callbacks :"before_#{name}_post_process", :"after_#{name}_post_process" define_method name do |*args| a = attachment_for(name) (args.length > 0) ? a.to_s(args.first) : a end define_method "#{name}=" do |file| attachment_for(name).assign(file) end define_method "#{name}?" do attachment_for(name).file? end validates_each(name) do |record, attr, value| attachment = record.attachment_for(name) attachment.send(:flush_errors) unless attachment.valid? end end # Places ActiveRecord-style validations on the size of the file assigned. The # possible options are: # * +in+: a Range of bytes (i.e. +1..1.megabyte+), # * +less_than+: equivalent to :in => 0..options[:less_than] # * +greater_than+: equivalent to :in => options[:greater_than]..Infinity # * +message+: error message to display, use :min and :max as replacements # * +if+: A lambda or name of a method on the instance. Validation will only # be run is this lambda or method returns true. # * +unless+: Same as +if+ but validates if lambda or method returns false. def validates_attachment_size name, options = {} min = options[:greater_than] || (options[:in] && options[:in].first) || 0 max = options[:less_than] || (options[:in] && options[:in].last) || (1.0/0) range = (min..max) message = options[:message] || "file size must be between :min and :max bytes." attachment_definitions[name][:validations] << [:size, {:range => range, :message => message, :if => options[:if], :unless => options[:unless]}] end # Adds errors if thumbnail creation fails. The same as specifying :whiny_thumbnails => true. def validates_attachment_thumbnails name, options = {} warn('[DEPRECATION] validates_attachment_thumbnail is deprecated. ' + 'This validation is on by default and will be removed from future versions. ' + 'If you wish to turn it off, supply :whiny => false in your definition.') attachment_definitions[name][:whiny_thumbnails] = true end # Places ActiveRecord-style validations on the presence of a file. # Options: # * +if+: A lambda or name of a method on the instance. Validation will only # be run is this lambda or method returns true. # * +unless+: Same as +if+ but validates if lambda or method returns false. def validates_attachment_presence name, options = {} message = options[:message] || "must be set." attachment_definitions[name][:validations] << [:presence, {:message => message, :if => options[:if], :unless => options[:unless]}] end # Places ActiveRecord-style validations on the content type of the file # assigned. The possible options are: # * +content_type+: Allowed content types. Can be a single content type # or an array. Each type can be a String or a Regexp. It should be # noted that Internet Explorer upload files with content_types that you # may not expect. For example, JPEG images are given image/pjpeg and # PNGs are image/x-png, so keep that in mind when determining how you # match. Allows all by default. # * +message+: The message to display when the uploaded file has an invalid # content type. # * +if+: A lambda or name of a method on the instance. Validation will only # be run is this lambda or method returns true. # * +unless+: Same as +if+ but validates if lambda or method returns false. # NOTE: If you do not specify an [attachment]_content_type field on your # model, content_type validation will work _ONLY upon assignment_ and # re-validation after the instance has been reloaded will always succeed. def validates_attachment_content_type name, options = {} attachment_definitions[name][:validations] << [:content_type, {:content_type => options[:content_type], :message => options[:message], :if => options[:if], :unless => options[:unless]}] end # Returns the attachment definitions defined by each call to # has_attached_file. def attachment_definitions read_inheritable_attribute(:attachment_definitions) end end module InstanceMethods #:nodoc: def attachment_for name @_paperclip_attachments ||= {} @_paperclip_attachments[name] ||= Attachment.new(name, self, self.class.attachment_definitions[name]) end def each_attachment self.class.attachment_definitions.each do |name, definition| yield(name, attachment_for(name)) end end def save_attached_files logger.info("[paperclip] Saving attachments.") each_attachment do |name, attachment| attachment.send(:save) end end def destroy_attached_files logger.info("[paperclip] Deleting attachments.") each_attachment do |name, attachment| attachment.send(:queue_existing_for_delete) attachment.send(:flush_deletes) end end end end # Set it all up. if Object.const_defined?("ActiveRecord") ActiveRecord::Base.send(:include, Paperclip) File.send(:include, Paperclip::Upfile) end