Safe place to store user-defined parameters
-
@fredo6 said:
I will release the new versions of LibFredo6
- with ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] on Windows
- with TIG's method on Mac, that is the parent directory of the ENV["TMPDIR"] folder. I think using ENV["HOME"] with some hidden subfolder would have been considered too intrusive.
These will be root folders into which I will create the LibFredo6 subfolders for persisting data.
I think in both cases these folder won't contain non-ascii characters, as they are defined and created by the system itself.
Fredo
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"]
may contain non-ascii characters, as it contains the current users username. Also, you should useENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] || ENV["APPDATA"]
so you can support XP at no extra effortBonus:
-
Just to test things I created a user account "tæst" under Windows7. And ran some tests in the Ruby Console:
ENV['HOMEPATH'] \Users\t‘st ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Local ENV["APPDATA"] C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Roaming file = File.join( ENV['LOCALAPPDATA'], 'FooBar.txt' ) C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Local/FooBar.txt File.open( tempfile, 'wb' ) { |file| file.puts 'Hello world' } Error; #<Errno;;ENOENT; (eval);0;in `initialize'; No such file or directory - C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Local/FooBar.txt> (eval) (eval);0;in `open' (eval);0 ENV['TEMP'] C;\Users\TST~1\AppData\Local\Temp tempfile = File.join( ENV['TEMP'], 'FooBar.txt' ) C;\Users\TST~1\AppData\Local\Temp/FooBar.txt File.open( tempfile, 'wb' ) { |file| file.puts 'Hello world' } nil
Interesting observations:
Most
ENV
has some strange character replacements. Is this a Ruby thing?ENV['TEMP']
returned a path in the format of the old DOS 8.3 format. And this could be written to.ENV.each { |k,v| puts "#{k}\t#{v}" } ALLUSERSPROFILE C;\ProgramData APPDATA C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Roaming CommonProgramFiles C;\Program Files (x86)\Common Files CommonProgramFiles(x86) C;\Program Files (x86)\Common Files CommonProgramW6432 C;\Program Files\Common Files COMPUTERNAME ARC-CU-10-09 ComSpec C;\Windows\system32\cmd.exe FP_NO_HOST_CHECK NO HOMEDRIVE C; HOMEPATH \Users\t‘st LOCALAPPDATA C;\Users\t‘st\AppData\Local LOGONSERVER \\ARC-CU-10-09 NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS 8 OS Windows_NT PATHEXT .COM;.EXE;.BAT;.CMD;.VBS;.VBE;.JS;.JSE;.WSF;.WSH;.MSC PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE x86 PROCESSOR_ARCHITEW6432 AMD64 PROCESSOR_IDENTIFIER Intel64 Family 6 Model 26 Stepping 5, GenuineIntel PROCESSOR_LEVEL 6 PROCESSOR_REVISION 1a05 ProgramData C;\ProgramData ProgramFiles C;\Program Files (x86) ProgramFiles(x86) C;\Program Files (x86) ProgramW6432 C;\Program Files PSModulePath C;\Windows\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\Modules\ PUBLIC C;\Users\Public SESSIONNAME Console SystemDrive C; SystemRoot C;\Windows TEMP C;\Users\TST~1\AppData\Local\Temp TMP C;\Users\TST~1\AppData\Local\Temp ULTRAMON_LANGDIR C;\Program Files\UltraMon\Resources\en USERDOMAIN arc-cu-10-09 USERNAME t‘st USERPROFILE C;\Users\t‘st windir C;\Windows
The TEMP path seem to be the only one using this format.
So, question is, is it possible to monkey-patch this so one can extract the user directory in DOS8.3 format and use that to replace the mangled paths of the other variables?And what does it return under other Windows versions? (Win8, Vista, XP)
What about chineese/japanese types or characters - does the same thing apply?
-
@unknownuser said:
Also, you should use
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] || ENV["APPDATA"]
so you can support XP at no extra effortWhat folders does this yield on XP? Under Win7 it's both in the user directory.
-
I will use the parent of ENV["TMPDIR"] only on Mac. Apparently, this directory has a long cryptic name, which I assume will only contain valid characters.
On Windows, this is more of a problem is ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] cannot be manipulated from Ruby dues to non Ascii characters. It's not only for creating subfolders there, but also to manage filepaths of files to be created and updated.
The best I can do is to check if the username contains non-ascii characters and then simplify the name to Ascii, and create a folder with that simplified name in C:\users. This really becomes convoluted!!
There must be a trick however, because when Sketchup installs, it sets the default file locations pointing to the "MyDocuments" folder, whose name also contains the username (something like
C:\Userfiles\<username>\Documents\
). But maybe these locations are not used from Ruby.Fredo
-
@fredo6 said:
The best I can do is to check if the username contains non-ascii characters and then simplify the name to Ascii, and create a folder with that simplified name in C:\users. This really becomes convoluted!!
Creating random folder directly in the location where user folders are? I don't think people would too happy about this. I'd like to explore if we can get the 8.3 filename for the appdata folder.
@fredo6 said:
There must be a trick however, because when Sketchup installs, it sets the default file locations pointing to the "MyDocuments" folder, whose name also contains the username (something like
C:\Userfiles\<username>\Documents\
). But maybe these locations are not used from Ruby.Correct - SketchUp itself has no problems with Unicode paths. It's the Ruby 1.8 core.
-
@thomthom said:
@unknownuser said:
Also, you should use
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] || ENV["APPDATA"]
so you can support XP at no extra effortWhat folders does this yield on XP? Under Win7 it's both in the user directory.
Actually as I use both, LOCALAPPDATA first and then APPDATA.
For info, on WindowsXP, ENV["APPDATA"] is defined and uses the old Windows user directory in the form of
C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data
.Fredo
-
@fredo6 said:
For info, on WindowsXP, ENV["APPDATA"] is defined and uses the old Windows user directory in the form of
C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data
.Got a full list of ENV variables under XP?
Btw- if I recall correctly "Documents and Settings" is localized to the user's language, isn't it? (without the shim that Vista,Win7, win8 uses)
-
We could also substitute <username> in the paths by
Default
on Win7, Vista, Win8All users
on XP
At least this will avoid the problem of unicode in the username.
Fredo
-
@fredo6 said:
We could also substitute <username> in the paths by
Default
on Win7, Vista, Win8All users
on XP
At least this will avoid the problem of unicode in the username.
And the setting would not be per-use - but per computer. ...which might not be a big issue since the plugin folder is shared by all users.
But again I raise my concern that XP paths might be translated. "All users" I think is "Alle brukere" in Norwegian XP. (I can dig out my old XP machine and test.)
-
Just found a BIG PROBLEM with the 'TIG' and new 'FREDO' path trick on my mac.
My User 'private' settings for 'BOTH' are now available to any account on my computer or connected to my network.
By stepping up stream, external to
ENV["TMPDIR"]
you are bypassing the LOCK to other user accounts and network traffic.So my SFC Password Cookie and my Fredo settings are usable from any account, I do not expect a Plugin to share this type of information with the world.
Please move these back into User Space asap.
This could be a huge problem on a work or university network...
john
-
@driven said:
Just found a BIG PROBLEM with the 'TIG' and new 'FREDO' path trick on my mac.
My User 'private' settings for 'BOTH' are now available to any account on my computer or connected to my network.
By stepping up stream, external to
ENV["TMPDIR"]
you are bypassing the LOCK to other user accounts and network traffic.So my SFC Password Cookie and my Fredo settings are usable from any account, I do not expect a Plugin to share this type of information with the world.
Please move these back into User Space asap.
This could be a huge problem on a work or university network...
john
Confirm: the parent of ENV[TMPDIR] has permissions drwxr-xr-x on my Mac - that means it is readable by anyone, though only the owner (me) can write new files there. ENV[TMPDIR] itself is drwx------, which means it is inaccessible to anyone but me. This is not a big deal if you are the only user on your computer, but a serious issue if anyone else has access.
Steve
-
I think I will default to the old method of DEFPARAM_Dir in the SU Plugins directory
-
Using Win32 API calls I've been able to get short (DOS 8.3 style) path name to appdata. I need to run some tests to make sure it works under XP etc.
-
Trying to recap
1) On Windows
For the non-ascii username, we have a much more general problem, because Temp directory and very likely any files (skp, materials), are going to be stamped with the username in the file paths. So nothing will work. For instance, I prepare the HTML files of webdialog boxes in the Temp directory. This is also where I put some traces.
--> I will ignore this until Sketchup moves to Ruby 1.9.2 which solves the problem (or thomthom to find a solution!). Too bad for users having a non-ascii name!For parameters, the usage of
LOCALAPPDATA
andAPPDATA
is OK. It is based on users and should correspond to writable areas
--> I will use this method2) on Mac
For the non-ascii username, apparently there is no issue with non-ascii usernames (to be confirmed), but anyway, the Temp dir is independent, writable and only visible to users. In addition, the ~/ notation allows avoiding having the user name in the path
--> NO issue thereFor parameters, there are visibility issues with the parent folder of ENV["TMPDIR"]. So the method cannot be used.
--> I will use driven's method based on a root directory~/Library/Application Support/
with a hidden folder "LIBFREDO6_DATA_Dir" under which I will create the files and subfolders.It's interesting to see that we have had a long debate on a basic question which we should expect to be covered by Sketchup itself. I think we should formulate it clearly for the Trimble SU team to address it in SU 2014.
Fredo
-
As for OSX, what about this:
plugin_path = Sketchup.find_support_file('Plugins') path = File.join( plugin_path, '..', '..' ) File.expand_path( path )
Making some assumption here, but tested under SU8 and SU2013 on OSX 10.8.3:
/Library/Application Support/Google SketchUp 8 /Users/thomas/Library/Application Support/SketchUp 2013
-
@fredo6 said:
1) On Windows
For the non-ascii username, we have a much more general problem, because Temp directory and very likely any files (skp, materials), are going to be stamped with the username in the file paths. So nothing will work. For instance, I prepare the HTML files of webdialog boxes in the Temp directory. This is also where I put some traces.
--> I will ignore this until Sketchup moves to Ruby 1.9.2 which solves the problem (or thomthom to find a solution!). Too bad for users having a non-ascii name!On my Win7 systems I tried, the TEMP/TMP ENV variables returned a short (DOS 8.3 style) path name. These short paths was writable with Ruby 1.8 as the system resolved their real paths. (I assume because the short paths where given to the ANSI version of the system file functions which in turn handled it.)
@fredo6 said:
For parameters, the usage of
LOCALAPPDATA
andAPPDATA
is OK. It is based on users and should correspond to writable areas
--> I will use this methodThere also include username in the path and may be non-writable. In fact - you are more likely to get issues here because the ENV variable doesn't return a short path - but a path string with replaced characters.
@fredo6 said:
2) on Mac
For the non-ascii username, apparently there is no issue with non-ascii usernames (to be confirmed), but anyway, the Temp dir is independent, writable and only visible to users. In addition, the ~/ notation allows avoiding having the user name in the path
--> NO issue thereUnicode filenames works under OSX with Ruby 1.8 because the file system functions calls handles UTF-8 strings.
@fredo6 said:
For parameters, there are visibility issues with the parent folder of ENV["TMPDIR"]. So the method cannot be used.
--> I will use driven's method based on a root directory~/Library/Application Support/
with a hidden folder "LIBFREDO6_DATA_Dir" under which I will create the files and subfolders.What about under '~\Library\Application Support\SketchUp 2013' ? That way the data is isolated from version to version.
-
On my Windows 7,
ENV["TMP"] --> C:\Users\Fred\AppData\Local\Temp
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] --> C:\Users\Fred\AppData\Local
So I don't see the short Dos 8.3 notation on my PCAnyway, since the releasing of my scripts I have been using ENV["TMP"] and I never came across a user having problem with non-ascii username. So maybe very few users do set up their PC with a non-ascii username
On Mac,
It seems SU 13 plugins is installed under
~/Library/Application Support/SketchUP 2013/Sketchup/Plugins
.So I still have a problem to understand
- why we could create a directory from Ruby under
~/Library/Application Support
- and why it fails when you create it in
~/Library/Application Support/SketchUP 2013/Sketchup/Plugins
(i.e. the failure reported on DEFPARAM_Dir creation)
Fredo
- why we could create a directory from Ruby under
-
@thomthom said:
As for OSX, what about this:
plugin_path = Sketchup.find_support_file('Plugins') path = File.join( plugin_path, '..', '..' ) File.expand_path( path )
The problem is when
Sketchup.find_support_file('Plugins')
returns the non-user Librarythe only way to be sure you have a User writable Plugins Folder is
userPlugins = (File.dirname(File.expand_path(Sketchup.find_support_file("OldColors")))) << ("/Plugins") Dir.mkdir(userPlugins ) unless File.exist?(userPlugins )
This empty Folder
OldColors
is in every version since v5 at least, it's not dynamically created likeShortcuts.plist
nor movable likeAutoSave
SU on mac has always been able to have 2 'Plugins' paths, it was mix and match that messed things up...
john
-
@fredo6 said:
On my Windows 7,
ENV["TMP"] --> C:\Users\Fred\AppData\Local\Temp
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] --> C:\Users\Fred\AppData\Local
So I don't see the short Dos 8.3 notation on my PCBecause your username "Fred" is compatible with the 8.3 annotation. If however the username is "tæst" the the returned value would be:
ENV["TMP"] --> C:\Users\TST~1\AppData\Local\Temp ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"] --> C:\Users\T'st\AppData\Local
As demonstrated by this example: http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=52730&start=60#p482159
So
ENV["LOCALAPPDATA"]
is not safe and will fail.@fredo6 said:
Anyway, since the releasing of my scripts I have been using ENV["TMP"] and I never came across a user having problem with non-ascii username. So maybe very few users do set up their PC with a non-ascii username
That's because ENV["TMP"] returns the path in the short 8.3 format.
I've managed to make Win32 API system calls to get the appdata folder in this format. But I don't see any other way to get this path. For me it's not a big deal because I already ship D. Berger's Win32::API class wrapped under the TT:: namespace in TT_Lib2. But it's not an ideal solution for everyone as it requires bundling a third party library.
-
Thomthom,
Thanks really for all your efforts.
On Win7, LOCALAPPDATA seems to be simply the parent of the Temp folder.
So maybe the solution is to use for local data
File.dirname ENV["TMP"]
, which hopefully will preserve the 8.3 notation.It may even work on Windows XP
[EDIT]from Internet googling, it seems that the temp directory on Xp is %SystemDrive%\Documents and Settings{username}\Local Settings\Temp.
On Windows Vista, 7, 8, the directory is %SystemDrive%\Users{username}\AppData\Local\TempSo the method
File.dirname ENV["TEMP"]
would work on both Widnows systems, provided this callFile.dirname
preserves the Dos8.3 notation.Fredo
Advertisement