This is a extionsion for the Ringo webframework. It can be used to save so called printtemplates in the applications. Printtemplates are ODT Files which can be filled with data comming from the module.
Template files are saved in the database on default, but using a special notation in the data field of the template model allows to refer to files in the local filesystem too:
@package:path/to/file/relative/to/package/file
Where package is the name of the application.
Optionally you can convert the ODT files into PDF. Therefore a libreoffice installation must be installed on the server. Please also note that currently (March 2017) the py3o.renderers.pyuno installation pulled by setup.py seems to be broken. A workaround is manually installing the package ('pip install py3o.renderers.pyuno') before installing ringo_printtemplates.
The following configuation variables are available:
### # Settings for the Converter ### # Should the converter be started on application start? Set to # true to enable converter startup. converter.start = false # Set python path for the Converter. Defaults to the system python converter.python = /usr/bin/python3 # Set port of which the client listen. Defaults to 2002 converter.port = 2002 # Instead of directly talking to the office you can talk to a # webservice. converter.url = http://127.0.0.1:5000
Ringo is Free Software. It is licensed under the GPL license in version 2 or later. See http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0 for more details on the license.
This extension comes with a small webservice which will take a ODT document and return a converted document.
Do not fortget to configure your application to use this service.
To start the service invoke the following command:
ringo-odfconverter
The service will listen on http://127.0.0.1:5000 on default. The service can be "pinged" to check its availablilty on "/" url. It should return "Pong" with status code 200.
Conversion of documents can be done by invoking a POST request on the server with a base64 encoded odt file in the request POST params on http://127.0.0.1:5000/pdf. The server will return a base64 encoded PDF document.
You can also start the application as a normal pyramid application using the pserve command:
pserve --reload development
If you encounter the following message on installation:
ERROR: /bin/sh: xslt-config: Kommando nicht gefunden ** make sure the development packages of libxml2 and libxslt are installed **
You need to install the following packages if you want to compile lxml for yourself:
apt-get install libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev
An alternative might be to install lxml globally on your system and give your virtual environment access to it.