switched doctype to standard compliance mode
[squirrelmail.git] / doc / db-backend.txt
1 $Id$
2
3
4 Storing private addressbooks and preferences in a database
5 ==========================================================
6
7
8 On sites with many users you might want to store your user data in a
9 database instead of in files. This document describes how to configure
10 SquirrelMail to do this.
11
12 Methods for storing both personal addressbooks and user preferences in
13 a database is included as a part of the distribution.
14
15
16
17 Configuring PEAR DB
18 -------------------
19
20 For this to work you must have the PEAR classes installed, these are
21 part of PHP. Once these are installed you must have sure the directory
22 containg them is a part of your PHP include path. See the PHP
23 documentation for information on how to do that.
24 Under Mandrake Linux the PEAR classes are installed as part of the
25 php-devel package and under FreeBSD they are installed as part of
26 the mod_php4 or php4 port/package. In Debian, you can install the
27 php4-pear package. I'm afraid I have no information on
28 other systems at the present time.
29
30
31 Configuring addressbooks in database
32 ------------------------------------
33
34 First you need to create a database and a table to store the data in.
35 Create a database user with access to read and write in that table.
36
37 For MySQL you would normally do something like:
38
39 (from the command line)
40 # mysqladmin create squirrelmail
41
42 (from the mysql client)
43 mysql> GRANT select,insert,update,delete ON squirrelmail.*
44 TO squirreluser@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'sqpassword';
45
46 The table structure should be similar to this (for MySQL):
47
48 CREATE TABLE address (
49 owner varchar(128) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
50 nickname varchar(16) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
51 firstname varchar(128) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
52 lastname varchar(128) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
53 email varchar(128) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
54 label varchar(255),
55 PRIMARY KEY (owner,nickname),
56 KEY firstname (firstname,lastname)
57 );
58
59 and similar to this for PostgreSQL:
60 CREATE TABLE "address" (
61 "owner" varchar(128) NOT NULL,
62 "nickname" varchar(16) NOT NULL,
63 "firstname" varchar(128) NOT NULL,
64 "lastname" varchar(128) NOT NULL,
65 "email" varchar(128) NOT NULL,
66 "label" varchar(255) NOT NULL,
67 CONSTRAINT "address_pkey" PRIMARY KEY ("nickname", "owner")
68 );
69 CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "address_firstname_key" ON "address"
70 ("firstname", "lastname");
71
72
73 Next, edit your configuration so that the address book DSN (Data Source
74 Name) is specified, this can be done using either conf.pl or via the
75 administration plugin. The DSN should look something like:
76
77 mysql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail or
78 pgsql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail
79
80 From now on all users' personal addressbooks will be stored in a
81 database.
82
83 Global address book uses same table format as the one used for personal
84 address book. You can even use same table, if you don't have user named
85 'global'.
86
87 Configuring preferences in database
88 -----------------------------------
89
90 This is done in much the same way as it is for storing your address
91 books in a database.
92
93 The table structure should be similar to this (for MySQL):
94
95 CREATE TABLE userprefs (
96 user varchar(128) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
97 prefkey varchar(64) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
98 prefval BLOB DEFAULT '' NOT NULL,
99 PRIMARY KEY (user,prefkey)
100 );
101
102 and for PostgreSQL:
103 CREATE TABLE "userprefs" (
104 "username" varchar(128) NOT NULL,
105 "prefkey" varchar(64) NOT NULL,
106 "prefval" text,
107 CONSTRAINT "userprefs_pkey" PRIMARY KEY ("prefkey", "username")
108 );
109
110 Next, edit your configuration so that the preferences DSN (Data Source
111 Name) is specified, this can be done using either conf.pl or via the
112 administration plugin. The DSN should look something like:
113
114 mysql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail or
115 pgsql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail
116
117 From now on all users' personal preferences will be stored in a
118 database.
119
120 Default preferences can be set by altering the $default array in
121 db_prefs.php.
122
123 Troubleshooting
124 ---------------
125 1. Oversized field values. Preferences are not/can't be saved
126
127 Database fields have size limits. Preference table example sets 128
128 character limit to owner field, 64 character limit to preference key
129 field and 64KB (database BLOB field size) limit to value field.
130
131 If interface tries to insert data without checking field limits, it
132 can cause data loss or database errors. Table information functions
133 provided by Pear DB libraries are not accurate and some database
134 backends don't support them. Since 1.5.1 SquirrelMail provides
135 configuration options that set allowed field sizes.
136
137 If you see oversized field errors in your error logs - check your
138 database structure. Issue can be solved by increasing database field
139 sizes.
140
141 If you want to get more debugging information - check setKey() function
142 in dbPrefs class. Class is stored in functions/db_prefs.php