I'll have a look at it maybe tomorrow on my train commute or else during
the coming week.
Thanks,

Tsvi Mostovicz
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/tsvim



On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 17:09, Alan Etkin <[email protected]> wrote:

> The web ticket output is managed by this code:
>
> <web2py>/applications/admin/controllers/default.py (see function ticket
> and ticketdb and errors)
> <web2py>/applications/admin/views/default/<view name> (see function ticket
> and ticketdb and errors)
>
> Errors is the error panel to show and classify the tickets, ticket and
> ticketdb return a single ticket for examination.
>
> It seems that the html output is handled at the controller using the gluon
> RestrictedError and TRACEBACK class (defined in default.py)
> If you don't want html output then it would be enough to instantiate the
> RestrictedError object and use it's methods.
>
> El miércoles 28 de marzo de 2012 10:40:49 UTC-3, Alan Etkin escribió:
>
>> Well, the admin web interface has to parse it somehow to render it in the
>> browser, there must be a function in appadmin or in the admin app for that
>> purpose.
>>
>> El miércoles 28 de marzo de 2012 08:33:11 UTC-3, tsvim escribió:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Lately, I've been using pythonanywhere to work on my pet project
>>> together with Dropbox. It's very fun, as it allows me to test all kinds of
>>> access (mobile, desktop), various environments (work, home), os's etc.
>>> Obviously I'm unable to access the admin as I'm not at a local machine
>>> and I don't want to enable remote access to the admin.
>>> I was wondering since I'm using Dropbx to sync my files, I do have local
>>> access to the ticket files themselves.
>>> Is there some parser that would allow me to look at the tickets without
>>> needing to run web2py locally to have access to the admin?
>>> I would even imagine a hook that would automagically parse the ticket
>>> into text form and save a text version of it.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> Tsvi
>>>
>>

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