Bugzilla::Group - Bugzilla group class.
use Bugzilla::Group; my $group = new Bugzilla::Group(1); my $group = new Bugzilla::Group({name => 'AcmeGroup'}); my $id = $group->id; my $name = $group->name; my $description = $group->description; my $user_reg_exp = $group->user_reg_exp; my $is_active = $group->is_active; my $icon_url = $group->icon_url; my $is_active_bug_group = $group->is_active_bug_group; my $group_id = Bugzilla::Group::ValidateGroupName('admin', @users); my @groups = Bugzilla::Group->get_all;
Group.pm represents a Bugzilla Group object. It is an implementation of Bugzilla::Object, and thus has all the methods that Bugzilla::Object provides, in addition to any methods documented below.
create
Note that in addition to what "create($params)" in Bugzilla::Object normally does, this function also makes the new group be inherited by the admin
group. That is, the admin
group will automatically be a member of this group.
ValidateGroupName($name, @users)
Description: ValidateGroupName checks to see if ANY of the users in the provided list of user objects can see the named group. Params: $name - String with the group name. @users - An array with Bugzilla::User objects. Returns: It returns the group id if successful and undef otherwise.
members_non_inherited
Returns an arrayref of Bugzilla::User objects representing people who are "directly" in this group, meaning that they're in it because they match the group regular expression, or they have been actually added to the group manually.
flatten_group_membership
Accepts a list of groups and returns a list of all the groups whose members inherit membership in any group on the list. So, we can determine if a user is in any of the groups input to flatten_group_membership by querying the user_group_map for any user with DIRECT or REGEXP membership IN() the list of groups returned.