Ok, so if it needs to be standalone and cannot include any wiki files
for db support, you can implement your own code to retrieve the
database connection - taking the DB settings from the
LocalSettings.php, which would mean you at least have to include them.
Or hard code them again into the Response.php.
I don't exactly see where the problem is?
You want to avoid implementing your own code for the database
connection retrieval?
You want to avoid storing the connection info (username, pw, etc.) in
two different places?
(Why does it need to be standalone in the first place? Wouldn't it
make things easier using the Wiki classes? We use the SpecialPage as
well to handle the Ajax requests, not a complete standalone page)
On 9/12/07, Michael Heyder <Info(a)hafenvolleyballer.de> wrote:
Mathias Conradt schrieb:
Use the wfGetDB function in response.php to
retrieve the data (i.e.
articles) from the database.
...
$theDoc->updateTitle();
...
public function updateTitle()
{
$dbr = wfGetDB( DB_SLAVE );
$theData = array();
$theData['title'] = $this->title;
$theWhere = array('id='.$this->uid);
$dbr->update('page_make_up', $theData,$theWhere);
$dbr->commit();
}
...
Thats the problem: the response.php is a standalone file. No claases are
integrated. It's only called from the ajax request. So none global vars
and/or claases are implemented.
Hope someone can understand my problem.
regards
mic
_______________________________________________
MediaWiki-l mailing list
MediaWiki-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
http://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/mediawiki-l