9.6 KiB
Request Tracker Architecture: Deep-Dive Technical Analysis
Source: RT 5.0.5 codebase analysis + official docs (docs.bestpractical.com)
Purpose: Reference for reimplementing RT's paradigm in Rust
1. SCRIPS — Event-Driven Automation Engine
Conceptual Model
A Scrip is a rule: "When X happens, if condition Y is met, execute action Z using template W."
Four primitives compose a scrip:
- Condition (RT::ScripCondition): Has
ApplicableTransTypes— comma-separated string of transaction types it matches (e.g., "Create,Correspond") or "Any". Modules like OnCreate, OnStatusChange, UserDefined. - Action (RT::ScripAction): Maps via
ExecModuleto a Perl module underRT::Action::*(SendEmail, AutoReply, CreateTickets, etc.). Has Argument field for parameterization. - Template (RT::Template): Global or queue-specific. Types: "Perl" (Text::Template) or "Simple" (variable substitution).
- Stage:
TransactionCreate(fires per-transaction) orTransactionBatch(fires once after batched updates).
Data Model
Scrips: id, Queue(0=global), Template(name), ScripCondition(id), ScripAction(id),
Description, Disabled, CustomPrepareCode, CustomCommitCode, CustomIsApplicableCode
ObjectScrips: id, Scrip(FK), Stage, ObjectId(0=global or Queue id), SortOrder
Key insight: The same Scrip record can be applied to multiple queues via ObjectScrips, each with different Stage and SortOrder.
Dispatch Model — Prepare/Commit Two-Phase
Prepare phase (RT::Scrips::Prepare):
- Load Ticket + Transaction as SystemUser (bypass ACL)
- Find matching Scrips: global + queue-specific, filtered by Stage, matched by Condition.ApplicableTransTypes using SQL LIKE
- Sort by SortOrder
- For each:
IsApplicable(no-side-effects check), thenPrepare(builds message, determines recipients — no send), push to prepared_scrips
Commit phase (RT::Scrips::Commit): Iterate prepared_scrips in order, call Commit (actual side effects)
Dry-run mode: On Ticket Update page load, ALL scrips run in dry-run (Prepare only, no Commit) to populate the "Scrips and Recipients" preview.
Batch mode: With $UseTransactionBatch, multiple updates accumulate in _TransactionBatch. RanTransactionBatch flag prevents infinite loops. TransactionBatch-stage scrips see ALL batched transactions.
Invariants & Edge Cases
- Prepare failures silently skip the scrip; Commit failures are NOT retried
- Template scoping: queue-specific template overrides global for the same name
- Global + queue-specific scrips both apply; their union runs sorted together
- SystemUser escalation is essential — automation must not be gated by the triggering user's ACL
CustomIsApplicableCode/CustomPrepareCode/CustomCommitCodeallow code injection at three points, guarded byExecuteCoderight- The
Disabledboolean on Scrips is separate from the deprecatedDisabledstage
2. TRANSACTION QUERY BUILDER
Conceptual Model
Five-layer pipeline: UI Tree → QueryBuilder::Tree (AST) → RT::SQL parser → RT::Tickets dispatch → DBIx::SearchBuilder SQL generation.
Transaction Model
Everything is a Transaction: Status changes, owner changes, comments, correspondence, CF updates, link changes, time worked — all create Transaction records.
Schema: id, ObjectType, ObjectId, Type, Field, OldValue, NewValue, Data, Creator, Created
Each transaction can have MIME attachments.
Dispatch Table Architecture
RT::Tickets::%FIELD_METADATA maps searchable fields to type handlers:
Status => [STRING], Queue => [QUEUE], Owner => [WATCHERFIELD => 'Owner'],
Requestor => [WATCHERFIELD => 'Requestor'], LinkedTo => [LINK => 'To'],
DependsOn => [LINK => To => 'DependsOn'], CF => [CUSTOMFIELD => 'Ticket'],
TxnCF => [CUSTOMFIELD => 'Transaction'], Content => [TRANSCONTENT],
Lifecycle => [LIFECYCLE], Created => [DATE => 'Created']
Each type dispatches to a handler (STRING → _StringLimit, WATCHERFIELD → _WatcherLimit, CUSTOMFIELD → _CustomFieldLimit, etc.) that generates appropriate SQL JOINs.
TicketSQL Parser
State-machine parser with states: KEYWORD, OP, VALUE, AGGREGATOR, OPEN_PAREN, CLOSE_PAREN.
Supports:
- Cross-field references (
Due < CF.{TargetDate}) - IS/IS NOT NULL
- LIKE/STARTSWITH/ENDSWITH
- SHALLOW modifier
Key Optimizations
- OR→IN conversion:
(Status='new' OR Status='open' OR Status='stalled')→Status IN ('new','open','stalled') - EntryAggregator intelligence: String fields default to OR for =, AND for !=; dates default to OR for equality, AND for ranges
- Join deduplication:
_sql_aliaseshash tracks which JOINs exist, preventing duplicates - Post-filtering: Deleted tickets and ACL checks applied after SQL, not in SQL
Edge Cases
- CF name ambiguity (same name, global vs queue-scoped) falls back to name-based query
- IPAddressRange queries decompose = into two range comparisons
- DateTime day-equality decomposes = into >= midnight AND < next midnight
- NULL handling on CFs adds extra EXISTS check on CFs.Name
UseSQLForACLChecksinjects ACL JOINs at SQL level
3. CUSTOM FIELDS
Attachment Model
Two join tables:
ObjectCustomFields: Maps CF to container (Queue id, or 0 for global). Controls which CFs appear.
ObjectCustomFieldValues: Stores actual values on records. CustomField(FK), ObjectType, ObjectId, Content, LargeContent, Disabled.
LookupTypes encode the relationship: RT::Queue-RT::Ticket (ticket CFs), RT::Queue-RT::Ticket-RT::Transaction (txn CFs), RT::User, RT::Queue, RT::Group.
Typing System
13 types: Select, Freeform, Text, HTML, Wikitext, Image, Binary, Combobox, Autocomplete, Date, DateTime, IPAddress, IPAddressRange.
Each has: sort_order, selection_type flag, canonicalization flag, render types, labels.
Values system: MaxValues (0=unlimited, 1=single, N=capped), UniqueValues, ValuesClass (external sources), CanonicalizeClass (normalization), Pattern (validation regex), BasedOn (cascading), LinkValueTo (object linking).
Permissions
Five distinct rights: SeeCustomField, AdminCustomField, AdminCustomFieldValues, ModifyCustomField, SetInitialCustomField.
The last creates a "set-once-at-creation" pattern. Rights are contextual (per-queue for tickets).
Queryability
Notation: CF.{Name}, TxnCF.{Name}, QueueCF.{Name}, QueueID.CF.{Name}.Content, cross-field comparison.
Compilation: _CustomFieldDecipher resolves name/id to CF object → _CustomFieldJoin performs LEFT JOINs → _LimitCustomField applies operator with type-aware value parsing.
Sorting: ORDER BY CF.{Name} joins ObjectCustomFieldValues and, for selection types, CustomFieldValues to sort by SortOrder.
Edge Cases
- Context-aware permissions (user sees CF on Queue A but not Queue B)
- CF name collision detection and fallback
- External values sources never stored locally
- Content vs LargeContent transparent handling
- SingleValue optimization (DISTINCT joins when MaxValues=1)
4. LIFECYCLES
Conceptual Model
A Lifecycle defines: valid statuses (initial/active/inactive), allowed transitions (directed graph), transition-gating rights, UI actions, defaults, and cross-lifecycle move maps.
Stored on Queue (not ticket); tickets inherit through queue.
State Machine Semantics
Date invariants:
- Moving FROM initial TO active/inactive → set Started
- Moving FROM initial/active TO inactive → set Resolved
- Moving BACK from inactive → clear Resolved (critical!)
- Moving FROM initial directly TO inactive → sets BOTH Started AND Resolved
Transition validation (ValidateStatusChange):
- Is new status valid in lifecycle?
- Is transition allowed? (
IsTransition) - Does user have the required right? (
CheckRightwith 4-level priority: exact→wildcard-from→wildcard-to→full-wildcard→fallback)
CheckRight priority: 'new→open' > '*→open' > 'new→*' > '*→*' > fallback (DeleteTicket for deleted, ModifyTicket otherwise).
Lifecycle rights REPLACE ModifyTicket, not supplement it.
Queue Changes
Move maps are directional ('default→orders' vs 'orders→default'). Maps MUST be complete — any missing status causes a hard error.
On queue change, if owner lacks OwnTicket on new queue, ticket is auto-reassigned to Nobody (safety invariant).
Rights Model
Custom named rights are auto-created: '* → rejected' => 'RejectTicket' creates a RejectTicket right.
No explicit guards for behavioral hooks — handled entirely through Scrips (OnStatusChange, OnResolve conditions).
Edge Cases
- Action deduplication: specific
'from→to'overrides wildcard'*→to' - Lifecycle caching; no hot-reload without restart
- Disabled lifecycles: existing queues keep working, can't be selected for new queues
- Default statuses cover specific named contexts: on_create, approved, denied, reminder_on_open, reminder_on_resolve
- Batched status changes: TransactionBatch scrips see all transactions atomically
Cross-Cutting Architectural Patterns
- Transaction-centric: Everything produces a transaction → unified audit trail, unified query interface, single Scrip event stream
- Container-scoped config: CFs, Scrips, Templates all follow global→queue override pattern
- Prepare/Commit: Separates planning from execution (essential for dry-run, safety)
- Dispatch tables: Field types → handlers, ApplicableTransTypes → conditions — config-driven, not code-driven extensibility
- SystemUser identity: Automation runs elevated; reimplementation needs explicit service account concept
- Aggressive caching: Lifecycle configs, CF join aliases, ACL roles, group memberships — essential at scale