External database enrolment: Skillnad mellan sidversioner

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== Synchronising external database enrolments (scheduled task and deprecated script) ==
== Synchronising external database enrolments (scheduled task and deprecated script) ==


In Moodle 3.7 onwards, a scheduled task called "Synchronise external database enrolments task" synchronises all user enrolments at once - both adding and removing user enrolments (and creating courses if specified) (MDL-59986).
A scheduled task called "Synchronise external database enrolments task" synchronises all user enrolments at once - both adding and removing user enrolments (and creating courses if specified) (MDL-59986).


Note that you need to make sure all the users present in the external enrolments are already created in Moodle, because users not existing in Moodle can't be enrolled in a course. If you are using external authentication plugins (db, ldap, etc.) you can use the scripts provided by those plugins to synchronise your users before running this script.
Note that you need to make sure all the users present in the external enrolments are already created in Moodle, because users not existing in Moodle can't be enrolled in a course. If you are using external authentication plugins (db, ldap, etc.) you can use the scripts provided by those plugins to synchronise your users before running this script.

Versionen från 28 oktober 2019 kl. 09.10

Using an external database to control enrolments

You may use a external database (of nearly any kind) to control your enrolments. It is assumed your external database contains a field containing a course ID, a field containing a user ID, and optionally a field containing a role. These are compared against fields that you choose in the local course, user tables, and role tables.

The following are the supported data sources, but note that you will need to have to compiled PHP with the appropriate options or through ODBC.

  • access
  • ado
  • mssql
  • borland_ibase
  • csv
  • db2
  • fbsql
  • firebird
  • ibase
  • informix72
  • informix
  • mysql (deprecated, please use mysqli instead)
  • mysqli
  • mysqlt
  • oci805
  • oci8
  • oci8po
  • odbc
  • odbc_mssql
  • odbc_oracle
  • oracle
  • postgres64
  • postgres7
  • postgres
  • proxy
  • sqlanywhere
  • sybase
  • vfp

Enrolment and unenrolment

External database enrolment happens at the moment when a user logs into Moodle. The plugin will attempt to automatically enrol the student in all their courses according to the data in the external database and, optionally, create empty courses where they do not already exist. To check if it is working, you can log in as a student and then check that their list of courses is as you would expect.

The process also unenrols users from courses if they are no longer in the database. User records are marked according to their original enrolment method. Therefore the external database plugin can only unenrol users who were enroled by the plugin in the first place.

Hidden courses

Courses that are set to "Course is not available to students" can be ignored for enrolment purposes by setting the "enrol_db_ignorehiddencourse" to yes.

Enrolment and roles

The "enrol_database | defaultrole" setting in the plugin settings page specifies the role that the user will take when they are added to the course. The default setting will set them to the course default setting (initially "student"). However, you can specify a field in the external table (specified in the "enrol_database | remoterolefield" setting) that contains the short name or id for the user's role. This could, for example, be used to enrol both students and teachers into courses using a suitably configured database.

Unenrolment

The External unenrol action ("enrol_database | unenrolaction") setting in the plugin settings page defines what action should be taken when a user enrolment disappears from external enrolment source. Each setting does the following:

  1. "Unenrol user from course" When the user disappears from the external source, the enrolment is completely removed and all the roles removed. This means some user data and settings are purged from course during course unenrolment (that usually include grades, activity attempts, etc.)
  2. "Keep user enrolled" When the user disappears from the external source, the enrolment is kept as is, and the user is still able to enter the course and perform activities, access resources, etc. It's a "do nothing" option.
  3. "Disable course enrolment" When the user disappears from the external source, user enrolment is suspended (the user can't access the course, but user data and settings are kept), and roles are kept as is. You might use this because in some cases the user needs a role with some capability to be visible in UI - such has in gradebook, assignments, etc.
  4. "Disable course enrolment and remove roles" When the user disappears from the external source, the enrolment is suspended and roles assigned by enrol instance are removed. Please note that user may "disappear" from gradebook and other areas.

Creating courses

Optionally courses that do not exist in the Moodle site can be created.

You can additionally specify the Category into which the new course will be placed, in the New course category id field. The data in this field must be the id of a currently existing category; it will not create a new category. The id number is number assigned by Moodle in the database when the category is created (e.g. mdl_course_categories.id).

  • Do not confuse this category id with the new custom category id number field that you can manually assign to a category. (See Trackers http://tracker.moodle.org/browse/MDL-28518 and http://tracker.moodle.org/browse/MDL-31845).
  • Leaving the category id data empty means that a course will be assigned to the default category.
  • If you assign data to categories that do not exist already in Moodle, the courses will not be created.

Default new course category is the category to which courses will be assigned and created in, unless you set up and so indicate in the data field of the "New course category id field."

You may also specify a New course template: a "template" course from which the new course will be copied. The data for this field should be the shortname of the template course.

Synchronising external database enrolments (scheduled task and deprecated script)

A scheduled task called "Synchronise external database enrolments task" synchronises all user enrolments at once - both adding and removing user enrolments (and creating courses if specified) (MDL-59986).

Note that you need to make sure all the users present in the external enrolments are already created in Moodle, because users not existing in Moodle can't be enrolled in a course. If you are using external authentication plugins (db, ldap, etc.) you can use the scripts provided by those plugins to synchronise your users before running this script.

A deprecated script is also provided that can do this task if the scheduled task is disabled (if the scheduled task is enabled the script won't do anything). The script is called sync.php and is found in the enrol/database/cli folder.

This script is meant to be called from a system cronjob to sync moodle enrolments with enrolments in the external database.

Example cron entry

   # 5 minutes past 4am
   5 4 * * * /usr/bin/php -c /path/to/php.ini /path/to/moodle/enrol/database/cli/sync.php

Notes:

  • If you have a large number of enrolments, you may want to raise the memory limits by passing -d memory_limit=256M
  • For debugging and better logging, you are encouraged to use in the command line: -d log_errors=1 -d error_reporting=E_ALL -d display_errors=0 -d html_errors=0
  • This only works for users that already exist in your Moodle site (see comment above)

Setting up enrolment sync (How to)

You will need to perform (as a minimum) the following steps to enable external database enrolment - only a single table is required in the database which contains a record for every user/course combination. If the table is large it is a good idea to make sure appropriate indexes have been created:

  • Use an existing database or create a new one. Use an existing table or create a new one with the following minimum fields.
    1. A unique course identifier to match one of the following fields.
      • the "idnumber" field in Moodle's course table (varchar 100), which is manually specified as the "Course ID number" when editing a course's settings
      • the "shortname" field in Moodle's course table (varchar 255), which is manually specified as the "Course short name" when editing a course's settings
      • the "id" field in Moodle's course table (int 10), which is based on course creation order
    2. A unique user identifier to match one of the following fields.
      • the "idnumber" field in Moodle's user table (varchar 255), which is manually specified as the "ID number" when editing a user's profile
      • the "username" field in Moodle's user table (varchar 100), which is manually specified as the "Username" when editing a user's profile
      • the "email" field in Moodle's user table (varchar 100), which is manually specified as the "Email address" when editing a user's profile
      • the "id" field in Moodle's user table (int 10), which is based on user creation order
    3. (optional) A unique role identifier to match one of the following fields.
      • the "shortname" field in Moodle's role table (varchar 100), for example editingteacher, coursecreator, student, ...
      • the "name" field in Moodle's role table (varchar 255), for example Teacher, Course creator, Student, ...
      • the "id" field in Moodle's role table (int 10), which is based on initial installation and new role creation order
  • Populate the database table. Each user/course combination to have a record in the table.
  • In Moodle, go to Site administration > Plugins > Enrolments > Manage enrol plugins, find External Database in the list, enable it (click the closed-eye icon) and click Settings.
  • In the top panel, select the database type (make sure you have the necessary configuration in PHP for that type) and then supply the information to connect to the database.
  • The middle panel creates the mapping between Moodle and the external database. The first three settings are for the local (Moodle) field names and the last three for the remote (external database) settings. They are in the same order.
    • enrol_localcoursefield / enrol_remotecoursefield - in Moodle the name of the field in the course settings the uniquely identifies the course (e.g., idnumber). In the external database the name of the matching field.
    • enrol_localuserfield / enrol_remoteuserfield - in Moodle the name of the field in the user profile that uniquely identified the user (e.g., idnumber). In the external database the name of the matching field.
    • enrol_db_localrolefield / enrol_db_remoterolefield - (optional) in Moodle the name of the field in the role edit page the uniquely identifies the role (e.g., shortname). In the external database the name of the matching field.
  • The Roles panel specifies the role that the user will get in the course if their role is not specified in the external database.
  • A new optional field enrol_database | remoteotheruserfield allows those with the role "Other users" to be added but not to be included as course participants.
  • The final panel enables auto creation of courses.
  • Save changes, and then tick the box to enable external database enrolment.

Field Mapping Example:

Choose your fields from the Moodle database:

  • enrol_localcoursefield: A course identifier from mdl_course, e.g. "idnumber"
  • enrol_localuserfield: A user identifier from mdl_user, e.g. "idnumber"
  • enrol_localrolefield: (optional) A role identifier from mdl_role, e.g. "shortname"

Create a view in your external database which matches the chosen field values from Moodle:

  • enrol_remotecoursefield: A matching course identifier from your external database table, e.g. "course_number"
  • enrol_remoteuserfield: A matching user identifier from your external database table, e.g. "userid"
  • enrol_remoterolefield: (optional) A matching role identifier from your external database table, e.g. "role_name"

Potential gotchas

  • It almost goes without saying that the integrity of the external database is important. If data is missing from the database then there is a potential for users being unenrolled from some or all of their courses. The unenrollment process will remove them from any group assignments and also poll each module type to give the module the option of removing that user's data if appropriate (for example, however, forum posts are never deleted). It is therefore prudent that you take the utmost care to ensure that the data in the external database is correct at all times.
  • Minor Security Issue Consider that if the ID number field you use to identify your students is editable by the students (in their profile), then there is a potential for them changing this to the id of another valid student and gaining access to resources that they should not. (However, they will still appear as themselves, they cannot impersonate the other user or otherwise gain access to their resources.) To prevent this and similar issues, you can lock the ID number as well as other fields so the user can not change them. Do this in the Data mapping section of Site administration > Plugins > Authentication > External database.

Errors and diagnostics

The plugin produces a number of diagnostic messages and/or errors which are recorded to the PHP error log (as defined in the php.ini file). In addition messages about courses that are in the database for the user but that do not exist in the Moodle site will only be produced if debugging is set to ALL or DEVELOPER.

You can get detailed progress information by executing the sync script with -v parameter:

php /path/to/moodle/enrol/database/cli/sync.php -v

See also