<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-12">
- <h1><img src="{{ STATIC_URL }}icons/user-xs.png" alt="User Registration" />User sign-up</h1>
+ <h1><img src="{{ STATIC_URL }}icons/user-xs.png" alt="User Registration" />User sign-up</h1>
</div>
</div>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-12">
- <p><strong>Questions? <a href="/portal/contact" >Contact us.</a></strong></p>
- </div>
+ <p><strong>Questions? <a href="/contact" >Contact us.</a></strong></p>
+ </div>
</div>
+
{% if errors %}
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-12">
- <ul>
+ <ul class="error">
{% for error in errors %}
- <li>{{ error }}</li>
+ <li>{{ error | safe }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
+<form action="/register" class="cmxform form-horizontal" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
<div class="row">
- <div class="col-md-12">
-
- <div class="form-group">
- <form class="cmxform form-horizontal" id="registrationForm" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" role="form">
- {% csrf_token %}
+ <div class="col-md-6">
+ <div>
+ {% csrf_token %}
<label for="authority_hrn" class="control-label">Organization</label>
<p></p>
- <input id="authority_hrn" name="org_name" class="form-control" style="width:590px" value="{{ organization }}"
+ <div class="ui-widget">
+ <select id="org_name" name="org_name" class="form-control" style="width:590px" value="{{ organization }}"
title="Choose your organization (company/university) from the list that apears when you click in the field and start to type.
- Use the arrow keys to scroll through the list; type part of the name to narrow down the list. If it is not in the list,
- please request its addition by clicking the link below. We will send an email to the managers that we have on record for
- your organization, asking them to validate your sign-up request." required/>
+ Use the arrow keys to scroll through the list; type part of the name to narrow down the list. We will send an email to
+ the managers that we have on record for your organization, asking them to validate your sign-up request." required>
+ <option value="">select an organization</option>
+ {% if authorities %}
+ {% for authority in authorities %}
+ {% if authority.name %}
+ <option value="{{ authority.authority_hrn }}">{{authority.name}}</option>
+ {% else %}
+ <option value="{{ authority.authority_hrn }}">{{authority.authority_hrn}}</option>
+ {% endif %}
+ {% endfor %}
+ {% else %}
+ <option value:"">No authority found !!!</option>
+ {% endif %}
+ </select>
+ </div>
<p></p>
- <p>Organization not listed? <a href="/portal/join">Request its addition now.</a></p>
- </div>
+ {% include theme|add:"_authority_notListed.html" %}
+ </div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-6">
-
- <div class="form-group">
+ <p>
<label for="firstname" class="control-label">Personal information</label>
- <p></p>
+ </p>
+ <p>
<input type="text" name="firstname" class="form-control" style="width:350px" minlength="2" value="{{ first_name }}" placeholder="First name" required />
- </div>
- <div class="form-group">
+ </p>
+ <p>
<input type="text" name="lastname" size="25" class="form-control" style="width:350px" minlength="2" value="{{ last_name }}" placeholder="Last name" required />
- </div>
- <div class="form-group">
- <input type="email" name="email" size="25" class="form-control" style="width:350px" value="{{ email }}"
- title="Your e-mail address will be your identifier for logging in. We contact you to verify your account and then, occasionally, for important issues."
- placeholder="Email" required/>
- </div>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <input type="email" name="email" size="25" class="form-control" style="width:350px" value="{{ email }}" title="Your e-mail address will be your identifier for logging in. We contact you to verify your account and then, occasionally, for important issues." placeholder="Email" required />
+ </p>
</div>
<div class="col-md-6">
- <div class="form-group">
+ <p>
<label for="password" class="control-label">Authentication</label>
- <p></p>
- <input type="password" id="password" name="password" class="form-control" style="width:250px" minlength="4" value="{{ password }}"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <input type="password" id="password" name="password" class="form-control" style="width:250px" minlength="8" value="{{ password }}"
title="Your password allows you to log in to this portal."
placeholder="Password" required />
- </div>
- <div class="form-group">
- <input type="password" id="confirmpassword" name="confirmpassword" style="width:250px" minlength="4" class="form-control" value=""
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <input type="password" id="confirmpassword" name="confirmpassword" style="width:250px" minlength="8" class="form-control" value=""
placeholder="Confirm password" required />
- </div>
- <div class="form-group">
- <!--<label for="question" class="control-label">Keys</label> -->
+ </p>
+ <p>
<select name="question" class="form-control" style="width:350px" id="key-policy"
- title="Your public/private key pair allows you to access the testbeds." required>
+ title="Your public/private key pair allows you to access the testbeds." required >
<option value="generate">Generate my keys for me (recommended)</option>
<option value="upload">Upload my public key (advanced users only)</option>
</select>
- </div>
- <div class="form-group" style="display:none;" id="upload_key">
+ </p>
+ <div style="display:none;" id="upload_key">
<label for="file" class="control-label">Upload public key</label>
- <input type="file" name="user_public_key" class="form-control" style="width:200px" id="user_public_key" required/>
+ <input type="file" name="user_public_key" class="form-control" style="width:200px" id="user_public_key" />
<br />
<div class="alert alert-danger" id="pkey_del_msg">
In order for the portal to contact testbeds on your behalf, so as to list and reserve resources, you will need to
- <a href="http://trac.myslice.info/wiki/InstallSfa" target="_blank">delegate your public key to the portal.</a>
+ <a href="/portal/manual_delegation" target="_blank">delegate your credentials to the portal.</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-12">
- <div class="form-group">
- <p></p>
- <input type="checkbox" name="agreement" value="agreement" required/> I agree to the
+ <p>
+ <input type="checkbox" name="agreement" value="agreement" required /> I agree to the
<a href="#" data-toggle="modal" data-target="#myModal">terms and conditions.</a>
- </div>
+ </p>
</div>
</div>
+{% include theme|add:"_register_info.html" %}
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-12">
- <div class="form-group" id="register">
- <p></p>
- <button class="submit btn btn-onelab" type="submit">Sign up</button>
+ <div id="register">
+ <p>
+ <input class="submit btn btn-onelab" type="submit" value="Sign up" />
+ </p>
+ </form>
</div>
- </form>
</div>
</div>
-
-
+
<!-- Modal - columns selector -->
- <div class="modal fade" id="myModal" tabindex="-1" role="dialog" aria-labelledby="myModalLabel" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="modal fade" id="myModal" tabindex="-1" role="dialog" aria-labelledby="myModalLabel" aria-hidden="true">
<div class="modal-dialog">
<div class="modal-content">
<div class="modal-header">
<h4 class="modal-title" id="myModalLabel">Terms & Conditions</h4>
</div>
<div class="modal-body">
- <p align="left">
- for OneLab Basic level service
- <br/>
- Version 0.6 of 20 May 2014
- <br>
- <a href="/portal/terms" target="_blank">[Printable format]</a>
- </p>
- <h1 align="left">1 Context</h1>
- <h2 align="left">1.1 OneLab</h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab is an experimental facility for testing new ideas and new technologies in the area of computer networking. It consists of a variety of types of
- platforms, including:</p>
- <ul type="disc">
- <li>
- <strong>internet overlay testbeds</strong>
- , testbeds that offer virtual machines distributed across locations in different countries, allowing users to deploy overlays on the internet;
- </li>
- <li>
- <strong>wireless testbeds</strong>
- , testbeds that consist of clusters of computers that are within Wi-Fi communication range of each other, either in an office environment or in an
- isolated setting;
- </li>
- <li>
- <strong>internet of things testbeds</strong>
- , testbeds that consist of embedded computing nodes with sensor capabilities, communicating wirelessly in an isolated environment;
- </li>
- <li>
- <strong>emulation testbeds,</strong>
- computing clusters that offer virtual machines on servers that are interconnected by a high speed switch, enabling large scale network emulation.
- </li>
- </ul>
- <p align="left">
- This list of types of platforms is subject to change, and the current list, along with the identities of the specific platforms of each type, can be found
- on the OneLab website (onelab.eu).</p>
- <p align="left">
- Each platform has its own owners, and OneLab is the grouping of these platforms through a consortium of institutions. The OneLab consortium is coordinated
- by UPMC Sorbonne Universités. It operates on a not-for-profit basis.</p>
- <p align="left">
- Access to OneLab may also provide access to additional platforms that are not part of OneLab, due to a federation agreement between OneLab and the owners
- of those platforms.</p>
- <h2 align="left">1.2 Fee-free Basic level service</h2>
- <p align="left">These terms and conditions define and apply to OneLab's Basic level service, which is available free of charge.</p>
- <p align="left">
- Users who would like additional services are encouraged to contact support@onelab.eu. Some additional services require a written agreement, but are
- otherwise free. Others require the payment of fees or in-kind contributions. (An example of an in-kind contribution is the hosting of a PlanetLab Europe
- server node.)</p>
- <h2 align="left">1.3 Managers and standard users</h2>
- <p align="left">
- There are two classes of OneLab user: the manager and the standard user. OneLab grants access rights to managers, who, in turn, provide access rights to
- standard users. Examples are: for a small enterprise, an executive may be the manager and the employees may be standard users; for a research team, a
- senior scientist (faculty member or research scientist) may be a manager and doctoral students and other members of the team may be standard users; for a
- university course, a professor may be a manager and the students may be standard users.</p>
- <h2 align="left">1.4 These terms and conditions</h2>
- <p align="left">
- Acceptance of these terms and conditions is a condition of obtaining OneLab Basic level user service. They are posted to the OneLab portal site
- (portal.onelab.eu). They may be changed without other notice than the posting of a new version to the portal site.</p>
- <h1 align="left">2 Services provided by OneLab</h1>
- <h2 align="left">2.1 Access to the experimental facility</h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab provides users with access to the platforms that make up the experimental facility. Each platform owner determines the specifics of this access (for
- example, how many nodes are available to a user, what happens in case of oversubscription, etc.), with the proviso that Basic level service requires that
- users be able to conduct meaningful experiments on every OneLab testbed.</p>
- <p align="left">
- Basic level service may also provide access to platforms that are federated with OneLab, but such access depends upon the terms of the federation
- agreements with those platforms, which may require that the user have a higher level of service in order to gain access. For example, Basic level service
- provides access to PlanetLab Europe, a OneLab platform, without providing access to PlanetLab Central, a federated platform. Users wanting full access
- across the global PlanetLab system should contact support@onelab.eu to arrange to enter into a PlanetLab Europe membership agreement.</p>
- <p align="left">OneLab's role is to facilitate access to the platforms. Specifically, it provides each user with:</p>
- <ul>
- <li align="left">
- <strong>a single account,</strong>
- the credentials for which can be used to access all of the OneLab testbeds;
- </li>
- <li align="left">
- <strong>tools through which to access the testbeds</strong>
- , including, notably, a web-based portal (portal.onelab.eu) that allows a user to see the resources available on each testbed and to reserve them,
- along with a number of experiment control tools that a user can employ to deploy an experiment on those resources;
- </li>
- <li align="left">
- <strong>support</strong>
- , with documentation on how to use the tools, pointers to documentation for individual testbeds, and a helpdesk to respond to user questions.
- </li>
- </ul>
- <p align="left">
- Additional support, such as accompaniment through the design and deployment of experiments and the interpretation of their results, is available through
- higher levels of service.
- </p>
- <h2 align="left">
- 2.2 Best effort, without guarantees
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab and the owners of the individual OneLab testbeds do their best to provide the services outlined here, with the understanding that Basic level
- service offers no guarantees. Users should clearly understand the following limitations.
- </p>
- <ul type="disc">
- <li>
- <strong>Reliability:</strong>
- OneLab does not provide any guarantees with respect to the reliability of the portal, of other tools, or of the individual nodes on platforms. These
- may be taken down for maintenance, rebooted, or reinstalled at any time. Reinstallation implies that disks are wiped, meaning that users should not
- consider a local disk to be a persistent form of storage.
- </li>
- <li>
- <strong>Fitness:</strong>
- OneLab does not guarantee that the platforms are suitable for the experiments that users intend to conduct. There may be limitations in the
- technologies that are offered that prevent certain types of experiments from being carried out.
- </li>
- <li>
- <strong>Privacy</strong>
- : OneLab does not guarantee the privacy of traffic generated on the platforms (e.g., wireless signals, packets). Unless otherwise specified by an
- individual platform owner, users should assume that traffic is monitored and logged. Such monitoring may be done intentionally, for example, to allow
- platform administrators as well as other users to investigate abuse.
- </li>
- </ul>
- <p align="left">
- Users who seek such guarantees are invited to consider a higher level of service.
- </p>
- <h2 align="left">
- 2.3 Limitedliability
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- In no event shall the partners of the OneLab consortium be liable to any user for any consequential, incidental, punitive, or lost profit damages, or for
- any damages arising out of loss of use or loss of data, to the extent that such damages arise out of the activities of OneLab consortium partners, or any
- breach of the present terms and conditions, even if the consortium partner has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Nothing contained in these terms and conditions shall be deemed as creating any rights or liabilities in or for third parties who are not Basic level users
- of OneLab.
- </p>
- <h1 align="left">
- 3 Acceptable use policy
- </h1>
- <h2 align="left">
- 3.1 Responsibilities of managers and standard users
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab creates and administers accounts for managers and delegates to managers the responsibility for creating and administering accounts for standard
- users. Both managers and standard users are required to follow OneLab's acceptable use policy. In addition, managers are fully responsible for the
- activities of the standard users whose accounts they create.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- A manager is expected to grant user access only an individual with whom he or she has a working relationship. In general, this means an individual who
- works for the same institution as the manager, or, in the case of higher education and research, an individual who is a student at the university where the
- manager works. Managers may also grant access to individuals from other institutions, provided that they are collaborating on a common project on OneLab.
- If there is a doubt, a manager should refer the question to support@onelab.eu.
- </p>
- <h2 align="left">
- 3.2 Types of use
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab may be used by enterprise, by scientific researchers, and by educators.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab may be used for pre-commercial research and development. In keeping with OneLab's not-for-profit status, it may not be used to deploy services that
- are designed to generate a commercial profit.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Not-for-profit use of OneLab to deploy services that are designed to generate revenue requires prior approval through a written agreement, and thus may not
- be carried out on a Basic level account. Interested users are invited to contact support@onelab.eu.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab may be used for scientific research.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab may be used to host lab exercises for university courses.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Questions about other types of use should be addressed to support@onelab.eu.
- </p>
- <h2 align="left">
- 3.3 Applicable laws and regulations
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab is managed, and the portal is hosted, in France. Information regarding the countries in which individual testbeds are managed and hosted is
- available from those testbeds. Users are responsible for being aware of the countries in which their experiments are deployed and for ensuring that their
- use of OneLab fully conforms to the laws and regulations of those countries, as well as the laws and regulations of the country in which they themselves
- are present when conducting their experiments.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Above and beyond specific national laws, the activities email spamming, phishing through web services, and all types of Internet fraud are prohibited on
- OneLab.
- </p>
- <h2>
- 3.4 Security and accounting mechanisms
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- Users are expected to respect the security and accounting mechanisms put in place by OneLab, its platforms, and federated platforms. For example, access to
- PlanetLab Europe is designed to take place through the SSH cryptographically-secured connection protocol, which uses public/private key pair
- authentication, and so users should not attempt to bypass this mechanism. As another example, OneLab's notion of a "slice" associates a set of resources
- with the group of users who have reserved those resources, and users should not attempt to obscure the identities of participants in a slice.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Hacking attempts against the OneLab portal and testbeds are not permitted. This includes "red team" (hacker test) experiments.
- </p>
- <h2>
- 3.5 Sharing of resources
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- OneLab is intended for ambitious experiments. Large numbers of resources and extended leases on resources may legitimately be granted in order to carry
- these out. At the same time, OneLab and its testbeds are shared environments, and when there is contention for resources, limits must be imposed.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Each OneLab platform sets its own policies for handling resource contention. As a general rule, users are encouraged to design their experiments to use
- resources efficiently. In particular, spinning/busy-waiting techniques for extended periods of time are strongly discouraged. Some resource contention
- policies (e.g., PlanetLab Europe's) terminate the jobs that are using the most resources in the case of contention.
- </p>
- <h2>
- 3.6 Internet-connected platforms
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- Some of OneLab's platforms allow experiments to take place on resources that have access to the public internet. These experiments can potentially generate
- traffic to, and receive traffic from, any host or router in the internet.<a></a><a id="_anchor_1" href="#_msocom_1" name="_msoanchor_1">[LB1]</a>
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Furthermore, some internet-connected platforms (e.g., PlanetLab Europe) consist of servers that are hosted by a large number of member institutions.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- The accessibility of internet-connected platforms and the distributed hosting model of some of these platforms imply certain responsibilities on the part
- of users, as detailed below.
- </p>
- <h3>
- 3.6.1 General guidance
- </h3>
- <p align="left">
- A good litmus test when considering whether an experiment is appropriate for such internet-connected platforms is to ask what the network administrator at
- one's own organisation would say about the experiment running locally. If the experiment disrupts local activity (e.g., uses more than its share of the
- site's internet bandwidth) or triggers complaints from remote network administrators (e.g., performs systematic port scans), then it is not appropriate for
- such internet-connected platforms.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- It is the responsibility of the user and the user's manager to ensure that an application that will run on an internet-connected platform is tested and
- debugged in a controlled environment, to better understand its behaviour prior to deployment.
- </p>
- <h3>
- 3.6.2 Standards of network etiquette
- </h3>
- <p align="left">
- Internet-connected platforms are designed to support experiments that generate unusual traffic, such as network measurements. However, it is expected that
- all users adhere to widely accepted standards of network etiquette in an effort to minimise complaints from network administrators. Activities that have
- been interpreted as worm and denial-of-service attacks in the past (and should be avoided) include sending SYN packets to port 80 on random machines,
- probing random IP addresses, repeatedly pinging routers, overloading bottleneck links with measurement traffic, and probing a single target machine from
- many nodes.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- For internet-connected platforms that have a distributed hosting model, each host institution will have its own acceptable use policy. Users should not
- knowingly violate such local policies. Conflicts between local policies and OneLab's stated goal of supporting research into wide-area networks should be
- brought to the attention of OneLab administrators at support@onelab.eu.
- </p>
- <h3>
- 3.6.3 Specific network usage rules
- </h3>
- <p align="left">
- It is not allowed to use one or more nodes of an internet-connected platform to generate a high number of network flows or flood a site with high traffic
- to the point of interfering with its normal operation. Use of congestion-controlled flows for large transfers is highly encouraged.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- It is not allowed to perform systematic or random port or address block scans from an internet-connected platform.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- For internet-connected platforms that use a distributed hosting model, it is not allowed to spoof or sniff traffic on a hosted server or on the network the
- server belongs to.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Access to a server on a distributed hosting platform may not be used to gain access to other servers or networked equipment that are not part of the
- testbed.
- </p>
- <h2>
- 3.7 Wireless platforms
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- Wireless-connected platforms give users access to nodes that communicate via Wi-Fi and other wireless technologies. They may be capable of detecting
- wireless activity in the neighbourhood of those nodes: traffic generated by other users of the platform or by individuals not associated with the platform.
- In general, much of the traffic will be encrypted, with certain aspects (such as SSIDs) not encrypted, but it is also possible that there will be fully
- unencrypted traffic. They may also be capable of generating wireless activity that reaches equipment outside of the testbed.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Furthermore, some wireless-connected platforms may have built-in limitations to prevent them from generating signals at a strength that exceeds health and
- safety regulations.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- These characteristics of wireless-connected platforms imply certain responsibilities on the part of users, as detailed below.
- </p>
- <h3>
- 3.7.1 Specific network usage rules
- </h3>
- <p align="left">
- Experimenters may make no attempt to defeat the encryption of encrypted third-party traffic. Furthermore, experimenters must treat with utmost discretion
- any unencrypted traffic. Limited metadata can be recorded for the bona fide purposes of an experiment, but under no case should third party communications
- be recorded.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- No attempt may be made to reverse engineer traffic in order to learn the identities of the parties who have generated the traffic.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Wireless-connected platforms may not be used to gain access to any network equipment that is not part of the testbed itself.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- It is not allowed to perform systematic or random scans of wireless networks that are not part of a wireless-connected platform. Similarly, it is not
- allowed to spoof or sniff wireless traffic of the institution that hosts a wireless-connected platform or of other networks in the proximity.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Care must be taken so that traffic on wireless-connected platforms does not interfere with the normal functioning of network equipment that is not part of
- the testbed itself.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- No attempt may be made to defeat the mechanisms that limit signal strength on wireless-connected platforms.
- </p>
- <h2>
- 3.8 Handling suspected violations
- </h2>
- <p align="left">
- Suspected violations of the OneLab acceptable use policy should be reported to support@onelab.eu.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- Upon notification or detection of a possible violation, OneLab management will attempt to understand if a violation has in fact occurred. To do so,
- management will freely communicate with the users concerned, the operators of the platforms concerned, as well as any third parties that might be involved.
- An example of a third party is a network operator who detects what they believe to be unauthorized traffic emanating from a OneLab platform.
- </p>
- <p align="left">
- The priority is to resolve any real or apparent violations amicably. However, if OneLab management believes that a violation may have occurred, it can, at
- its sole discretion, and without prior notice, apply any of the following measures:
- </p>
- <ul type="disc">
- <li>
- notification of the users of the concerned slice (set of resources);
- </li>
- <li>
- disabling of the concerned slice;
- </li>
- <li>
- disabling an individual user's account;
- </li>
- <li>
- reporting of the user's activity to his/her manager;
- </li>
- <li>
- disabling of the manager's account and all user accounts for which the manager is responsible;
- </li>
- <li>
- disabling of all accounts associated with the user's institution.
- </li>
- </ul>
- <p align="left">
- In the case of suspected illegal activity, OneLab management might need, without prior notice, to notify the relevant authorities.
- </p>
-
+ {% include theme|add:"_terms_and_conditions.html" %}
</div>
<div class="modal-footer">
<button type="button" class="btn btn-default" data-dismiss="modal">Close</button>
</div>
</div>
</div>
-
<script>
-jQuery(document).ready(function(){
- var availableTags = [
- {% if authorities %}
- {% for authority in authorities %}
- {% if authority.name %}
- {value:"{{ authority.name }}",label:"{{authority.name}}"},
- // show hrn if we don't have the name
- {% else %}
- {value:"{{ authority.authority_hrn }}",label:"{{authority.authority_hrn}}"},
- {% endif %}
- {% endfor %}
- {% else %}
- {value:"",label:"No authority found !!!"}
+$(document).ready(function(){
+
+ // auto-complete the form
+ jQuery("#org_name").combobox();
+
+ {% if theme == 'fed4fire' %}
+ //setting the default value in the org_list
+ var temp="fed4fire.global";
+ $("#org_name").val(temp);
{% endif %}
- ];
- // sorting the list
- availableTags.sort(function(a,b){
- var nameA=a.value.toLowerCase(), nameB=b.value.toLowerCase();
- if (nameA < nameB) {
- return -1;
- }
- if (nameA > nameB) {
- return 1;
+
+ $('[title!=""]').qtip();
+ $("form").validate();
+ $("form").submit(function() {
+ if ($('select option:selected').val() == 'upload') {
+ if ($('input[name=user_public_key]').val() == '') {
+ alert('Please specify the key file to upload');
+ return false;
+ }
}
- return 0;
- });
- // auto-complete the form
- jQuery( "#authority_hrn" ).autocomplete({
- source: availableTags,
- minLength: 0,
- change: function (event, ui) {
- if(!ui.item){
- //http://api.jqueryui.com/autocomplete/#event-change -
- // The item selected from the menu, if any. Otherwise the property is null
- //so clear the item for force selection
- jQuery("#authority_hrn").val("");
- }
- }
- //select: function( event, ui ) {console.log(jQuery(this))}
- });
- // for hover texts
- jQuery('[title!=""]').qtip();
+ });
});
</script>
{% endblock %}
-