When we want to deprecate a command, policy says we need to alert the user. We do this with a message logged at WARNING level before any command output is emitted.
OpenStackClient command classes are derived from the cliff classes. Cliff uses setuptools entry points for dispatching the parsed command to the respective handler classes. This lends itself to modifying the command execution at run-time.
The obvious approach to adding the deprecation message would be to just add the message to the command class take_action() method directly. But then the various deprecations are scattered throughout the code base. If we instead wrap the deprecated command class with a new class we can put all of the wrappers into a separate, dedicated module. This also lets us leave the original class unmodified and puts all of the deprecation bits in one place.
This is an example of a minimal wrapper around a command class that logs a deprecation message as a warning to the user then calls the original class.
class ListFooOld(ListFoo):
"""List resources"""
# This notifies cliff to not display the help for this command
deprecated = True
log = logging.getLogger('deprecated')
def take_action(self, parsed_args):
self.log.warning(
"%s is deprecated, use 'foobar list'",
getattr(self, 'cmd_name', 'this command'),
)
return super(ListFooOld, self).take_action(parsed_args)