Watcher Applier has an external action plugin interface which gives anyone the ability to integrate an external action in order to extend the initial set of actions Watcher provides.
This section gives some guidelines on how to implement and integrate custom actions with Watcher.
First of all you have to extend the base BaseAction class which defines a set of abstract methods and/or properties that you will have to implement:
- The schema is an abstract property that you have to implement. This is the first function to be called by the applier before any further processing and its role is to validate the input parameters that were provided to it.
- The precondition() is called before the execution of an action. This method is a hook that can be used to perform some initializations or to make some more advanced validation on its input parameters. If you wish to block the execution based on this factor, you simply have to raise an exception.
- The postcondition() is called after the execution of an action. As this function is called regardless of whether an action succeeded or not, this can prove itself useful to perform cleanup operations.
- The execute() is the main component of an action. This is where you should implement the logic of your action.
- The revert() allows you to roll back the targeted resource to its original state following a faulty execution. Indeed, this method is called by the workflow engine whenever an action raises an exception.
Here is an example showing how you can write a plugin called DummyAction:
# Filepath = <PROJECT_DIR>/thirdparty/dummy.py
# Import path = thirdparty.dummy
import voluptuous
from watcher.applier.actions import base
class DummyAction(base.BaseAction):
@property
def schema(self):
return voluptuous.Schema({})
def execute(self):
# Does nothing
pass # Only returning False is considered as a failure
def revert(self):
# Does nothing
pass
def precondition(self):
# No pre-checks are done here
pass
def postcondition(self):
# Nothing done here
pass
This implementation is the most basic one. So in order to get a better understanding on how to implement a more advanced action, have a look at the Migrate class.
As you can see in the previous example, we are using Voluptuous to validate the input parameters of an action. So if you want to learn more about how to work with Voluptuous, you can have a look at their documentation:
At this point, you have a fully functional action. However, in more complex implementation, you may want to define some configuration options so one can tune the action to its needs. To do so, you can implement the get_config_opts() class method as followed:
from oslo_config import cfg
class DummyAction(base.BaseAction):
# [...]
def execute(self):
assert self.config.test_opt == 0
@classmethod
def get_config_opts(cls):
return super(
DummyAction, cls).get_config_opts() + [
cfg.StrOpt('test_opt', help="Demo Option.", default=0),
# Some more options ...
]
The configuration options defined within this class method will be included within the global watcher.conf configuration file under a section named by convention: {namespace}.{plugin_name}. In our case, the watcher.conf configuration would have to be modified as followed:
[watcher_actions.dummy]
# Option used for testing.
test_opt = test_value
Then, the configuration options you define within this method will then be injected in each instantiated object via the config parameter of the __init__() method.
Here below is the abstract BaseAction class that every single action should implement:
Defines a Schema that the input parameters shall comply to
Returns: | A schema declaring the input parameters this action should be provided along with their respective constraints (e.g. type, value range, ...) |
---|---|
Return type: | voluptuous.Schema instance |
Constructor
Parameters: |
|
---|
Executes the main logic of the action
This method can be used to perform an action on a given set of input parameters to accomplish some type of operation. This operation may return a boolean value as a result of its execution. If False, this will be considered as an error and will then trigger the reverting of the actions.
Returns: | A flag indicating whether or not the action succeeded |
---|---|
Return type: | bool |
Defines the configuration options to be associated to this loadable
Returns: | A list of configuration options relative to this Loadable |
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Return type: | list of oslo_config.cfg.Opt instances |
Hook: called after the execution of an action
This function is called regardless of whether an action succeded or not. So you can use it to perform cleanup operations.
Hook: called before the execution of an action
This method can be used to perform some initializations or to make some more advanced validation on its input parameters. So if you wish to block its execution based on this factor, raise the related exception.
In order for the Watcher Applier to load your new action, the action must be registered as a named entry point under the watcher_actions entry point of your setup.py file. If you are using pbr, this entry point should be placed in your setup.cfg file.
The name you give to your entry point has to be unique.
Here below is how you would proceed to register DummyAction using pbr:
[entry_points]
watcher_actions =
dummy = thirdparty.dummy:DummyAction
The Watcher Applier service will automatically discover any installed plugins when it is restarted. If a Python package containing a custom plugin is installed within the same environment as Watcher, Watcher will automatically make that plugin available for use.
At this point, you can use your new action plugin in your strategy plugin if you reference it via the use of the add_action() method:
# [...]
self.solution.add_action(
action_type="dummy", # Name of the entry point we registered earlier
applies_to="",
input_parameters={})
By doing so, your action will be saved within the Watcher Database, ready to be processed by the planner for creating an action plan which can then be executed by the Watcher Applier via its workflow engine.
At the last, remember to add the action into the weights in watcher.conf, otherwise you will get an error when the action be referenced in a strategy.
Watcher provides a basic built-in planner which is only able to process the Watcher built-in actions. Therefore, you will either have to use an existing third-party planner or implement another planner that will be able to take into account your new action plugin.