The following diagram shows how the project is laid out.
openstack/
connection.py
resource.py
compute/
compute_service.py
v2/
server.py
_proxy.py
tests/
compute/
v2/
test_server.py
The openstack.resource.Resource
base class is the building block
of any service implementation. Resource
objects correspond to the
resources each service’s REST API works with, so the
openstack.compute.v2.server.Server
subclass maps to the compute
service’s https://openstack:1234/v2/servers
resource.
The base Resource
contains methods to support the typical
CRUD
operations supported by REST APIs, and handles the construction of URLs
and calling the appropriate HTTP verb on the given Adapter
.
Values sent to or returned from the service are implemented as attributes
on the Resource
subclass with type openstack.resource.prop
.
The prop
is created with the exact name of what the API expects,
and can optionally include a type
to be validated against on requests.
You should choose an attribute name that follows PEP-8, regardless of what
the server-side expects, as this prop
becomes a mapping between the two.:
is_public = resource.prop('os-flavor-access:is_public', type=bool)
There are six additional attributes which the Resource
class checks
before making requests to the REST API. allow_create
, allow_retreive
,
allow_commit
, allow_delete
, allow_head
, and allow_list
are set
to True
or False
, and are checked before making the corresponding
method call.
The base_path
attribute should be set to the URL which corresponds to
this resource. Many base_path
s are simple, such as "/servers"
.
For base_path
s which are composed of non-static information, Python’s
string replacement is used, e.g., base_path = "/servers/%(server_id)s/ips"
.
resource_key
and resources_key
are attributes to set when a
Resource
returns more than one item in a response, or otherwise
requires a key to obtain the response value. For example, the Server
class sets resource_key = "server"
as an individual Server
is
stored in a dictionary keyed with the singular noun,
and resource_keys = "servers"
as multiple Server
s are stored in
a dictionary keyed with the plural noun in the response.
Each service implements a Proxy
class based on
Proxy
, within the
openstack/<program_name>/vX/_proxy.py
module. For example, the v2 compute
service’s Proxy
exists in openstack/compute/v2/_proxy.py
.
The Proxy
class is based on
Adapter
.
Bases: keystoneauth1.adapter.Adapter
Represents a service.
HTTP status codes that should be retried by default.
The number of retries is defined by the configuration in parameters called
<service-type>_status_code_retries
.
Each service’s Proxy
provides a higher-level interface for users to work
with via a Connection
instance.
Rather than requiring users to maintain their own Adapter
and work with
lower-level Resource
objects, the Proxy
interface offers a place to make things easier for the caller.
Each Proxy
class implements methods which act on the underlying
Resource
classes which represent the service. For example:
def list_flavors(self, **params):
return flavor.Flavor.list(self.session, **params)
This method is operating on the openstack.compute.v2.flavor.Flavor.list
method. For the time being, it simply passes on the Adapter
maintained
by the Proxy
, and returns what the underlying Resource.list
method
does.
The implementations and method signatures of Proxy
methods are currently
under construction, as we figure out the best way to implement them in a
way which will apply nicely across all of the services.
The openstack.connection.Connection
class builds atop a
openstack.config.cloud_region.CloudRegion
object, and provides a
higher level interface constructed of Proxy
objects from each of the
services.
The Connection
class’ primary purpose is to act as a high-level interface
to this SDK, managing the lower level connecton bits and exposing the
Resource
objects through their corresponding Proxy object.
If you’ve built proper Resource
objects and implemented methods on the
corresponding Proxy
object, the high-level interface to your service
should now be exposed.
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