forked from intel/virtual-storage-manager
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manager.py
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manager.py
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# vim: tabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 softtabstop=4
# Copyright 2010 United States Government as represented by the
# Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""Base Manager class.
Managers are responsible for a certain aspect of the system. It is a logical
grouping of code relating to a portion of the system. In general other
components should be using the manager to make changes to the components that
it is responsible for.
For example, other components that need to deal with storages in some way,
should do so by calling methods on the HardwareManager instead of directly
changing fields in the database. This allows us to keep all of the code
relating to storages in the same place.
We have adopted a basic strategy of Smart managers and dumb data, which means
rather than attaching methods to data objects, components should call manager
methods that act on the data.
Methods on managers that can be executed locally should be called directly. If
a particular method must execute on a remote host, this should be done via rpc
to the service that wraps the manager
Managers should be responsible for most of the db access, and
non-implementation specific data. Anything implementation specific that can't
be generalized should be done by the Driver.
In general, we prefer to have one manager with multiple drivers for different
implementations, but sometimes it makes sense to have multiple managers. You
can think of it this way: Abstract different overall strategies at the manager
level(FlatNetwork vs VlanNetwork), and different implementations at the driver
level(LinuxNetDriver vs CiscoNetDriver).
Managers will often provide methods for initial setup of a host or periodic
tasks to a wrapping service.
This module provides Manager, a base class for managers.
"""
from vsm.db import base
from vsm import flags
from vsm.openstack.common import log as logging
from vsm.openstack.common import periodic_task
from vsm.openstack.common.rpc import dispatcher as rpc_dispatcher
from vsm import version
FLAGS = flags.FLAGS
LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
class Manager(base.Base, periodic_task.PeriodicTasks):
#__metaclass__ = ManagerMeta
# Set RPC API version to 1.0 by default.
RPC_API_VERSION = '1.0'
def __init__(self, host=None, db_driver=None):
if not host:
host = FLAGS.host
self.host = host
super(Manager, self).__init__(db_driver)
def insert_node_info_into_db(self):
pass
def create_rpc_dispatcher(self):
'''Get the rpc dispatcher for this manager.
If a manager would like to set an rpc API version, or support more than
one class as the target of rpc messages, override this method.
'''
return rpc_dispatcher.RpcDispatcher([self])
def periodic_tasks(self, context, raise_on_error=False):
"""Tasks to be run at a periodic interval."""
return self.run_periodic_tasks(context, raise_on_error=raise_on_error)
def init_host(self):
"""Handle initialization if this is a standalone service.
Child classes should override this method.
"""
pass
def service_version(self, context):
return version.version_string()
def service_config(self, context):
config = {}
for key in FLAGS:
config[key] = FLAGS.get(key, None)
return config