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YANG Development Kit (Generator)

Table of Contents

Overview

ydk-gen is a developer tool that can generate API's that are modeled in YANG. Currently, it generates language binding for Python, Go and C++ with planned support for other language bindings in the future.

Other tools and libraries are used to deliver ydk-gen's functionality. In particular:

  • YANG model analysis and code generation is implemented using APIs from the pyang library
  • Documentation is generated using Sphinx
  • Run time yang model analysis is done using libyang
  • C++ to python bindings are created using pybind11
  • C++ uses catch and spdlog for tests and logging respectively

Of course, many other libraries are used as an integral part of ydk-gen and it's dependencies, too many to mention!

The output of ydk-gen is either a core package, that defines services and providers, or a module bundle, consisting of APIs based on YANG models. Each module bundle is generated using a bundle profile and the ydk-gen tool. Developers can either use pre-packaged generated bundles (e.g. ydk-py), or they can define their own bundle, consisting of a set of YANG models, using a bundle profile (e.g. ietf_0_1_1.json). This gives a developer the ability to customize the scope of their bundle based on their requirements.

Backward compatibility

Please see this page for details on some backward incompatible changes introduced as part of the 0.6.0 release. Note also that #604 and #748 introduced backward incompatibility for python. The bundles generated with 0.7.1 or newer ydk-gen will only work with ydk core version 0.7.1 or newer. Also error types for python were renamed from YPYError to YError.

Docker

A docker image is automatically built with the latest ydk-gen installed. This be used to run ydk-gen without installing anything natively on your machine.

To use the docker image, install docker on your system and run the below command. See the docker documentation for more details.

docker run -it ydkdev/ydk-gen

System requirements

Please follow the below instructions to install the system requirements before installing YDK-Py/YDK-Cpp. Please note that if you are using the latest ydk-gen master branch code, you may not be able to use the below prebuilt libydk binaries. You need to build libydk from source after installing the below requirements:

Linux

Ubuntu (Debian-based):

Install prebuilt libydk binary:

   $ sudo apt-get install gdebi-core python3-dev python-dev libtool-bin
   $ wget https://devhub.cisco.com/artifactory/debian-ydk/0.7.1/libydk_0.7.1-1_amd64.deb
   $ sudo gdebi libydk_0.7.1-1_amd64.deb

To build from source:

$ sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev libpcre3-dev libssh-dev libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev libtool-bin cmake python3-dev python-dev

Centos (Fedora-based):

Install prebuilt libydk binary:

   $ sudo yum install epel-release
   $ sudo yum install libssh-devel gcc-c++
   $ sudo yum install https://devhub.cisco.com/artifactory/rpm-ydk/0.7.1/libydk-0.7.1-1.x86_64.rpm

   # Upgrade compiler to gcc 5.*
   $ yum install centos-release-scl -y > /dev/null
   $ yum install devtoolset-4-gcc* -y > /dev/null
   $ ln -sf /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/root/usr/bin/gcc /usr/bin/cc
   $ ln -sf /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/root/usr/bin/g++ /usr/bin/c++

To build from source:

   $ sudo yum install epel-release
   $ sudo yum install libxml2-devel libxslt-devel libssh-devel libtool gcc-c++ pcre-devel cmake3 clang libcurl-devel rpm-build redhat-lsb

   # Upgrade compiler to gcc 5.*
   $ yum install centos-release-scl -y > /dev/null
   $ yum install devtoolset-4-gcc* -y > /dev/null
   $ ln -sf /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/root/usr/bin/gcc /usr/bin/cc
   $ ln -sf /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/root/usr/bin/g++ /usr/bin/c++

macOS

It is recommended to install homebrew and Xcode command line tools on your system before installing YDK-Py/YDK-Cpp.

You can download the latest python package from here. Please do not use the homebrew version of python as it causes issues with installing ydk packages. Please execute brew rm python python3 to remove any homebrew python packages.

Install prebuilt libydk binary:

   $ xcode-select --install
   $ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
   $ brew install pkg-config libssh xml2 curl pcre cmake libxml2 pybind11
   $ curl -O https://devhub.cisco.com/artifactory/osx-ydk/0.7.1/libydk-0.7.1-Darwin.pkg
   $ sudo installer -pkg libydk-0.7.1-Darwin.pkg -target /

To build from source:

   $ xcode-select --install
   $ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
   $ brew install pkg-config libssh xml2 curl pcre cmake

Windows

Currently, YDK-Py and YDK-Cpp from release 0.6.0 onwards is not supported on Windows.

Installation

Setting up your environment

We recommend that you run ydk-gen under a Python virtual environment (virtualenv/virtualenvwrapper). To install support in your system, execute

  $ pip install virtualenv virtualenvwrapper
  $ source /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh

In some systems (e.g. Debian-based Linux), you may need to install support for Python virtual environments as root

  $ sudo pip install virtualenv virtualenvwrapper
  $ source /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh

At this point, create a new virtual environment

  $ mkvirtualenv -p python2.7 py2

Clone ydk-gen and install the requirements

$ git clone https://github.com/CiscoDevNet/ydk-gen.git
$ cd ydk-gen
$ pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage

$ ./generate.py --help
Usage: generate.py [options]

Options:
  --version           show program's version number and exit
  -h, --help          show this help message and exit
  -p, --python        Select Python language. This is currently the default option
  -l, --libydk        Generate the libydk core package (required for using YDK Python, Go, C++)
  -c, --cpp           Select C++ language
  -g, --go            Select Go language
  --core              Generate the core for the selected language
  --bundle=PROFILE    Generate the bundle for the selected language
  --one-module-per-class
                      Generate python bundles by creating separate python modules for each class
  -v, --verbose       Verbose mode
  --generate-doc      Generation documentation
  --output-directory  The output-directory . If not specified the output can be found under `ydk-gen/gen-api/python`

The below steps specify how to use ydk-gen to generate the core and a bundle. Pre-generated bundles and core are available for python, go and C++: ydk-py, ydk-go and ydk-cpp. The script create_ydk_sdk_for_github.sh can be used to generate the ydk-py, ydk-cpp and ydk-go repositories after having generated all the bundles and core packages using generate.py.

First step: choose your bundle profile

The first step in using ydk-gen is either using one of the already existing bundle profiles or constructing your own bundle profile, consisting of the YANG models you are interested in:

Construct a bundle profile file, such as ietf_0_1_1.json and specify its dependencies.

Details

A sample bundle profile file is described below. The file is in a JSON format. Specify the name of your bundle, the version of the bundle and the ydk_version, which refers to the version of the ydk core package you want to use with this bundle. The name of the bundle here is especially important as this will form part of the installation path of the bundle.

{
    "name":"cisco-ios-xr",
    "version": "0.1.0",
    "ydk_version": "0.5.0",
    "Author": "Cisco",
    "Copyright": "Cisco",
    "Description": "Cisco IOS-XR Native Models From Git",

The "models" section of the file describes where to source models from. There are 3 sources:

  • Directories
  • Specific files
  • Git, within which specific relative directories and files may be referenced

The sample below shows the use of git sources only.

    "models": {
        "git": [

We have a list of git sources. Each source must specify a URL. This URL should be one that allows the repository to be cloned without requiring user intervention, so please use a public URL such as the example below. There are three further options that can be specified:

  • commitid - Optional specification of a commit in string form. The files identified will be copied from the context of this commit.
  • dir - List of relative directory paths within git repository. All .yang files in this directory and any sub-directories will be pulled into the generated bundle.
  • file- List of relative file paths within the git repository.

Only directory examples are shown below.

            {
                "url": "https://github.com/YangModels/yang.git",
                "dir": [
                    "vendor/cisco/xr/532"
                ]
            },
            {
                "url": "https://github.com/YangModels/yang.git",
                "commitid": "f6b4e2d59d4eedf31ae8b2fa3119468e4c38259c",
                "dir": [
                    "experimental/openconfig/bgp",
                    "experimental/openconfig/policy"
                ]
            }
        ]
    },

Second step: Generate & install the core

On executing pip install ydk-cisco-ios-xr, you will be able to install the latest released PyPi version of all the ydk packages.

Note: There usually would have been changes on the master branch since the last released version. To install the latest code at your own risk, you need to follow the below steps in the exact order.

First, generate the core and install it:

First generate and install libydk (required for C++, Go or Python):

$ ./generate.py --libydk
$ cd gen-api/cpp/ydk/build
$ make

# To create the libydk binary package to use for later installation, run the below command
$ make package

# To install the compiled libydk code, run the below command after the above
$ [sudo] make install

For python:

$ ./generate.py --python --core
$ pip install gen-api/python/ydk/dist/ydk*.tar.gz

For Go:

$ ./generate.py --go --core
$ cp -r gen-api/go/ydk/* $GOPATH/src/github.com/CiscoDevNet/ydk-go/ydk

Third step: Generate & install your bundle

Then, generate your bundle using a bundle profile and install it:

For python:

$ ./generate.py --python --bundle profiles/bundles/<name-of-profile>.json
$ pip install gen-api/python/<name-of-bundle>-bundle/dist/ydk*.tar.gz

Now, doing pip list should show the ydk (refering to the core package) and ydk-<name-of-bundle> packages installed:

$ pip list
...
ydk (0.5.2)
ydk-models-<name-of-bundle> (0.5.1)
...

For Go:

$ ./generate.py --go --bundle profiles/bundles/<name-of-profile>.json
$ cp -r gen-api/go/<name-of-bundle>-bundle/ydk/models/*  $GOPATH/src/github.com/CiscoDevNet/ydk-go/ydk/models

For C++:

$ ./generate.py --cpp --bundle profiles/bundles/<name-of-profile>.json
$ cd gen-api/cpp/<name-of-bundle>-bundle/build && make && make install

Fourth step: Writing your first app

Now, you can start creating apps based on the models in your bundle. Assuming you generated a python bundle, the models will be available for importing in your app under ydk.models.<name-of-your-bundle>. For examples, see ydk-py-samples and C++ samples. Also refer to the documentation for python, Go and for C++.

Documentation

When generating the YDK documentation for several bundles and the core, it is recommended to generate the bundles without the --generate-doc option. After generating all the bundles, the combined documentation for all the bundles and the core can be generated using the --core --generate-doc option. For example, the below sequence of commands will generate the documentation for the three python bundles and the python core (for C++, use --cpp; for Go, use --go).

Note that the below process could take a few hours due to the size of the cisco_ios_xr bundle.

./generate.py --python --bundle profiles/bundles/ietf_0_1_1.json
./generate.py --python --bundle profiles/bundles/openconfig_0_1_1.json
./generate.py --python --bundle profiles/bundles/cisco_ios_xr_6_1_1.json
./generate.py --python --core --generate-doc

Pre-generated documentation for ydk-py and ydk-cpp are available.

Generating an "Adhoc" YDK-Py Bundle

The ability to generate an adhoc bundle directly from the command line and without creating a bundle file can be done something like this:

$ ./generate.py --adhoc-bundle-name test --adhoc-bundle \
    /opt/git-repos/clean-yang/vendor/cisco/xr/621/Cisco-IOS-XR-ipv4-bgp-oper*.yang \
    /opt/git-repos/clean-yang/vendor/cisco/xr/621/Cisco-IOS-XR-types.yang
    /opt/git-repos/clean-yang/vendor/cisco/xr/621/Cisco-IOS-XR-ipv4-bgp-datatypes.yang

When run in this way, we will generate a bundle that only contains tje files specified with the --adhoc-bundle option, creating a pip package name by the --adhoc-bundle-name, with a version 0.1.0 and a dependency on the base IETF bundle. Note that all dependencies for the bundle must be listed, and as the expectation is that this option will typically be used for generating point YDK-Py bundles for specific testing, the --verbose option is automatically enabled to quickly and easily let a user see if dependencies have been satisfied.

Notes

Python version

  • If your environment has both python 2 and python 3 and uses python 2 by default, you may need to use python3 and pip3 instead of python and pip in the commands mentioned in this document.

Directory structure

README          - install and usage notes
gen-api         - generated bundle/core
                    - python (Python SDK)
                    - go (Go SDK)
                    - cpp (C++ SDK)

generate.py     - script used to generate SDK for yang models
profiles        - profile files used during generation
yang            - some yang models used for testing
requirements.txt- python dependencies used during installation
sdk             - sdk core and stubs for python and cpp
test            - test code

Troubleshooting

Sometimes, developers using ydk-gen may run across errors when generating a YDK bundle using generate.py with some yang models. If there are issues with the .json profile file being used, such errors will be easily evident. Other times, when the problem is not so evident, it is recommended to try running with the --verbose|-v flag, which may reveal syntax problems with the yang models being used. For example,

./generate.py --python --bundle profiles/bundles/ietf_0_1_1.json --verbose

Also, it may be a good idea to obtain a local copy of the yang models and compile them using pyang to ensure the validity of the models,

cd /path/to/yang/models
pyang *.yang

Running Unit Tests

Python

First, generate and install the test bundle and core package

$ ./generate.py --core
$ pip install gen-api/python/core/dist/ydk*.tar.gz

$ ./generate.py --bundle profiles/test/ydktest.json
$ pip install gen-api/python/ydktest-bundle/dist/ydk*.tar.gz

To run the sanity tests, do the following:

$ cd ydk-gen/sdk/python
$ python test/test_sanity_types.py
$ python test/test_sanity_levels.py
$ python test/test_sanity_filters.py

C++

First, install the test bundle and core package

$ ./generate.py --core --cpp
$ ./generate.py --bundle profiles/test/ydktest-cpp.json --cpp
$ cd gen-api/cpp/ydktest-bundle/build
$ sudo make install
$ cd -

To run the core and bundle tests, do the following

$ cd ydk-gen/sdk/cpp/ydk
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake .. && sudo make all install test

$ cd ydk-gen/sdk/cpp/tests
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake .. && make all test

Go

Please refer here.

Support

Join the YDK community to connect with other users and with the makers of YDK.

Release Notes

The current YDK release version is 0.7.1 (alpha). The version of the latest YDK-Gen master branch is 0.7.2-dev. YDK-Gen is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.

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