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authorPavel Zuna <pzuna@redhat.com>2010-04-20 18:32:11 +0200
committerRob Crittenden <rcritten@redhat.com>2010-04-27 16:33:08 -0400
commita8409b7db15d28b3b938e4a0e93dd1c3e3a6a960 (patch)
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parent44c18444935443e3ea1cb9bb6c543a436bc84cd8 (diff)
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Add file with example plugins/tutorial.
Note that this is still work in progress and will be finished in another patch. Specifically, it currently doesn't cover baseldap.py classes.
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+# Authors:
+# Pavel Zuna <pzuna@redhat.com>
+#
+# Copyright (C) 2010 Red Hat
+# see file 'COPYING' for use and warranty information
+#
+# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
+# published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 only
+#
+# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+# GNU General Public License for more details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
+"""
+Example plugins
+"""
+
+# Hey guys, so you're interested in writing plugins for IPA? Great!
+# We compiled this small file with examples on how to extend IPA to suit
+# your needs. We'll be going from very simple to pretty complex plugins
+# hopefully covering most of what our framework has to offer.
+
+# First, let's import some stuff.
+
+# api is an object containing references to all plugins and useful classes.
+# errors is a module containing all IPA specific exceptions.
+from ipalib import api, errors
+# Command is the base class for command plugin.
+from ipalib import Command
+# Str is a subclass of Param, it is used to define string parameters for
+# command. We'll go through all other subclasses of Param supported by IPA
+# later in this file
+from ipalib import Str
+# output is a module containing the most common output patterns.
+# Command plugin do output validation based on these patterns.
+# You can define your own as we're going to show you later.
+from ipalib import output
+
+
+# We're going to create an example command plugin, that takes a name as its
+# only argument. Commands in IPA support input validation by defining
+# functions we're going to call 'validators'. This is an example of such
+# function:
+def validate_name(ugettext, name):
+ """
+ Validate names for the exhelloworld command. Names starting with 'Y'
+ (picked at random) are considered invalid.
+ """
+ if name.startswith('Y'):
+ raise errors.ValidationError(
+ name='name',
+ error='Names starting with \'Y\' are invalid!'
+ )
+ # If the validator doesn't return anything (i.e. it returns None),
+ # the parameter passes validation.
+
+
+class exhelloworld(Command):
+ """
+ Example commnad: Hello world!
+ """
+ # takes_args is an attribute of Command. It's a tuple containing
+ # instances of Param (or its subclasses such as Str) that define
+ # what position arguments are accepted by the command.
+ takes_args = (
+ # The first argument of Param constructor is the name that will be
+ # used to identify this parameter. It can be followed by validator
+ # functions. The constructor can also take a bunch of keyword
+ # arguments. Here we use default, to set the parameters default value
+ # and autofill, that fills the default value if the parameter isn't
+ # present.
+ # Note the ? at the end of the parameter name. It makes the parameter
+ # optional.
+ Str('name?', validate_name,
+ default=u'anonymous coward',
+ autofill=True,
+ ),
+ )
+
+ # has_output is an attribute of Command, it is a tuple containing
+ # output.Output instances that define its output pattern.
+ # Commands in IPA return dicts with keys corresponding to items
+ # in the has_output tuple.
+ has_output = (
+ # output.summary is one of the basic patterns.
+ # It's a string that should be filled with a user-friendly
+ # decription of the action performed by the command.
+ output.summary,
+ )
+
+ # Every command needs to override the execute method.
+ # This is where the command functionality should go.
+ # It is always executed on the server-side, so don't rely
+ # on client-side stuff in here!
+ def execute(self, name):
+ return dict(summary='Hello world, %s!' % name)
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exhelloworld)
+
+# Anyway, that was a pretty bad example of a command or, to be more precise,
+# a bad example of resource use. When a client executes a command locally, its
+# name and parameters are transfered to the server over XML-RPC. The command
+# execute method is then executed on the server and results are transfered
+# back to the client. The command does nothing, but create a string - a task
+# that could be easily done locally. This can be done by overriding the Command
+# forward method. It has the same signature as execute and is normally
+# responsible for transferring stuff to the server.
+# Most commands will, however, need to perfom tasks on the server. I didn't
+# want to start with forward and confuse the hell out of you. :)
+
+
+# Okey, time to look at something a little more advance. A command that
+# actually communicates with the LDAP backend.
+
+# Let's import a new parameter type: Flag.
+# Parameters of type Flag do not have values per say. They are either enabled
+# or disabled (True or False), so there's no need to make then optional, ever.
+from ipalib import Flag
+
+class exshowuser(Command):
+ """
+ Example command: retrieve an user entry from LDAP
+ """
+ takes_args = (
+ Str('username'),
+ )
+
+ # takes_options is another attribute of Command. It works the same
+ # way as takes_args, but instead of positional arguments, it enables
+ # us to define what options the commmand takes.
+ # Note that an options can be both required and optional.
+ takes_options = (
+ Flag('all',
+ # the doc keyword argument is what you see when you go
+ # `ipa COMMAND --help` or `ipa help COMMAND`
+ doc='retrieve all attributes',
+ flags=['no_output'],
+ ),
+ )
+
+ has_output = (
+ # Here, you can see a custom output pattern. The pattern constructor
+ # takes the output name (key in the dictionary returned by execute),
+ # the allowed type(s) (can be a tuple with several types), a
+ # simple description and a list of flags. Currently, only
+ # the 'no_display' flag is supported by the Command.output_for_cli
+ # method, but you can always use your own if you plan
+ # to override it - I'll show you how later.
+ output.Output('result', dict, 'user entry whithout DN'),
+ output.Output('dn', unicode, 'DN of the user entry', ['no_display']),
+ )
+
+ # Notice the ** argument notation for options. It is not required, but
+ # we strongly recommend you to use it. In some cases, special options
+ # are added automatically to commands and not listing them or using **
+ # may lead to exception flying around... and nobody likes exceptions
+ # flying around.
+ def execute(self, username, **options):
+ # OK, I said earlier that this command is going to communicate
+ # with the LDAP backend, You could always use python-ldap to do
+ # that, but there's also this nice class we have... it's called
+ # ldap2 and this is how you get a handle to it:
+ ldap = self.api.Backend.ldap2
+
+ # ldap2 enables you to do a lot of crazy stuff with LDAP and it's
+ # specially crafted to suit IPA plugin needs. I recommend you either
+ # look at ipaserver/plugins/ldap2 or checkout some of the generated
+ # HTML docs on www.freeipa.org as I won't be able to cover everything
+ # it offers in this file.
+
+ # We want to retrieve an user entry from LDAP. We need to know its
+ # DN first. There's a bunch of method in ldap2 to build DNs. For our
+ # purpose, this will do:
+ dn = ldap.make_dn_from_attr(
+ 'uid', username, self.api.env.container_user
+ )
+ # Note that api.env contains a lot of useful constant. We recommend
+ # you to check them out and use them whenever possible.
+
+ # Let's check if the --all option is enabled. If it is, let's
+ # retrieve all of the entry attributes. If not, only retrieve some
+ # basic stuff like the username, first and last names.
+ if options.get('all', False):
+ attrs_list = ['*']
+ else:
+ attrs_list = ['uid', 'givenname', 'sn']
+
+ # Give us the entry, LDAP!
+ (dn, entry_attrs) = ldap.get_entry(dn, attrs_list)
+
+ return dict(result=entry_attrs, dn=dn)
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exshowuser)
+
+
+# Now let's a take a look on how you can modify the command output if you don't
+# like the default.
+
+class exshowuser2(exshowuser):
+ """
+ Example command: exusershow with custom output
+ """
+ # Just some values we're going to use for textui.print_entry
+ attr_order = ['uid', 'givenname', 'sn']
+ attr_labels = {
+ 'uid': 'User login', 'givenname': 'First name', 'sn': 'Last name'
+ }
+
+ def output_for_cli(self, textui, output, *args, **options):
+ # Now we've done it! We have overridden the default output_for_cli.
+ # textui is a class that implements a lot of useful outputting methods,
+ # please use it when you can
+ # output contains the dict returned by execute
+ # args, options contain the command parameters
+ textui.print_dashed('User entry:')
+ textui.print_indented('DN: %s' % output['dn'])
+ textui.print_entry(output['result'], self.attr_order, self.attr_labels)
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exshowuser2)
+
+# Alright, so now you'll always want to define your own output_for_cli...
+# No, you won't! Because the default output_for_cli isn't as stupid as it looks.
+# It can take information from the command parameters and output patterns
+# to produce nice output like all real IPA commands have.
+
+class exshowuser3(exshowuser):
+ """
+ Example command: exusershow that takes full advantage of the default output
+ """
+ takes_args = (
+ # We're going to rename the username argument to uid to match
+ # the attribute name it represent. The cli_name kwarg is what
+ # users will see in the CLI and label is what the default
+ # output_for_cli is going to use when printing the attribute value.
+ Str('uid',
+ cli_name='username',
+ label='User login',
+ ),
+ )
+
+ # has_output_params works the same way as takes_args and takes_options,
+ # but is only used to define output attributes. These won't show up
+ # as parameters for the command.
+ has_output_params = (
+ Str('givenname',
+ label='First name',
+ ),
+ Str('sn',
+ label='Last name',
+ ),
+ )
+
+ # standard_entry includes an entry 'result' (dict), a summary 'summary'
+ # and the entry primary key 'value'
+ # It also makes the command automatically add two special options:
+ # --all and --raw. Look at the description of nearly any real IPA command
+ # to see what they're about.
+ has_output = output.standard_entry
+
+ # Since --all and --raw are added automatically thanks to standard_entry,
+ # we need to clear takes_options from the base class otherwise we would
+ # get a parameter conflict.
+ takes_options = tuple()
+
+ def execute(self, *args, **options):
+ # Let's just call execute of the base class, extract it's output
+ # and fit it into the standard_entry output pattern.
+ output = super(exshowuser3, self).execute(*args, **options)
+ output['result']['dn'] = output['dn']
+ return dict(result=output['result'], value=args[0])
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exshowuser3)
+
+
+# Pretty cool, right? But you will probably want to implement a set of commands
+# to manage a certain type of entries (like users in the above examples).
+# To save you the massive PITA of parameter copy&paste, we introduced
+# the Object and Method plugin classes. Let's see how they work.
+
+from ipalib import Object, Method
+
+# First, we're going to create an object that represent the user entry.
+class exuser(Object):
+ """
+ Example plugin: user object
+ """
+ # takes_params is an attribute of Object. It is used to define output
+ # parameters for associated Methods. Methods can also use them to
+ # to generate their own parameters as you'll see in a while.
+ takes_params = (
+ Str('uid',
+ cli_name='username',
+ label='User login',
+ # The primary_key kwarg is used to, well, specify the object's
+ # primary key.
+ primary_key=True,
+ ),
+ Str('givenname?',
+ cli_name='first',
+ label='First name',
+ ),
+ Str('sn?',
+ cli_name='last',
+ label='Last name',
+ ),
+ )
+
+# register the object, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exuser)
+
+# Next, we're going to create a set of methods to manage this type of object
+# i.e. to manage user entries. We're only going to do "read" commands, because
+# we don't want to damage your user entries - adding, deleting, modifying is a
+# bit more complicated and will be covered later in this file.
+
+# Methods are automatically associtad with a parent Object based on class
+# names. They can then access their parent Object using self.obj.
+# Simply said, Methods are just Commands associated with an Object.
+
+class exuser_show(Method):
+ has_output = output.standard_entry
+
+ # get_args is a method of Command used to generate positional arguments
+ # we're going to use it to extract parameters from the parent
+ # Object
+ def get_args(self):
+ # self.obj.primary_key contains a reference the parameter with
+ # primary_key kwarg set to True.
+ # Parameters can be cloned to create new instance with additional
+ # kwargs. Here we add the attribute kwargs, that tells the framework
+ # the parameters corresponds to an LDAP attribute. The query kwargs
+ # tells the framework to skip parameter validation (i.e. do NOT call
+ # validators).
+ yield self.obj.primary_key.clone(attribute=True, query=True)
+
+ def execute(self, *args, **options):
+ ldap = self.api.Backend.ldap2
+
+ dn = ldap.make_dn_from_attr(
+ 'uid', args[0], self.api.env.container_user
+ )
+
+ if options.get('all', False):
+ attrs_list = ['*']
+ else:
+ attrs_list = [p.name for p in self.output_params()]
+
+ (dn, entry_attrs) = ldap.get_entry(dn, attrs_list)
+ entry_attrs['dn'] = dn
+
+ return dict(result=entry_attrs, value=args[0])
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exuser_show)
+
+class exuser_find(Method):
+ # standard_list_of_entries is an output pattern that
+ # define a dict with a list of entries, their count
+ # and a truncated flag. The truncated flag is used to mark
+ # truncated (uncomplete) search results - for example due to
+ # timeouts.
+ has_output = output.standard_list_of_entries
+
+ # get_options is similar to get_args, but is used to generate
+ # options instead of positional arguments
+ def get_options(self):
+ for option in self.obj.params():
+ yield option.clone(
+ attribute=True, query=True, required=False
+ )
+
+ def execute(self, *args, **options):
+ ldap = self.api.Backend.ldap2
+
+ # args_options_2_entry is a helper method of Command used
+ # to create a dictionary from the command parameters that
+ # have the attribute kwargs set to True.
+ search_kw = self.args_options_2_entry(*args, **options)
+
+ # make_filter will create an LDAP filter from attribute values
+ # exact=False means the values are surrounded with * when constructing
+ # the filter and rules=ldap.MATCH_ALL means the filter is going
+ # to use the & operators. More complex filters can be constructed
+ # by joining simpler filters using ldap2.combine_filters.
+ attr_filter = ldap.make_filter(
+ search_kw, exact=False, rules=ldap.MATCH_ALL
+ )
+
+ if options.get('all', False):
+ attrs_list = ['*']
+ else:
+ attrs_list = [p.name for p in self.output_params()]
+
+ # perform the search
+ (entries, truncated) = ldap.find_entries(
+ attr_filter, attrs_list, self.api.env.container_user,
+ scope=ldap.SCOPE_ONELEVEL
+ )
+
+ # find_entries returns DNs and attributes separately, but the output
+ # patter expects them in one dict. We need to arrange that.
+ for e in entries:
+ e[1]['dn'] = e[0]
+ entries = [e for (dn, e) in entries]
+
+ return dict(result=entries, count=len(entries), truncated=truncated)
+
+# register the command, uncomment this line if you want to try it out
+#api.register(exuser_find)
+
+# As most commands associated with objects are used to manage entries in LDAP,
+# we defined a basic set of base classes for your plugins implementing CRUD
+# operations. This is maily to save you from defining your own has_output,
+# get_args, get_options and to have a standardized way of doing things for the
+# sake of consistency. We won't cover them here, because you probably won't
+# need to use them. So why did we botter? Well, you're going to see in
+# a while. If interested anyway, check them out in ipalib/crud.py.
+
+
+# At this point, if you've already seen some of the real plugins, you might
+# be going like "WTH is this !@#^&? The user_show plugin is only like 4 lines
+# of code and does much more than the exshowuser crap. Well yes, that's because
+# it is based on one of the awesome plugin base classes we created to save
+# authors from doing all the dirty work. Let's take a look at them.
+
+# COMING SOON: baseldap.py classes, extending existing plugins, etc.
+
+