The Design Center API
The Design Center API (DC API or just API henceforth) is a simple JSON-based protocol for communicating with the Design Center backend. The backend may be running locally or remotely; the API makes no assumptions about the transport channel and is entirely a line-based text protocol consisting of one JSON line each way.
The API client makes a request and gets a response over the same channel.
Again, the request and the response can only be a single line of text, ended
by the transport channel's standard line-ending sequence, e.g. CRLF for HTTP.
JSON escapes such sequences so they should not happen anywhere in the
payloads.
Requests
API requests have the following general structure:
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: { ...commands... } }
The version is strictly semantically versioned as major.minor.patch. It must match exactly, so you can't have a 0.0.1 client talking to a 0.0.2 server for instance (the client has to say "0.0.2" to be usable). We expect backwards compatibility, this is just a way to avoid misunderstandings.
Note: Generally, only one command may be specified per request.
Responses
API responses look like this:
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"log": [],
"tags": {},
"data": {...response data...
}
}
}
The top key can be one of the following:
api_ok
The command was processed correctly and the response is enclosed as valid JSON (note that this doesn't mean the response indicates success!!!)
api_error
The command was not processed correctly and the response may not be valid JSON
at all. It may be good JSON and even contain keys like api_ok
promises,
e.g. warnings
or success
, but you can't rely on that.
The API client may wish to replace unparseable data with
{api_error: "BAD JSON (escaped data here)"}
or something similar to make the
response handler simpler.
Inside the API response, under the api_ok
key, you can expect to find the
following:
success
Indicates, generally speaking, that the command succeeded or failed. Any complex commands can fail in subtle ways, but the API will do its best to make this a good indicator.
errors
andwarnings
Lists of strings that log errors and warnings for the command.
error_tags
Key-value array of tag strings assigned to the error messages. This lets the client tell what stages or areas of the command triggered the errors.
List of general message strings. This is optional and purely informational.
tags
Key-value array of tag strings assigned to the response, not associated with errors. This lets the client tell what stages or areas of the command triggered messages or warnings, or more generally what stages or areas of the command were executed. This is optional and purely informational.
data
The meat of the response plate, if you will. This key contains all the response data that the API command generated. Each command has different return data so the specifics are listed per command.
API Commands
Version: 0.0.1-1
The API commands and their data responses are listed below. Generally they
are exclusive of each other, and the order below is the order in which they
are answered. Thus, for instance, a request that issues both list
and
search
will get just the list
results.
Many commands take terms. Terms are one of the following:
- a string (matches any field)
- a list of strings (any of them may match any field)
- a list of lists, with each one in the following formats:
[FIELD, "matches", REGEX]
or[FIELD, "equals", STRING]
or[[FIELD1, FIELD2,...], "matches", STRING]
list
The list
command lists installed sketches.
Here are examples of three list
commands. The first one lists everything
installed.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {list: true } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"list": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"CFEngine::dclib::3.5.0": "CFEngine::dclib::3.5.0",
"CFEngine::dclib": "CFEngine::dclib",
"CFEngine::sketch_template": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"VCS::vcs_mirror": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"Security::SSH": "Security::SSH",
"Utilities::ping_report": "Utilities::ping_report",
"Monitoring::SNMP::Walk": "Monitoring::SNMP::Walk",
"Data::Classes": "Data::Classes",
"CFEngine::stdlib": "CFEngine::stdlib",
"Utilities::ipverify": "Utilities::ipverify"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
Note the top-level key under data
is the name of the repository, which is
always a local directory.
The next one takes terms and lists all the sketches whose name satisfies the terms.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {list: [["name", "matches", "(Cloud|CFEngine|Security)"]] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"list": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"Security::SSH": "Security::SSH",
"CFEngine::dclib::3.5.0": "CFEngine::dclib::3.5.0",
"CFEngine::dclib": "CFEngine::dclib",
"CFEngine::sketch_template": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"CFEngine::stdlib": "CFEngine::stdlib"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
option: describe
When describe
is given as a top-level option with a value of true
, as in
the example below, the returned data is the contents of sketch.json
.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {describe: true, list: [["name", "matches", "ping"]] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"list": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"Utilities::ping_report": {
"namespace": "cfdc_ping",
"manifest": {
"changelog": {
"comment": "changelog"
},
"test.cf": {
"comment": "Test Policy"
},
"README.md": {
"documentation": true
},
"params/example.json": {
"comment": "Example parameters to report on a few hosts connectivity."
},
"main.cf": {
"desc": "main file"
}
},
"interface": ["main.cf"],
"metadata": {
"authors": ["Nick Anderson <nick@cmdln.org>", "Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>"],
"version": 1.2,
"name": "Utilities::ping_report",
"license": "MIT",
"description": "Report on pingability of hosts",
"tags": ["cfdc"],
"depends": {
"cfengine": {
"version": "3.4.0"
},
"CFEngine::dclib": {},
"os": ["linux"],
"CFEngine::stdlib": {
"version": 105
}
}
},
"entry_point": null,
"api": {
"ping": [{
"name": "runenv",
"type": "environment"
},
{
"name": "metadata",
"type": "metadata"
},
{
"name": "hosts",
"type": "list"
},
{
"name": "count",
"type": "string"
},
{
"name": "reached",
"type": "return"
},
{
"name": "not_reached",
"type": "return"
}]
}
}
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
When describe
is given as a top-level option with a value of README
, as in
the example below, the returned data is actually the sketch's auto-generated
README.md
file (which comes from sketch.json
). The tools/test/Makefile
testing Makefile has a convenience regenerate_readme
target to do this for
all the DC sketches.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {describe: "README", list: [["name", "matches", "ping"]] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"list": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"Utilities::ping_report": ["/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/ping_report", "# Utilities::ping_report version 1.2\n\nLicense: MIT\nTags: cfdc\nAuthors: Nick Anderson <nick@cmdln.org>, Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>\n\n## Description\nReport on pingability of hosts\n\n## Dependencies\nCFEngine::dclib, CFEngine::stdlib\n\n## API\n### bundle: ping\n* parameter _environment_ *runenv* (default: none, description: none)\n\n* parameter _metadata_ *metadata* (default: none, description: none)\n\n* parameter _list_ *hosts* (default: none, description: none)\n\n* parameter _string_ *count* (default: none, description: none)\n\n* returns _return_ *reached* (default: none, description: none)\n\n* returns _return_ *not_reached* (default: none, description: none)\n\n\n## SAMPLE USAGE\nSee `test.cf` or the example parameters provided\n\n"]
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
search
The search
command works exactly like list
above, except that the
candidate list contains all available sketches (from recognized_sources
),
not just the installed sketches.
option: describe
The describe
option to search
works exactly like it does for list
above.
describe
The describe
command gives the contents of sketch.json
for the matching
installed sketches by name.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {describe:"Security::SSH"} }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"describe": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"Security::SSH": [{
"namespace": "cfdc_sshd",
"manifest": {
"ssh.cf": {
"desc": "main file"
},
"README.md": {
"documentation": true
},
"params/simple.json": {}
},
"interface": ["ssh.cf"],
"metadata": {
"authors": ["Diego Zamboni <diego.zamboni@cfengine.com>", "Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>"],
"version": 1.1,
"name": "Security::SSH",
"license": "MIT",
"description": "Configure and enable sshd",
"tags": ["cfdc"],
"depends": {
"cfengine": {
"version": "3.4.0"
},
"CFEngine::dclib": {
"version": "1.0.0"
},
"CFEngine::stdlib": {
"version": 105
}
}
},
"api": {
"sshd": [{
"name": "runenv",
"type": "environment"
},
{
"name": "metadata",
"type": "metadata"
},
{
"name": "params",
"type": "array"
}]
}
}]
},
"/home/tzz/source/design-center/sketches": {
"Security::SSH": [{
"namespace": "cfdc_sshd",
"manifest": {
"ssh.cf": {
"desc": "main file"
},
"README.md": {
"documentation": true
},
"params/simple.json": {}
},
"interface": ["ssh.cf"],
"metadata": {
"authors": ["Diego Zamboni <diego.zamboni@cfengine.com>", "Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>"],
"version": 1.1,
"name": "Security::SSH",
"license": "MIT",
"description": "Configure and enable sshd",
"tags": ["cfdc"],
"depends": {
"cfengine": {
"version": "3.4.0"
},
"CFEngine::dclib": {
"version": "1.0.0"
},
"CFEngine::stdlib": {
"version": 105
}
}
},
"api": {
"sshd": [{
"name": "runenv",
"type": "environment"
},
{
"name": "metadata",
"type": "metadata"
},
{
"name": "params",
"type": "array"
}]
}
}]
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
install
The install
command installs any number of sketches. The data provides is a
list of key-value arrays with keys:
force
Boolean, false by default.Whether any existing installations of the sketch should be respected or overwritten. Also asks the API to ignore OS and CFEngine version dependencies.
sketch
The sketch name.
The sketch version. Optional.
target
The sketch install directory. Must be in the API's repolist
.
Optional; when not given, the first element of the repolist
will be used.
The sketch source repository. Must be in the API's recognized_sources
.
Optional; when not given, every element of the recognized_sources
will be tried. Can be a string or an array of strings.
{
dc_api_version: "0.0.1",
request: {
install: [{
sketch: "CFEngine::sketch_template",
force: true
},
{
sketch: "VCS::vcs_mirror",
force: true,
target: "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches",
source: "/home/tzz/source/design-center/tools/test/../../sketches"
}]
}
}
The return data is a key-value array as follows, describing the installation details.
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": {
"params/thrift-lib-perl.json": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/params/thrift-lib-perl.json",
"README.md": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/README.md",
"params/cfengine-core.json": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/params/cfengine-core.json",
"params/cfengine-copbl.json": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/params/cfengine-copbl.json",
"main.cf": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/main.cf",
"params/cfengine-core-runas-tzz.json": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/utilities/vcs_mirror/params/cfengine-core-runas-tzz.json"
},
"install": {
"~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": 1,
"CFEngine::sketch_template": 1
}
},
"inventory_save": 1,
"CFEngine::sketch_template": {
"test.cf": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/test.cf",
"scripts/sample.sh": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/scripts/sample.sh",
"params/demo.json": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/params/demo.json",
"README.md": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/README.md",
"modules/mymodule": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/modules/mymodule",
"main.cf": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/sketch_template/main.cf"
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": 1,
"installation": 7,
"CFEngine::sketch_template": 1
}
}
}
uninstall
The uninstall
command simply deletes the top-level sketch directory and
everything under it. It takes a list of key-value arrays with keys:
sketch
The sketch name.
target
The sketch install directory we want to clean. Must be in the API's
repolist
.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {uninstall: [ { sketch: "CFEngine::stdlib", target: "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches" } ] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"inventory_save": 1,
"uninstall": {
"~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"CFEngine::stdlib": 1
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"uninstallation": 1,
"CFEngine::stdlib": 1
}
}
}
The inventory_save
key in the return indicates whether the inventory
(cfsketches.json
) was written successfully.
compositions
The compositions
command lists the defined compositions.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {compositions: true} }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"compositions": {
"mirror_to_template_2": {
"destination_sketch": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"source_scalar": "deploy_path",
"source_sketch": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"destination_scalar": "myip"
},
"mirror_to_template_1": {
"destination_sketch": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"source_scalar": "deploy_path",
"source_sketch": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"destination_list": "mylist"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
compose
The compose
command defines a composition. It returns the same data as
compositions
.
{
dc_api_version: "0.0.1",
request: {
compose: {
mirror_to_template_1: {
destination_sketch: "CFEngine::sketch_template",
destination_list: "mylist",
source_sketch: "VCS::vcs_mirror",
source_scalar: "deploy_path"
},
mirror_to_template_2: {
destination_sketch: "CFEngine::sketch_template",
destination_scalar: "myip",
source_sketch: "VCS::vcs_mirror",
source_scalar: "deploy_path"
}
}
}
}
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"compositions": {
"mirror_to_template_2": {
"destination_sketch": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"source_scalar": "deploy_path",
"source_sketch": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"destination_scalar": "myip"
},
"mirror_to_template_1": {
"destination_sketch": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"source_scalar": "deploy_path",
"source_sketch": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"destination_list": "mylist"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"compose": 1
}
}
}
decompose
The decompose
command undefines a composition by name. It returns the same
data as compositions
.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {decompose: "mirror_to_template_1" } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"compositions": {
"destination_sketch": "CFEngine::sketch_template",
"source_scalar": "deploy_path",
"source_sketch": "VCS::vcs_mirror",
"destination_list": "mylist"
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"compose": 1
}
}
}
(Note that Monty Python has beaten us to this joke by decades with "The Decomposing Composers.")
activations
The activations
command lists the defined activations.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {activations:true} }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"activations": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": [{
"params": ["vcs_base", "git_mirror_core"],
"environment": "testing",
"target": "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches"
},
{
"params": ["vcs_base", "svn_mirror_thrift"],
"environment": "testing",
"target": "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches"
}],
"CFEngine::sketch_template": [{
"params": ["incomplete_sketch"],
"environment": "testing",
"target": "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches",
"compositions": ["mirror_to_template_1", "mirror_to_template_2"]
}]
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
activate
The activate
command defines a new activation of a sketch.
An activation is a matching of a sketch bundle with parameters, a run environment, and optionally compositions. The sketch name is matched with a target (so the API knows which installed sketch to inspect), a run environment name, and a list of parameter names.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {activate: { "VCS::vcs_mirror": { target: "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches", environment: "testing", params: [ "vcs_base", "git_mirror_core" ] } } } }
The sketch bundle will be selected based on which one is satisfied by the
given parameters and compositions. You can use the __bundle__
parameter key
to specify the bundle explicitly.
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"activate": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": {
"params": ["vcs_base", "git_mirror_core"],
"environment": "testing",
"target": "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": 1
}
}
}
You can pass a identifier
parameter to an activate
command, which can then
be used to deactivate
an activation specifically, and which will show up in
the classes and prefixes of that activation.
You can pass a metadata
parameter to an activate
command, which will show
up under the activation
key in the metadata.
You can pass a target
parameter to an activate
command with an install
location, which will only activate sketches that exist in that location.
option: compose
When the activate
command has a compose
key with a list of composition
names, those compositions are considered whenever the parameters alone are not
enough to activate the sketch. Thus compositions and parameters work
together, as late and immediate bindings of the passed data respectively.
deactivate
The deactivate
command removes sketch activations. It can take either the
name of a sketch or true
to indicate all activations should be removed.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {deactivate: "VCS::vcs_mirror" } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"deactivate": {
"VCS::vcs_mirror": 1
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"deactivate": 1
}
}
}
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {deactivate: true } }
(No activations existed at this point, so the return data is empty.)
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
definitions
The definitions
command lists the parameter definitions. This is the DC
API's central library of knowledge. Every parameter definition is a source of
configuration data (like a CFEngine common bundle, but applied directly to a
sketch bundle). Parameter definitions have names, which are used when you
want to activate a sketch, and can contain more than one sketch's parameters
or only part of a sketch's parameters.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {definitions:true} }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"definitions": {
"simple_ssh": {
"Security::SSH": {
"params": {
"X11Forwarding": "yes",
"Protocol": "2",
"PermitRootLogin": "yes"
}
}
},
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
define
The define
command creates a parameter definition with a name. You can use
the function
expression in data, as shown below, to make sure
that the DC API will make a function call and not just pass a string. So,
instead of getenv("LOGNAME", "128")
you need to use
{ "function": "getenv", "args": ["LOGNAME", "128"] }
to make sure the
function call is preserved.
Note that the reply doesn't tell you more than "I got it, thanks."
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {define: { "vcs_base": { "VCS::vcs_mirror": { options: { parent_dir: { owner: { "function": "getenv", "args": ["LOGNAME", "128"] }, group: { "function": "getenv", "args": ["LOGNAME", "128"] }, perms: "755", ensure: true }, nowipe: true, vcs: { runas: { "function": "getenv", "args": ["LOGNAME", "128"] }, umask: "000" } } } } } } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"define": {
"vcs_base": 1
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"vcs_base": 1
}
}
}
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {define: { "git_mirror_core": { "VCS::vcs_mirror": { vcs: "/usr/bin/git", path: "/tmp/q/cfengine-core", branch: "master", origin: "https://github.com/cfengine/core.git" } } } } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"define": {
"git_mirror_core": 1
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"git_mirror_core": 1
}
}
}
The example here creates some base parameters for the VCS::vcs_mirror
sketch
and then lays specific configuration to mirror the
CFEngine Core repository's master branch from
Git. In this case, we do it in two steps, but could have done it in one step.
undefine
The undefine
command removes a parameter definition by name. You can pass a
list of string parameter definition names or simply true
to remove all the
parameter definitions.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {undefine: ["git_mirror_core"] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"undefine": {
"git_mirror_core": "1"
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"git_mirror_core": 1
}
}
}
environments
The environments
command lists the run environments.
A run environment is a common bundle of general settings. It affects the execution of bundles globally, so it's not intended to be specific for each bundle activation.
The sketch bundle chooses to have a run environment by specifying a parameter
with type environment
. Only a run environment can satisfy that API
parameter.
Good examples of run environments are production, production_debug, or
development_nodebug. In a run environment you'd expect to find at least the
activated
, verbose
, and test
variables. For each of those, the DC API
will also provide a class named runenv_ENVIRONMENTNAME_ENVIRONMENTVARIABLE
.
Here's an example of a testing
run environment, as it appears in the
generated runfile:
bundle common testing
{
vars:
"activated" string => "1";
"env_vars" slist => { "activated", "test", "verbose" };
"test" string => "1";
"verbose" string => "1";
classes:
"runenv_testing_activated" expression => "any";
"runenv_testing_test" expression => "any";
"runenv_testing_verbose" expression => "any";
}
And here is the definition of that run environment:
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {environments:true} }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"environments": {
"testing": {
"verbose": "1",
"test": "1",
"activated": "1"
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
The last thing to note is that any run environment variable can have values
other than true
and false
. If they are a string, then that string is a
class expression. So, for instance, if activated
is Monday
then the run
environment will only be activated on Mondays.
If activated
is a key-value array with the key include
pointing to an
array of regular expressions, then every element of that array will be AND-ed
in a classmatch. So, if for the environment testing you specify:
activated: { include: [ "x", "y", "regex.*" ] }
That will produce, in the runfile,
classes:
"runenv_testing_activated" and => { classmatch("x"), classmatch("y"), classmatch("regex.*") };
It's trivial to do an OR with alternation in the regular expression.
define_environment
The define_environemnt
command defines a run environment. The testing
example above can be defined like so:
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {define_environment: { "testing": { activated: true, test: true, verbose: true } } } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"define_environment": {
"testing": 1
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"testing": 1
}
}
}
Again, remember that each of those variables can be a string, to be interpreted as a class expression, and that you can have more than those three variables.
undefine_environment
The undefine_environemnt
command removes a run environment. It takes a list
of environment names.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {undefine_environment: [ "testing" ] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"undefine_environment": {
"testing": "1"
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"testing": 1
}
}
}
validations
The validations
command lists the data validations.
The data validations are just strings that have a key-value array associated with them. Specific keys trigger specific validation behavior in order, as follows. Note that the examples below are not necessarily in your API installation already.
// only the inside of the request is shown for brevity
define_validation: { DIGITS: { valid_regex: "^[0-9]+$" } }
define_validation: { NUMBER: { derived: [ "DIGITS" ] } }
define_validation: { AB: { choice: [ "A", "B" ] } }
define_validation: { 8BIT_NUMBER: { minimum_value: 0, maximum_value: 255 } }
define_validation: { LIST_OF_NUMBERS: { list: [ "NUMBER" ] } }
define_validation: { MOG_SEQUENCE: { sequence: [ "OCTAL", "UID", "GID" ] } }
define_validation: { ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS: { array_k: [ "NUMBER" ], array_v: [ "URL" ] } }
derived
Defines a parent data validation. So a NUMBER validation requires that DIGITS and any other parent data validations be checked first.
choice
Defines a list of exact string matches. So AB must be given A
or B
to
pass validation.
minimum_value
andmaximum_value
Numeric checks. So 8BIT_NUMBER has to be between 0 and 255. Any invalid
numbers, e.g. hello
, will be treated as 0.
invalid_regex
andvalid_regex
Regular expressions written as strings. They follow the Perl regex syntax
right now. So DIGITS can only contain the decimal digits 0 through 9 and
will reject the empty string `or
hello`.
invalid_ipv4
andvalid_ipv4
Ensures that the given data is a list of one of several data types. So in the example, LIST_OF_NUMBERS will check that every element passes the NUMBER validation.
sequence
Like a record: it ensures that the data is a sequence (list) of the given data types. So for example, MOG_SEQUENCE has to have three elements, of which the first one passes OCTAL validation, the second passed UID validation, and the third passes GID validation.
array_k
andarray_v
Like list
, but they validate the keys and values of a key-value array,
respectively, against a list of several data types. So
ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS requires that every key pass the NUMBER
validation and every value pass the URL validation.
define_validation
The define_validation
command defines a data validation. In the return data
you will find all the currently defined data validations.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {define_validation: { NONEMPTY_STRING: { valid_regex: "." } } } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"validations": {
"NONEMPTY_STRING": {
"valid_regex": "."
},
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"define_validation": 1
}
}
}
undefine_validation
The undefine_validation
command removes a data validation by name.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {undefine_validation: "NONEMPTY_STRING" } }'
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"validations": {
"valid_regex": "."
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {
"undefine_validation": 1
}
}
}
validate
The validate
command validates data using a named data validation.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {validate: { validation: "ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS", data: { "20": "http://this.that", "30": "not a URL" } } } }
It's useful to look at the log output here. This example failed:
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS against data '{"30":"not a URL","20":"http://this.that"}'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:282): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS: checking 'array_k' is ["NUMBER"]
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating NUMBER against data '30'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating DIGITS against data '30'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating DIGITS: checking valid_regex ^[0-9]+$
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:85): Validating NUMBER: checking parent data type DIGITS
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating NUMBER against data '20'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating DIGITS against data '20'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating DIGITS: checking valid_regex ^[0-9]+$
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:85): Validating NUMBER: checking parent data type DIGITS
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:282): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS: checking 'array_v' is ["URL"]
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating URL against data 'not a URL'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating URL: checking valid_regex ^[A-Za-z]{3,9}://.+
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating URL against data 'http://this.that'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating URL: checking valid_regex ^[A-Za-z]{3,9}://.+
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": false,
"errors": ["Could not validate any of the allowed array_v types [URL]"],
"error_tags": {
"array_v": 1,
"validation": 1
},
"data": {},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
This example succeeded:
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {validate: { validation: "ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS", data: { "20": "http://this.that", "30": "http://this.that2" } } } }
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS against data '{"30":"http://this.that2","20":"http://this.that"}'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:282): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS: checking 'array_k' is ["NUMBER"]
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating NUMBER against data '30'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating DIGITS against data '30'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating DIGITS: checking valid_regex ^[0-9]+$
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:85): Validating NUMBER: checking parent data type DIGITS
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating NUMBER against data '20'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating DIGITS against data '20'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating DIGITS: checking valid_regex ^[0-9]+$
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:85): Validating NUMBER: checking parent data type DIGITS
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:282): Validating ARRAY_OF_NUMBERS_TO_URLS: checking 'array_v' is ["URL"]
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating URL against data 'http://this.that2'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating URL: checking valid_regex ^[A-Za-z]{3,9}://.+
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:73): Validating URL against data 'http://this.that'
DCAPI::log4(Validation.pm:166): Validating URL: checking valid_regex ^[A-Za-z]{3,9}://.+
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
regenerate
The regenerate
command writes the API runfile (as specified in the API
configuration) from all the known activations, compositions, run environments,
parameter definitions, and data validations.
The command does not allow the user to change the runfile type (standalone or not) or location, as that is a possible security risk.
test
The test
command tests installed sketches. It always returns true if the
test harness ran, even if the individual tests failed. It's up to you to
check the result of each sketch's test.
Here are examples of two test
commands. The first one tests everything
installed (shown when no sketches were installed for brevity; see below for a
full test example).
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {test: true } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"coverage": 0,
"test": {},
"total": 0
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
Under data
you will find a coverage
and a total
key, which respectively
represent the number of covered sketches and the total number of sketches
inspected. So if you asked to test 10 sketches but only one had any test
scripts, your coverage would be 1/10.
The top-level key under data.test
is the name of the repository, which is
always a local directory.
The next one takes terms and tests all the sketches whose name satisfies the
terms. The return format is the same: for each repository and each sketch
tested, you'll get a key-value array with keys log
(the text log of the
output); failed
(with tests that failed); and total
(with all the tests).
The format inside each test is according to the Perl module Test::Harness
.
For instance the good
key will be 1
if all the planned tests succeeded.
The bench
key will give you some timings, but more precise timings may be
added in the future. Do not depend on the format of the bench
value.
{ dc_api_version: "0.0.1", request: {test: ["Applications::Memcached"] } }
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"test": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"Applications::Memcached": {
"log": "/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches/applications/memcached/test.pl .. \n1..6\n# Running under perl version 5.014002 for linux\n# Current time local: Tue May 7 18:08:08 2013\n# Current time GMT: Tue May 7 22:08:08 2013\n# Using Test.pm version 1.25_02\nok 1\nok 2\nok 3\nok 4\nok 5\nok 6\nok\n",
"failed": {},
"total": {
"files": 1,
"max": 6,
"bonus": 0,
"skipped": 0,
"sub_skipped": 0,
"ok": 6,
"bad": 0,
"good": 1,
"tests": 1,
"bench": " 1 wallclock secs ( 0.02 usr 0.00 sys + 0.45 cusr 0.01 csys = 0.48 CPU)",
"todo": 0
}
}
}
}
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
You can skip the actual testing and just get the coverage if you give the
test
command the coverage
parameter. Here's how you can inspect the
coverage of every single installed sketch:
{"dc_api_version":"0.0.1","request":{"coverage":1,"test":["1"]}}
{
"api_ok": {
"warnings": [],
"success": true,
"errors": [],
"error_tags": {},
"data": {
"coverage": 7,
"test": {
"/home/tzz/.cfagent/inputs/sketches": {
"System::Syslog": 0,
"Networking::NTP::Client": 0,
// ...
"Packages::installed": 1,
"CFEngine::dclib::3.5.0": 1,
}
},
"total": 32
},
"log": [],
"tags": {}
}
}
API CLI Interface and config.json
From the command line, you can run cd tools/cf-sketch; ./cf-dc-api.pl
config.json
where config.json
contains the necessary configuration for the
API:
{
log: "STDERR",
log_level: 4,
repolist: [ "~/.cfagent/inputs/sketches" ],
recognized_sources: [ "~/source/design-center/sketches" ],
runfile: { location: "~/.cfagent/inputs/api-runfile.cf", standalone: true, relocate_path: "sketches", filter_inputs: [ "some bad file" ] },
vardata: "~/.cfagent/vardata.conf",
}
log
Either STDOUT
or STDERR
or a file name.
log_level
1-5 currently. 4 or 5 for debugging; 1 or 2 for normal usage.
3 is for people who can't make up their mind.
repolist
A list of local directories where sketches may be installed.
recognized_sources
A list of DC repositories where sketches may be installed FROM. There can be local directories or URLs.
runfile
A key-value array with keys location
for the place where the runfile is
written; standalone
for the runfile standalone (when false, this setting
makes the runfile suitable for inclusion in the main promises.cf
);
relocate_path
for what to add to all inputs.
If you specify the array filter_inputs
under runfile
, any inputs matching
any elements in that array will be omitted from the generated runfile. That
way you can, for example, exclude the cfengine_stdlib.cf
that Design Center
provides.
vardata
The file location where the API will record all data.