# Copyright 2012-2014 ksyun.com, Inc. or its affiliates. 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. A copy of # the License is located at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # or in the "license" file accompanying this file. This file 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. import jmespath import logging import time from kscore.utils import get_service_module_name from kscore.docs.docstring import WaiterDocstring from .exceptions import WaiterError, ClientError, WaiterConfigError from . import xform_name logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) def create_waiter_with_client(waiter_name, waiter_model, client): """ :type waiter_name: str :param waiter_name: The name of the waiter. The name should match the name (including the casing) of the key name in the waiter model file (typically this is CamelCasing). :type waiter_model: kscore.waiter.WaiterModel :param waiter_model: The model for the waiter configuration. :type client: kscore.client.BaseClient :param client: The kscore client associated with the service. :rtype: kscore.waiter.Waiter :return: The waiter object. """ single_waiter_config = waiter_model.get_waiter(waiter_name) operation_name = xform_name(single_waiter_config.operation) operation_method = NormalizedOperationMethod( getattr(client, operation_name)) # Create a new wait method that will serve as a proxy to the underlying # Waiter.wait method. This is needed to attach a docstring to the # method. def wait(self, **kwargs): Waiter.wait(self, **kwargs) wait.__doc__ = WaiterDocstring( waiter_name=waiter_name, event_emitter=client.meta.events, service_model=client.meta.service_model, service_waiter_model=waiter_model, include_signature=False ) # Rename the waiter class based on the type of waiter. waiter_class_name = str('%s.Waiter.%s' % ( get_service_module_name(client.meta.service_model), waiter_name)) # Create the new waiter class documented_waiter_cls = type( waiter_class_name, (Waiter,), {'wait': wait}) # Return an instance of the new waiter class. return documented_waiter_cls( waiter_name, single_waiter_config, operation_method ) class NormalizedOperationMethod(object): def __init__(self, client_method): self._client_method = client_method def __call__(self, **kwargs): try: return self._client_method(**kwargs) except ClientError as e: return e.response class WaiterModel(object): SUPPORTED_VERSION = 2 def __init__(self, waiter_config): """ Note that the WaiterModel takes ownership of the waiter_config. It may or may not mutate the waiter_config. If this is a concern, it is best to make a copy of the waiter config before passing it to the WaiterModel. :type waiter_config: dict :param waiter_config: The loaded waiter config from the *.waiters.json file. This can be obtained from a kscore Loader object as well. """ self._waiter_config = waiter_config['waiters'] # These are part of the public API. Changing these # will result in having to update the consuming code, # so don't change unless you really need to. version = waiter_config.get('version', 'unknown') self._verify_supported_version(version) self.version = version self.waiter_names = list(sorted(waiter_config['waiters'].keys())) def _verify_supported_version(self, version): if version != self.SUPPORTED_VERSION: raise WaiterConfigError( error_msg=("Unsupported waiter version, supported version " "must be: %s, but version of waiter config " "is: %s" % (self.SUPPORTED_VERSION, version))) def get_waiter(self, waiter_name): try: single_waiter_config = self._waiter_config[waiter_name] except KeyError: raise ValueError("Waiter does not exist: %s" % waiter_name) return SingleWaiterConfig(single_waiter_config) class SingleWaiterConfig(object): """Represents the waiter configuration for a single waiter. A single waiter is considered the configuration for a single value associated with a named waiter (i.e TableExists). """ def __init__(self, single_waiter_config): self._config = single_waiter_config # These attributes are part of the public API. self.description = single_waiter_config.get('description', '') # Per the spec, these three fields are required. self.operation = single_waiter_config['operation'] self.delay = single_waiter_config['delay'] self.max_attempts = single_waiter_config['maxAttempts'] @property def acceptors(self): acceptors = [] for acceptor_config in self._config['acceptors']: acceptor = AcceptorConfig(acceptor_config) acceptors.append(acceptor) return acceptors class AcceptorConfig(object): def __init__(self, config): self.state = config['state'] self.matcher = config['matcher'] self.expected = config['expected'] self.argument = config.get('argument') self.matcher_func = self._create_matcher_func() def _create_matcher_func(self): # An acceptor function is a callable that takes a single value. The # parsed KSYUN response. Note that the parsed error response is also # provided in the case of errors, so it's entirely possible to # handle all the available matcher capabilities in the future. # There's only three supported matchers, so for now, this is all # contained to a single method. If this grows, we can expand this # out to separate methods or even objects. if self.matcher == 'path': return self._create_path_matcher() elif self.matcher == 'pathAll': return self._create_path_all_matcher() elif self.matcher == 'pathAny': return self._create_path_any_matcher() elif self.matcher == 'status': return self._create_status_matcher() elif self.matcher == 'error': return self._create_error_matcher() else: raise WaiterConfigError( error_msg="Unknown acceptor: %s" % self.matcher) def _create_path_matcher(self): expression = jmespath.compile(self.argument) expected = self.expected def acceptor_matches(response): return expression.search(response) == expected return acceptor_matches def _create_path_all_matcher(self): expression = jmespath.compile(self.argument) expected = self.expected def acceptor_matches(response): result = expression.search(response) if not isinstance(result, list) or not result: # pathAll matcher must result in a list. # Also we require at least one element in the list, # that is, an empty list should not result in this # acceptor match. return False for element in result: if element != expected: return False return True return acceptor_matches def _create_path_any_matcher(self): expression = jmespath.compile(self.argument) expected = self.expected def acceptor_matches(response): result = expression.search(response) if not isinstance(result, list) or not result: # pathAny matcher must result in a list. # Also we require at least one element in the list, # that is, an empty list should not result in this # acceptor match. return False for element in result: if element == expected: return True return False return acceptor_matches def _create_status_matcher(self): expected = self.expected def acceptor_matches(response): # We don't have any requirements on the expected incoming data # other than it is a dict, so we don't assume there's # a ResponseMetadata.HTTPStatusCode. status_code = response.get('ResponseMetadata', {}).get( 'HTTPStatusCode') return status_code == expected return acceptor_matches def _create_error_matcher(self): expected = self.expected def acceptor_matches(response): # When the client encounters an error, it will normally raise # an exception. However, the waiter implementation will catch # this exception, and instead send us the parsed error # response. So response is still a dictionary, and in the case # of an error response will contain the "Error" and # "ResponseMetadata" key. return response.get("Error", {}).get("Code", "") == expected return acceptor_matches class Waiter(object): def __init__(self, name, config, operation_method): """ :type name: string :param name: The name of the waiter :type config: kscore.waiter.SingleWaiterConfig :param config: The configuration for the waiter. :type operation_method: callable :param operation_method: A callable that accepts **kwargs and returns a response. For example, this can be a method from a kscore client. """ self._operation_method = operation_method # The two attributes are exposed to allow for introspection # and documentation. self.name = name self.config = config def wait(self, **kwargs): acceptors = list(self.config.acceptors) current_state = 'waiting' sleep_amount = self.config.delay num_attempts = 0 max_attempts = self.config.max_attempts while True: response = self._operation_method(**kwargs) num_attempts += 1 for acceptor in acceptors: if acceptor.matcher_func(response): current_state = acceptor.state break else: # If none of the acceptors matched, we should # transition to the failure state if an error # response was received. if 'Error' in response: # Transition to the failure state, which we can # just handle here by raising an exception. raise WaiterError( name=self.name, reason=response['Error'].get('Message', 'Unknown')) if current_state == 'success': logger.debug("Waiting complete, waiter matched the " "success state.") return if current_state == 'failure': raise WaiterError( name=self.name, reason='Waiter encountered a terminal failure state') if num_attempts >= max_attempts: raise WaiterError(name=self.name, reason='Max attempts exceeded') time.sleep(sleep_amount)