Remove the New constructors since calling Init should be done by the
engine, and not by the user even when using mgmt as a lib. This is also
the case in tests! It used to be the case that a user might want to call
Init manually, but that is no longer the case!
This makes examples slightly nicer to commit, since you don't have to
have a hardcoded ~/james/ in their source value. It's also probably a
useful feature for the resource.
This patch makes a number of changes in the engine surrounding the
resource API. In particular:
* Cleanup of send/read event.
* Cleanup of DoSend (now Event) in the Watch method.
* Events are now more consistently pointers.
* Exiting within Watch is now done in a single place.
* Multiple incoming events will be combined into a single action.
* Events in flight during an action are played back after CheckApply.
* Addition of Close method to API
This gets things ready for rate limiting and semaphore metaparams!
This removes some boilerplate from the Watch methods which can be baked
into the engine instead.
This code should be checked for races and locks to make sure we only
start resources when it makes sense to.
This takes the Converged initialization and Startup patterns that are
common in all resources, and bakes it into the core engine. This way
resource writing is much more concise and there is less boilerplate!
This is a monster patch that splits out the yaml and puppet based graph
generation and pushes them behind a common API. In addition alternate
pluggable GAPI's can be easily added! The important side benefit is that
you can now write a custom GAPI for embedding mgmt!
This also includes some slight clean ups that I didn't find it worth
splitting into separate patches.
Remove the implicit emulator path from the domain definition. Libvirt is
already configured to use the correct emulator for kvm or qemu and
specifying it creates distro dependence.
Fixes#85
This adds an initial implementation of a virt resource based on libvirt.
It is not complete and requires more testing. The initial skeleton was
written by nseps but was not merged. It was later cleaned up and merged
in its current form by purpleidea. Many thanks to nseps for getting this
going, and hopefully we'll get you contributing more in the future!