Files
mgmt/engine/graph/autogroup/base.go
James Shubin d30ff6cfae legal: Remove year
Instead of constantly making these updates, let's just remove the year
since things are stored in git anyways, and this is not an actual modern
legal risk anymore.
2025-01-26 16:24:51 -05:00

169 lines
5.5 KiB
Go

// Mgmt
// Copyright (C) James Shubin and the project contributors
// Written by James Shubin <james@shubin.ca> and the project contributors
//
// 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, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// 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, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
//
// Additional permission under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
//
// If you modify this program, or any covered work, by linking or combining it
// with embedded mcl code and modules (and that the embedded mcl code and
// modules which link with this program, contain a copy of their source code in
// the authoritative form) containing parts covered by the terms of any other
// license, the licensors of this program grant you additional permission to
// convey the resulting work. Furthermore, the licensors of this program grant
// the original author, James Shubin, additional permission to update this
// additional permission if he deems it necessary to achieve the goals of this
// additional permission.
package autogroup
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/pgraph"
)
// baseGrouper is the base type for implementing the AutoGrouper interface.
type baseGrouper struct {
graph *pgraph.Graph // store a pointer to the graph
vertices []pgraph.Vertex // cached list of vertices
i int
j int
done bool
}
// Name provides a friendly name for the logs to see.
func (ag *baseGrouper) Name() string {
return "baseGrouper"
}
// Init is called only once and before using other AutoGrouper interface methods
// the name method is the only exception: call it any time without side effects!
func (ag *baseGrouper) Init(g *pgraph.Graph) error {
if ag.graph != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("the init method has already been called")
}
ag.graph = g // pointer
// We sort deterministically, first by kind, and then by name. In
// particular, longer kind chunks sort first. So http:ui:text should
// appear before http:server and http:ui. This is a hack so that if we
// are doing hierarchical automatic grouping, it gives the http:ui:text
// a chance to get grouped into http:ui, before http:ui gets grouped
// into http:server, because once that happens, http:ui:text will never
// get grouped, and this won't work properly. This works, because when
// we start comparing iteratively the list of resources, it does this
// with a O(n^2) loop that compares the X and Y zero indexes first, and
// and then continues along. If the "longer" resources appear first,
// then they'll group together first. We should probably put this into
// a new Grouper struct, but for now we might as well leave it here.
//vertices := ag.graph.VerticesSorted() // formerly
vertices := RHVSort(ag.graph.Vertices())
ag.vertices = vertices // cache in deterministic order!
ag.i = 0
ag.j = 0
if len(ag.vertices) == 0 { // empty graph
ag.done = true
return nil
}
return nil
}
// VertexNext is a simple iterator that loops through vertex (pair) combinations
// an intelligent algorithm would selectively offer only valid pairs of vertices
// these should satisfy logical grouping requirements for the autogroup designs!
// the desired algorithms can override, but keep this method as a base iterator!
func (ag *baseGrouper) VertexNext() (v1, v2 pgraph.Vertex, err error) {
// this does a for v... { for w... { return v, w }} but stepwise!
l := len(ag.vertices)
if ag.i < l {
v1 = ag.vertices[ag.i]
}
if ag.j < l {
v2 = ag.vertices[ag.j]
}
// in case the vertex was deleted
if !ag.graph.HasVertex(v1) {
v1 = nil
}
if !ag.graph.HasVertex(v2) {
v2 = nil
}
// two nested loops...
if ag.j < l {
ag.j++
}
if ag.j == l {
ag.j = 0
if ag.i < l {
ag.i++
}
if ag.i == l {
ag.done = true
}
}
// TODO: is this index swap better or even valid?
//if ag.i < l {
// ag.i++
//}
//if ag.i == l {
// ag.i = 0
// if ag.j < l {
// ag.j++
// }
// if ag.j == l {
// ag.done = true
// }
//}
return
}
// VertexCmp can be used in addition to an overridding implementation.
func (ag *baseGrouper) VertexCmp(v1, v2 pgraph.Vertex) error {
if v1 == nil || v2 == nil {
return fmt.Errorf("the vertex is nil")
}
if v1 == v2 { // skip yourself
return fmt.Errorf("the vertices are the same")
}
return nil // success
}
// VertexMerge needs to be overridden to add the actual merging functionality.
func (ag *baseGrouper) VertexMerge(v1, v2 pgraph.Vertex) (v pgraph.Vertex, err error) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("vertexMerge needs to be overridden")
}
// EdgeMerge can be overridden, since it just simply returns the first edge.
func (ag *baseGrouper) EdgeMerge(e1, e2 pgraph.Edge) pgraph.Edge {
return e1 // noop
}
// VertexTest processes the results of the grouping for the algorithm to know
// return an error if something went horribly wrong, and bool false to stop.
func (ag *baseGrouper) VertexTest(b bool) (bool, error) {
// NOTE: this particular baseGrouper version doesn't track what happens
// because since we iterate over every pair, we don't care which merge!
if ag.done {
return false, nil
}
return true, nil
}