Files
mgmt/engine/graph/autogroup/base.go
James Shubin 654e958d3f engine: resources: Add the proper prefix to grouped http resources
Resources that can be grouped into the http:server resource must have
that prefix. Grouping is basically hierarchical, and without that common
prefix, it means we'd have to special-case our grouping algorithm.
2025-05-25 01:40:25 -04:00

170 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:server:ui:input
// should appear before http:server and http:server:ui. This is a
// strategy so that if we are doing hierarchical automatic grouping, it
// gives the http:server:ui:input a chance to get grouped into
// http:server:ui, before http:server:ui gets grouped into http:server,
// because once that happens, http:server:ui:input 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 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 overriding 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
}