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(Created page with ' == pykickstart Programmer's Guide == ''by Chris Lumens'' (written April 13, 2007) === Introduction === pykickstart is a Python library for manipulating kickstart files. It c...')
 
Line 54: Line 54:
         from pykickstart.parser import *
         from pykickstart.parser import *
         from pykickstart.version import makeVersion
         from pykickstart.version import makeVersion
         ksparser = KickstartParser(makeVersion())
         ksparser = KickstartParser(makeVersion())
         ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")
         ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")

Revision as of 20:03, 28 May 2009


pykickstart Programmer's Guide

by Chris Lumens (written April 13, 2007)


Introduction

pykickstart is a Python library for manipulating kickstart files. It contains a common data representation, a parser, and a writer. This library aims to be useful for all Python programs that need to work with kickstart files. The two most obvious examples are anaconda and system-config-kickstart. It is recommended that all other tools that need to use kickstart files use this library so that we can maintain equivalent levels of support across all tools.

The kickstart file format itself has only been defined in a rather ad-hoc manner. Various documents describe the format, commands, and their effects. However, each kickstart-related program implemented its own parser. As anaconda added support for new commands and options, other programs drifted farther and farther out of sync with the "official" format. This leads to the problem that valid kickstart files are not accepted by all programs, or that programs will strip out options it doesn't understand so that the input and output files do not match.

pykickstart is an effort to correct this. It was originally designed to be a common code base for anaconda and system-config-kickstart, so making the code generic and easily extensible were top priorities. Another priority was to formalize the currently recognized grammar in an easily understood parser so that files that used to work would continue to. I believe these goals have been met.

pykickstart also understands all the various versions of the kickstart syntax that have been around. Various releases of Red Hat Linux, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and Fedora Core have had slightly different versions. For the most part, the basic syntax has stayed the same. However, different commands have come and gone and different options have been supported on those commands. pykickstart allows specifying which version of kickstart syntax you want to support for reading and writing, allowing you to use one code base to deal with the full range of kickstart files.

This document will cover how to use pykickstart in your programs and how to extend the basic parser to get customized behavior. It includes a description of the important classes and several working examples.


Getting Started

Before diving into the full documentation, it is useful to see an example of how simple it is to use the default pykickstart in your programs. Here is a code snippet that imports the required classes, parses a kickstart file, and leaves the results in the common data format:

       #!/usr/bin/python
       from pykickstart.parser import *
       from pykickstart.version import makeVersion
       ksparser = KickstartParser(makeVersion())
       ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")

The call to makeVersion() creates a new kickstart handler object for the specified version. By default, it creates one for the latest supported syntax version. The call to KickstartParser() creates a new parser using the handler object for dealing with individual commands. The call to readKickstart() then reads in the kickstart file and sets values in the handler.

After this call, all the data from the input kickstart file has been set on the command objects. You can see which objects are available by running dir(ksparser.handler), and then inspect various data settings by examining the contents of each of those objects.

The data can be modified if you want. You can then write out the contents to a new file by simply calling:

       outfile = open("out.cfg", 'w")
       outfile.write(kshandlers.__str__())
       outfile.close()

Files

The important classes that make up pykickstart are spread across a handful of files. This section includes a brief outline of the contents of those classes. For more thorough documentation, refer to the python doc strings throughout pykickstart. In python, you can view these docs strings like so:

       >>> from pykickstart import parser
       >>> help(parser)
       >>> help(parser.KickstartParser)

base.py

This file contains several basic classes that are used throughout the rest of the library. For the most part, these are abstract classes that are not important to most users of pykickstart. You will really only need to deal with these classes if you are extending kickstart syntax. Other users will mainly only want to look at these classes to see what methods and attributes are provided. This information is also available from the docs strings.

BaseData, BaseHandler, and KickstartCommand are abstract classes that define common methods and attributes. These classes may not be used directly - they can only be used if subclassed. The BaseData and KickstartCommand classes are subclassed to create data objects and command objects. BaseHandler is subclassed to create version handlers that drive the processing of commands and the setting of data.

DeprecatedCommand is a subclass of KickstartCommand that may be further used as a subclass for command objects. When one of these subclasses is used, a warning message is printed. Commands that are deprecated are recognized by the parser, but any options given will not be processed and their use causes a warning message to be printed.

constants.py

This file includes no classes, though it does include several important constants representing various things in a kickstart handler class. You should import its contents like so:

       from pykickstart.constants import *

error.py

This file contains several useful exceptions and methods. There are four basic exceptions in pykickstart: KickstartError, KickstartParseError, KickstartValueError, and KickstartVersionError.

KickstartError is a generic exception, raised on conditions that are not appropriate for any of the other more specific exceptions.

If the parser encounters an error while reading your input file, it will raise a KickstartParseError with the line in question. Examples of errors include bad options given to section headers, include files not existing, or headers given for sections that are not recognized (for instance, typos). If the parser encounters an error while processing the arguments to a command, it will raise a KickstartValueError. Examples of these sorts of errors include too many or too few arguments, or missing required arguments.

KickstartVersionError is only raised by the methods in pykickstart.version if an invalid version is provided by the user.

Error messages should call formatErrorMsg() to be properly formatted before being sent into an exception. A properly formatted error message includes the line number in the kickstart file where the problem occurred and optionally, a more descriptive message.

option.py

This file contains the KSOptionParser and KSOption classes, which are specialized subclasses of OptionParser and Option from python's optparse module. These classes are used extensively throughout the parser and command objects. Specialized subclasses are needed to support required, deprecated, and versioned options; handle specialized error reporting; and support additional option types.

parser.py

This file represents the bulk of pykickstart code. At its core is the KickstartParser class, which is essentially a state machine. There is one state for each of the sections in a kickstart file, plus some specialized ones to make the parser work. The readKickstart() method is the entry point into this class and is designed to be as generic as possible. It reads from the given file name. It is also possible that you may want to read from an existing string, so readKickstartFromString() is also provided.

With the exception of _stateMachine(), all the methods in KickstartParser may be overridden in a subclass. _stateMachine() should never be overridden, however, as it provides the core logic for processing kickstart files.

There are a few other minor points to note about KickstartParser. When creating a KickstartParser object, you can set the followIncludes attribute to False if you do not wish for include files to be looked up and parsed as well. There are several instances when this is handy. You can also set the missingIncludesIsFatal attribute to False if you want to ignore missing include files. This is most useful when you only care about the main kickstart file (like in ksvalidator, for instance). Note that you can pass None in for kshandlers in the special case if you do not care about handling any commands at all. As we will see later, this is useful in one special case.

The Script class represents a single script found in the kickstart file. Since there can be several scripts in a single file, all the instances of Script are stored in a single list. Somewhat confusingly, this list is stored in the handler object provided to KickstartParser when it is instantiated. The script list is not stored in the parser itself. There are three different types of scripts - pre, post, and traceback. The script class contains an attribute that may be used to discriminate among types.

Finally, the parser.py file contains a Packages class for representing the %packages section of the kickstart file. It includes three separate lists - a list of packages to install, a list of packages to exclude, and a list of groups to install. It does not contain anything to handle the header of the %packages section, as this is done by the parser. The Packages instance is held in the same place as the script list.

version.py

pykickstart supports processing multiple versions of the kickstart syntax from the same code base. In order to make use of this functionality, users must request objects by version number. This file provides the methods and attributes to make this easy. Versions are specified by symbolic names that match up with the names of Fedora or Red Hat Enterprise Linux releases.

There is also a special DEVEL version that maps to the latest supported syntax version. All methods in version.py take DEVEL as the implied version, so most people should never even need to deal with specifying their own version.

stringToVersion() and versionToString() map between strings and these symbolic names. These are provided to make using pykickstart a little easier. stringToVersion() allows you to take the contents of /etc/redhat-release and get a pykickstart version right from that.

returnClassForVersion() returns the class that matches a specific version. Most people will not need this capability, as what they are really after is an instance of that class. makeVersion() returns that instance.


Handler Classes

Kickstart syntax versions are each represented by a file in the handlers/ subdirectory. For the most part, these are extremely simple files that define a subclass of the BaseHandler class mentioned above. The names of the handler files are important, but this only matters when adding support for new syntax version. This will be discussed in a later section.

The control.py file is a little more complicated, however.

control.py

This file contains two dictionaries. The commandMap defines a mapping from a syntax version number (as returned by version.stringToVersion()) to another dictionary. This dictionary defines a mapping from a command string to an object that processes that command. Multiple strings may map to the same object, since some kickstart commands have multiple names ("part" and "partition", for instance).

The dataMap is set up similarly. It maps syntax version numbers to further dictionaries. These dictionaries map data object names to the objects themselves. Unlike the commandMap, each name may only map to a single object. However, multiple instances of each object can exist at once as these instances are stored in lists. This entire setup is required to handle the data for commands such as "network" and "logvol", which can be specified several times in one kickstart file.

The structures in control.py look to be much more verbose than required. Since much data is duplicated among all the various substructures, it seems like this is a perfect place for better object oriented design. However, the duplication is considered a benefit in this one case. It can be difficult to tell which commands are supported by each syntax version, and what object handles those commands. The verbosity in this file makes it very clear exactly which objects will be used by each version of kickstart.


Command Classes

In the commands/ subdirectory you will see many files. Each file corresponds to a single kickstart command. At a minimum, one file will contain a single class that implements the parser, writer, and data store for that command. This command is then entered into the appropriate place in the commandMap from control.py, and then called in the right places by the parser.

These files may be slightly more complicated, however. Some files contain several classes that all do the same thing. This is because there have been multiple versions of the syntax for that command, and there is one class per version. They are all grouped in the same file for ease of readability, and later versions are allowed to inherit from earlier versions by means of subclassing.

Each file may also contain one or more data objects. These data objects are the same as the contents of the dataMap from control.py. There may also be several versions of each data object.

At a minimum, the command classes and data classes must implement the methods from KickstartCommand and BaseData. In particular, __init__, __str__, and parse will be called by the KickstartParser. An exception will be raised if one is not defined and the abstract class's method is called instead.

There are a couple important things to know about command classes. The more complex commands have a lot of data attributes. In writing code to deal with these commands, it can be very tedious to write things like:

  ksparser.handler.bootloader.forceLBA = True
  ksparser.handler.bootloader.linear = False
  ksparser.handler.bootloader.password = "blah"

As a shortcut, command classes provide a __call__ method that allows a much more concise and natural way to set a lot of attributes. Any keyword arguments to a command's __init__ method may be passed like this:

  ksparser.handler.bootloader(forceLBA=True, linear=False, password="blah")

Also, all command classes have a writePriority attribute. This controls the order in which commands will be written out when KickstartParser.__str__ is called. This is needed because the order of certain commands matters to anaconda. Lower numbered commands will be written out before higher numbered ones. If several classes have the same priority, they are written in alphabetical order.


Extending pykickstart

By default, pykickstart reads in a kickstart file and sets values in the command objects. This is useful for some applications, but not all. anaconda in particular has some odd requirements so it will be our basis for examples on extending pykickstart.

Only paying attention to one command

Sometimes, you only want to take action on a single kickstart command and don't care about any of the others. anaconda, for instance, supports a vnc command that needs to be processed well before any of the other commands. pykickstart has some functionality to handle this. Version handlers maintain an internal dictionary mapping commands to objects. By setting objects in this dictionary to None, pykickstart knows to ignore them.

Luckily, you don't have to deal with these internal data structures yourself. All that is required is to create a special BaseHandler subclass and mask out all commands except the ones you are interested in:

  from pykickstart.parser import KickstartParser
  from pykickstart.version import *
  superclass = returnClassForVersion()
  class VNCHandlers(superclass):
     def __init__(self, mapping={}):
        superclass.__init__(self, mapping=mapping)
        self.maskAllExcept(["vnc"])
  ksparser = KickstartParser(VNCHandlers())
  ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")

Here, we make use of the BaseHandler.maskAllExcept method. This method blanks out the handler for every command except the ones given in the list. Note that the commands are specified by their string representation, not by object reference. We must also be careful when creating the VNCHandler class to make sure it is a subclass. Here, we use the default DEVEL syntax version handler as the superclass.

You can then check the results by examining the attributes of ksparser.handler.vnc.

Customized handlers

In other cases, you may want to include some customized behavior in your kickstart handlers. Due to the use of the commandMap in version.py, this is not as straightforward as it should be. Including specialized behavior for a single handler involves a fairly large amount of code, but specializing the behavior for all handlers does not require much more overhead.

  import pykickstart.commands as commands
  from pykickstart.handlers.control import commandMap
  from pykickstart.version import *
  class Bootloader(commands.bootloader.FC4_Bootloader):
     def parse(self, args):
        commands.bootloader.FC4_Bootloader.parse(self, args)
        print "bootloader location = %s" % self.location
  commandMap[DEVEL]["bootloader"] = Bootloader
  superclass = returnClassForVersion()
  class KSHandlers(superclass):
     def __init__(self, mapping={}):
         superclass.__init__(self, mapping=commandMap[DEVEL])
  ksparser = KickstartParser(KSHandlers())
  ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")

First, we must create a new class for the specialized command object. This class does not have to be a subclass of an already existing handler, but that would require fully writing the parse, __str__, and __init__ methods. Instead of doing that, we just subclass it from the latest version of Bootloader.

We then import the existing commandMap, overriding the entry for the "bootloader" command with our own new class. We also have to create a special BaseHandler subclass, though here it doesn't do very much. Its only purpose is to deal with our new commandMap. By default, the pykickstart internals will use the commandMap in pykickstart.handlers.control. Since we've modified the mapping, we need to tell pykickstart to use it.

It used to be possible to force the handlers, but now it makes more sense to just create a BaseHandler subclass and stick any attributes you need access to into that object. They can then be accessed via the self.handler attribute in any command object. For instance, a handler could be created like so:

  class SpecialHandler(superclass):
     def __init__(self, mapping={}):
        superclass.__init__(self, mapping=mapping)
        # special data we want to access in command objects
        self.skipSteps = []
        self.showSteps = []
        self.ksID = 10000

Adding a new command

Adding a new command to pykickstart is only slightly more complicated than customizing a handler. Here, we create a new hypothetical "confirm" command. If we were to add this into anaconda as well, it might do something such as tell the installer to stop at the confirmation screen and wait for input.

  from pykickstart.base import *
  from pykickstart.handlers.control import commandMap
  from pykickstart.errors import *
  from pykickstart.parser import KickstartParser
  from pykickstart.version import *
  class F7_Confirm(KickstartCommand):
      def __init__(self, writePriority=0, confirm=False):
          KickstartCommand.__init__(self, writePriority)
          self.confirm = confirm
      def __str__(self):
          if self.confirm:
              return "confirm\n"
          else:
              return ""
      def parse(self, args):
          if len(args) > 0:
              raise KickstartValueError, formatErrorMsg(self.lineno, msg=("Kickstart command %s does not take any arguments") % "confirm")
          self.confirm = True
  commandMap[DEVEL]["confirm"] = F7_Confirm
  superclass = returnClassForVersion()
  class KSHandlers(superclass):
      def __init__(self, mapping={}):
          superclass.__init__(self, mapping=commandMap[DEVEL])
  ksparser = KickstartParser(KSHandlers())
  ksparser.readKickstart("ks.cfg")
  print ksparser.handler.confirm.confim

Notice how the command object is subclassed from the base object, KickstartCommand. Its name also has a version number at the beginning. While all command object names in pykickstart take the form Version_CommandName, this is not strictly necessary. Also note how F7_Confirm.__init__ takes a "confirm" keyword argument. All publicly available attributes should be accepted like this for convenience.

Adding a new version

While multiple version support is one of the major features of pykickstart, adding a new version is more complicated than can be shown in a simple example. The basic requirements would involve first creating a new handler along the lines of those in handlers/*.py, adding new entries to the commandMap and dataMap structures laying out exactly which commands are supported, and then duplicating most of the code in version.py to add the new version number and proper imports.

Adding a new section

Currently, there is no simple way to add a new section to the kickstart file. This requires adding more code to _stateMachine as well as additional states. _stateMachine is not set up to do this sort of thing easily.