Hi,
Here is another attempt for proposed text for Actions/RPC statements in
NMDA.
<new>
6.2 Invocation of RPC Operations
This section updates section 7.14 of RFC 7950.
RPCs MAY be defined as affecting the contents of a specific datastore,
any configuration datastore (e.g., <edit-config>), or any datastore
(e.g., <get-data>). The RPC definition specifies how the RPC input
data is interpreted by the server.
RPCs definitions that do not explicitly state an affected
datastore(s) modify the general operational state of the server.
Hence, if any RPC input data relates to data node instances then
those would generally resolve to data node instances in the
<operational> data tree.
6.3 Invocation of Actions
This section updates section 7.15 of RFC 7950.
In YANG data models, the "action" statement may appear under "config
true" and "config false" schema nodes. While instances of both
schema nodes may appear in <operational>, instances of "config true"
schema nodes may also appear in other datastores.
Actions are always invoked on a data node instance that exist in the
<operational> data tree. The behavior defined by an action statement
is generally expected to affect the operational state of the server
rather than directly modifying the contents of any configuration
datastore.
</new>
On a related note, I also want to confirm that it is right that RPC
input data is always checked against operational:
Section 6.1. of the NMDA draft states:
o If the XPath expression is defined in a substatement to an "input"
statement in an "rpc" or "action" statement, the accessible tree
is the RPC or action operation instance and all operational state
in the server. The root node has top-level data nodes in all
modules as children. Additionally, for an RPC, the root node also
has the node representing the RPC operation being defined as a
child. The node representing the operation being defined has the
operation's input parameters as children.
Is <operational> always the right datastore to evaluate RPC input/output
data relative to? For most RPCs this seems to be the right choice by
default but it also seems plausible that someone may wish to define an
RPC that wants to validate its input parameters against the contents of
another datastore.
An example could be an "is-applied" RPC that takes a path to a subtree
in <running> or <intended> and checks whether the configuration for that
subtree is fully represented in <operational>.
Thanks,
Rob
On 27/10/2017 09:33, Martin Bjorklund wrote:
Andy Bierman <[email protected]> wrote:
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 11:22 AM, Randy Presuhn <
[email protected]> wrote:
Hi -
On 10/26/2017 10:44 AM, Robert Wilton wrote:
Hi ,
Separating out the issue regarding which datastore action and RPC apply
to, we propose the following NEW text to the datastores draft:
6.2 Invocation of Actions and RPC Operations
This section updates section 7.15. of RFC 7950.
In YANG data models, the "action" statement may appear under "config
true" and "config false" schema nodes. While instances of both
schema nodes may appear in <operational>, instances of "config true"
schema nodes may also appear in other datastores.
An NMDA compliant server MUST execute all actions in the context of
<operational>. Likewise, an NMDA compliant server MUST invoke all RPC
operations in the context of <operational>, unless the RPC is
explicitly
defined as affecting other datastores (e.g., <edit-config>).
OK?
A question - I understand the motivation for the "unless" for RPC
operations, but wonder why there is no similar "unless" for actions.
The <rpc> is not really in a datastore at all.
It may have input and output parameters with leafref and must/when
statements.
These are evaluated in the <operational> context.
The <rpc> may in fact be something like <edit-config>
which has parameters (like <config> to apply to
a specific datastore.
The action node is embedded within some data that has to be parsed
in a specific datastore before the action is processed.
This data is required to be in <operational>.
It also has XPath and leafref that needs to be resolved (same as <rpc>).
The side effects of the <rpc> or <action> can impact other datastores.
This would be defined in the description-stmt and this is not a problem.
This is exactly right. We need to capture this in the text.
/martin
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