cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
370
Views
0
Helpful
1
Replies

NCS Python question: Modifying a leaf value

previousqna
Level 5
Level 5

Hi All,

I’m trying to get a clear idea what is needed to modify a leaf value in a service model.

Just running at an interactive prompt I’m trying the following:

import ncs

mr=ncs.maapi.Maapi()

mw=ncs.maapi.Maapi()

sr=ncs.maapi.Session(mr,'admin','admin')

sw=ncs.maapi.Session(mw,'admin','admin')

tw=mw.start_write_trans()

tr=mr.start_read_trans()

rroot=ncs.maagic.get_root(tr)

wroot=ncs.maagic.get_root(tw)

It’s likely not necessary, but I have a read(tr) and a write transaction(tw) setup.

>>> rroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]

'firstValue'

>>> wroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]='secondValue'

>>> rroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]

'firstValue'

###### The value doesn’t change #########

Questions:

- What is the proper call to commit the “tw” transaction? And will the existing read transaction “see” it immediately or do I need to re-establish a new read transaction?

- Am I going about this the hard way? Is there a wrapper function/class to open a write transaction, assign a value and commit it?

- Does setting this value directly (outside of the cb_create function) create any side effects ?

- What causes the naming convention of “autovnfpair__autovnfpair” ?

                - I’ve seen other example code that doesn’t follow this pattern , but I can’t determine the difference in the yang model or code that would make this different.

1 Reply 1

previousqna
Level 5
Level 5

Inline

Hi All,

I’m trying to get a clear idea what is needed to modify a leaf value in a service model.

Just running at an interactive prompt I’m trying the following:

import ncs

mr=ncs.maapi.Maapi()

mw=ncs.maapi.Maapi()

sr=ncs.maapi.Session(mr,'admin','admin')

sw=ncs.maapi.Session(mw,'admin','admin')

tw=mw.start_write_trans()

tr=mr.start_read_trans()

rroot=ncs.maagic.get_root(tr)

wroot=ncs.maagic.get_root(tw)

It’s likely not necessary, but I have a read(tr) and a write transaction(tw) setup.

>>> rroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]

'firstValue'

>>> wroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]='secondValue'

>>> rroot.services.autovnfpair__autovnfpair["Auto1"]["mytest"]

'firstValue'

###### The value doesn’t change #########

Questions:

- What is the proper call to commit the “tw” transaction? And will the existing read transaction “see” it immediately or do I need to re-establish a new read transaction?

tw.apply()

the read transaction will never see the new value because it read the old value beforehand and a read transaction is supposed to give you one consistent view of the DB.

See following trace, the read transaction maintains a consistent view of the DB, so exactly what is seen immediately depends on what the read transaction has already read and is now cached in the transaction

>>> tw=mw.start_write_trans()

>>> rroot.devices.device['testdev'].address

'1.2.3.4'

Now before making a change we read into the read transaction the device IP

>>> wroot.devices.device['testdev'].address='1.2.3.5'

>>> tw.apply()

>>> rroot.devices.device['testdev'].address

'1.2.3.4'

Even though the write transaction is applied, the old avalue of the IP is still in the read transaction.

>>>

- Am I going about this the hard way? Is there a wrapper function/class to open a write transaction, assign a value and commit it?

Probably not. Why not use a single transaction? There is nothing stopping you from reading in a write transaction.

No wrapper is provided, and I think in almost all cases there is more than one value to write.

- Does setting this value directly (outside of the cb_create function) create any side effects ?

It is persisted in the DB when you apply, that is an intended side effect. Otherwise no nothing harmful here at all.

- What causes the naming convention of “autovnfpair__autovnfpair” ?

                - I’ve seen other example code that doesn’t follow this pattern , but I can’t determine the difference in the yang model or code that would make this different.

You have a list called autovnfpair in a namespace called autovnfpair, python does no allow identifiers with ‘:’ so it is replaced with ‘__’. Note that in yang ‘-‘ is also a common identifier in names, that is not useable in python, and this is replaced by ‘_’.

You could just use autovpnfpair as the  identifier instead of the long form if it is unambiguous, just like I did not have to use ncs__devices