Node Types
node_types
are used for defining common properties and behaviors for node-templates. node-templates
can then be created based on these types, inheriting their definitions.
Declaration
node_types:
type1:
derived_from: cloudify.types.Root
interfaces:
...
properties:
...
type2:
...
...
Schema
Keyname | Required | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
derived_from | no | string | A string referencing a parent type. |
interfaces | no | dictionary | A dictionary of node interfaces. |
properties | no | dictionary | A dictionary of node properties. |
derived_from
The derived_from
property can be used to build over and extend an existing type. This is useful for further extracting common properties and behaviors, this time in between types.
Using this mechanism, you can build various type hierarchies that can be reused across different application blueprints.
When a type derives from another type, its interfaces
and properties
keys are merged with the parent type’s interfaces
and properties
keys. The merge is on the property/operation level. A property defined on the parent type is overridden by a property with the same name that is defined on the deriving type. The same is true for an interface operation mapping. However, it is important to note that it is possible to add additional operation mappings to an interface defined in the parent type in the deriving type. See the examples section for more information.
interfaces
The interfaces
property can be used to define common behaviors for node templates. For additonal information, see the Interfaces documentation.
properties
The properties
property can be used to define a common properties schema for node templates.
properties
is a dictionary from a property name to a dictionary describing the property. The nested dictionary includes the following keys:
Keyname | Required | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
description | no | string | Description for the property. |
type | no | string | Property type. Not specifying a data type means the type can be anything (including types not listed in the valid types). Valid types: string, integer, float, boolean or a custom data type. |
default | no | <any> | An optional default value for the property. |
required | no | boolean | Specifies whether the property is required. (Default: true , Supported since: cloudify_dsl_1_2) |
Examples
Following is an example node type definition extracted from the Cloudify-Nodecellar-Example blueprint.
node_types:
nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase:
derived_from: cloudify.nodes.DBMS
properties:
port:
description: MongoDB port
type: integer
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
create: scripts/mongo/install-mongo.sh
start: scripts/mongo/start-mongo.sh
stop: scripts/mongo/stop-mongo.sh
An example of how to use this type follows:
node_templates:
MongoDB1:
type: nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase
MongoDB2:
type: nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase
Each of these two nodes now have both the port
property and the three operations defined for the nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase
type.
Finally, here is an example of how to extend an existing type by deriving from it.
node_types:
nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabaseExtended:
derived_from: nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase
properties:
enable_replication:
description: MongoDB replication enabling flag
type: boolean
default: false
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
create: scripts/mongo/install-mongo-extended.sh
configure: scripts/mongo/configure-mongo-extended.sh
The nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabaseExtended
type derives from the nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabase
type that was defined in the previous example. As such, it derives its properties and interfaces definitions, which are either merged or overridden by the ones it defines itself.
A node template with a nodecellar.nodes.MongoDatabaseExtended
type therefore has both the port
and enable_replication
properties, and the following interfaces mapping:
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
create: scripts/mongo/install-mongo-extended.sh
configure: scripts/mongo/configure-mongo-extended.sh
start: scripts/mongo/start-mongo.sh
stop: scripts/mongo/stop-mongo.sh
As is evident, the configure
operation, which is mapped only in the extending type, merged with the start
and stop
operations that are only mapped in the parent type, whereas the create
operation, which is defined on both types, is mapped to the value set in the extending type.