libvirt/python/libvirt-override.py
Cole Robinson 7268cb9274 python: Mark event callback wrappers as private
These functions aren't intended to be called directly by users, so mark
them as private.

While we're at it, remove unneeded exception handling, and break some
long lines.
2011-06-21 10:08:48 -04:00

210 lines
6.1 KiB
Python

#
# Manually written part of python bindings for libvirt
#
# On cygwin, the DLL is called cygvirtmod.dll
try:
import libvirtmod
except ImportError, lib_e:
try:
import cygvirtmod as libvirtmod
except ImportError, cyg_e:
if str(cyg_e).count("No module named"):
raise lib_e
import types
# The root of all libvirt errors.
class libvirtError(Exception):
def __init__(self, defmsg, conn=None, dom=None, net=None, pool=None, vol=None):
# Never call virConnGetLastError().
# virGetLastError() is now thread local
err = virGetLastError()
if err is None:
msg = defmsg
else:
msg = err[2]
Exception.__init__(self, msg)
self.err = err
def get_error_code(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[0]
def get_error_domain(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[1]
def get_error_message(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[2]
def get_error_level(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[3]
def get_str1(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[4]
def get_str2(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[5]
def get_str3(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[6]
def get_int1(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[7]
def get_int2(self):
if self.err is None:
return None
return self.err[8]
#
# register the libvirt global error handler
#
def registerErrorHandler(f, ctx):
"""Register a Python written function to for error reporting.
The function is called back as f(ctx, error), with error
being a list of information about the error being raised.
Returns 1 in case of success."""
return libvirtmod.virRegisterErrorHandler(f,ctx)
def openAuth(uri, auth, flags):
ret = libvirtmod.virConnectOpenAuth(uri, auth, flags)
if ret is None:raise libvirtError('virConnectOpenAuth() failed')
return virConnect(_obj=ret)
#
# Return library version.
#
def getVersion (name = None):
"""If no name parameter is passed (or name is None) then the
version of the libvirt library is returned as an integer.
If a name is passed and it refers to a driver linked to the
libvirt library, then this returns a tuple of (library version,
driver version).
If the name passed refers to a non-existent driver, then you
will get the exception 'no support for hypervisor'.
Versions numbers are integers: 1000000*major + 1000*minor + release."""
if name is None:
ret = libvirtmod.virGetVersion ();
else:
ret = libvirtmod.virGetVersion (name);
if ret is None: raise libvirtError ("virGetVersion() failed")
return ret
#
# Invoke an EventHandle callback
#
def _eventInvokeHandleCallback(watch, fd, event, opaque, opaquecompat=None):
"""
Invoke the Event Impl Handle Callback in C
"""
# libvirt 0.9.2 and earlier required custom event loops to know
# that opaque=(cb, original_opaque) and pass the values individually
# to this wrapper. This should handle the back compat case, and make
# future invocations match the virEventHandleCallback prototype
if opaquecompat:
callback = opaque
opaque = opaquecompat
else:
callback = opaque[0]
opaque = opaque[1]
libvirtmod.virEventInvokeHandleCallback(watch, fd, event, callback, opaque);
#
# Invoke an EventTimeout callback
#
def _eventInvokeTimeoutCallback(timer, opaque, opaquecompat=None):
"""
Invoke the Event Impl Timeout Callback in C
"""
# libvirt 0.9.2 and earlier required custom event loops to know
# that opaque=(cb, original_opaque) and pass the values individually
# to this wrapper. This should handle the back compat case, and make
# future invocations match the virEventTimeoutCallback prototype
if opaquecompat:
callback = opaque
opaque = opaquecompat
else:
callback = opaque[0]
opaque = opaque[1]
libvirtmod.virEventInvokeTimeoutCallback(timer, callback, opaque);
def _dispatchEventHandleCallback(watch, fd, events, cbData):
cb = cbData["cb"]
opaque = cbData["opaque"]
cb(watch, fd, events, opaque)
return 0
def _dispatchEventTimeoutCallback(timer, cbData):
cb = cbData["cb"]
opaque = cbData["opaque"]
cb(timer, opaque)
return 0
def virEventAddHandle(fd, events, cb, opaque):
"""
register a callback for monitoring file handle events
@fd: file handle to monitor for events
@events: bitset of events to watch from virEventHandleType constants
@cb: callback to invoke when an event occurs
@opaque: user data to pass to callback
Example callback prototype is:
def cb(watch, # int id of the handle
fd, # int file descriptor the event occured on
events, # int bitmap of events that have occured
opaque): # opaque data passed to eventAddHandle
"""
cbData = {"cb" : cb, "opaque" : opaque}
ret = libvirtmod.virEventAddHandle(fd, events, cbData)
if ret == -1: raise libvirtError ('virEventAddHandle() failed')
return ret
def virEventAddTimeout(timeout, cb, opaque):
"""
register a callback for a timer event
@timeout: time between events in milliseconds
@cb: callback to invoke when an event occurs
@opaque: user data to pass to callback
Setting timeout to -1 will disable the timer. Setting the timeout
to zero will cause it to fire on every event loop iteration.
Example callback prototype is:
def cb(timer, # int id of the timer
opaque): # opaque data passed to eventAddTimeout
"""
cbData = {"cb" : cb, "opaque" : opaque}
ret = libvirtmod.virEventAddTimeout(timeout, cbData)
if ret == -1: raise libvirtError ('virEventAddTimeout() failed')
return ret