Comments inline
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Kolesnik" <mkolesni(a)redhat.com>
To: "engine-devel" <engine-devel(a)ovirt.org>
Sent: Monday, July 2, 2012 5:35:52 PM
Subject: [Engine-devel] Fwd: Problem in REST API handling/displaying of logical networks
Hi All,
I would like to hear opinions about a behaviour that I think is
problematic in
REST API handling of logical networks.
-- Intro --
Today in the REST API we are exposing two collections for "logical
network" related entities.
First is a top level collection which is out of any context at the
address
http://engine/api/networks.
Second is a sub-collection in the context of a cluster:
http://engine/api/cluster/xxx/networks
The network itself is defined per DC level, so for each DC you would
have
at least one logical network for management, which has some
properties such
as STP, MTU, etc..
The top level collection is used to create/delete such network
entities.
The sub-collection in the context of a Cluster is used to
attach/detach a
network from the DC of that cluster.
Edit as well. you can update cluster network and change the "Display" property.
The network in the context of a cluster has some additional
information, let's
say for example 'status' of the network:
If a network is defined on all hosts in the cluster then it's status
is
'Operational'.
If a network is not defined on some of the hosts in the cluster then
it's
status is 'Not Operational'[1].
-- Problem --
The problem is that details which are only relevant in context of a
cluster, are still displayed in the root context as well (e.g:
'status').
This can, in certain cases, cause unexpected behaviour.
+1 no need to display cluster properties in datacenter context.
(
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=815268)
For example, let's consider this topology:
Data Center A
|
|\____ Network 'red'
|\____ Cluster A1
| \______ Network 'red' attached
\____ Cluster A2
\______ Network 'red' attached
If the 'status' is the same on all the clusters that the network is
attached to
(A1, A2) then there will be one element in the top level collection,
with the
network details and the 'status' field representing the state (which
is same
for all networks in the cluster contexts of the cluster).
If, however, the status is not the same (ie. on A1 the network is
'Operational' and on A2 it is 'Non Operational') then the top-level
collection will show two elements for the network, where all network
details are the same and only the 'status' field is different.
This is problematic IMHO for several reasons:
1. Showing one network in certain states, and multiple copies of this
network in other states is not optimal, to say the least.
2. In the top-level collection there is no indicator of the cluster
for which
the network is displayed, so there is no way to differentiate between
the
two 'red' network elements (they will have same id, name, etc.).
3. There is a certain asymmetry between the remove action[2] and the
result in that you would expect: you either remove a network but in
the
result you would see several elements removed.
-- Proposed Solutions --
Personally I can think of several solutions to this problem:
1. Declare the top-level collection as a collection of all networks
that are
either attached to cluster or not, and if they are indeed attached
then
show the details for each cluster, including a link to the cluster.
2. Declare the top-level collection as a collection of all networks
that are
defined in data-centers, but they will not contain any cluster
specific
data, and thus each entry is unique.
Why do we keep holding this Top level collection instead of having each network related
under his datacenter (/api/datacenter/id/networks)???
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=741111
One solution which is must is to move the top level network (/api/networks) under each
Datacenter!
1. having top level networks path isn't symmetric to our entire REST API
implementation!
all other network collections (cluster, hosts, VMs, Templates) placed under their
related component.
2. as a REST API user, having sub collection networks under each datacenter is better to
handle than parsing a top level collection
and comparing DC id in order to get all DC related networks.
3. as for breaking api/ backward compatibility, we can still hold the top level network
collection ad deprecated and start exposing the sub collections
under each datacenter.
Solution #2 is breaking the API backwards-compatibility, since it
includes
removing certain fields that have appeared today (namely 'status' and
'display') but IMO would give a better experience since the top-level
collection is actually used for managing networks, and not their
attachment
to clusters which should be done in the context of each cluster.
I would like to hear what suggestions you have to solve this problem
or if
you prefer either of the above solutions.
-- Footnotes --
[1] In 3.1 this is slightly different, but for the sake of simplicity
I didn't
specify the new behaviour.
[2] Currently you can't update the network if it's attached to any
cluster,
but perhaps in the future this would be possible.
Regards,
Mike
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