The ServiceFilter is the base class
for service identifiers and user service preferences. Each
Resource has a service identifier to
associate the resource with a service. An example of a service identifier
would be openstack.compute.compute_service.ComputeService.
The service preference and the service identifier are joined to create a
filter to match a service.
The ServiceFilter class can be built
with a service type, interface, region, name, and version.
Create a compute service and service preference. Join the services and match:
from openstack import service_filter
from openstack.compute import compute_service
default = compute_service.ComputeService()
preference = service_filter.ServiceFilter('compute', version='v2')
result = preference.join(default)
matches = (result.match_service_type('compute') and
result.match_service_name('Hal9000') and
result.match_region('DiscoveryOne') and
result.match_interface('public'))
print(str(result))
print("matches=" + str(matches))
The resulting output from the code:
service_type=compute,interface=public,version=v2
matches=True
openstack.service_filter.ServiceFilter(service_type, interface='public', region=None, service_name=None, version=None, api_version=None, requires_project_id=False)¶Create a service identifier.
| Parameters: |
|
|---|
get_module()¶Get the full module name associated with the service.
get_service_module()¶Get the module version of the service name.
This would often be the same as the service type except in cases like object store where the service type is object-store and the module is object_store.
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