Template Unit

The template unit is a variant of Checkbox unit types. A template is a skeleton for defining additional units, typically job definitions. A template is defined as a typical RFC822-like Checkbox unit (like a typical job definition) with the exception that all the fields starting with the string template- are reserved for the template itself while all the other fields are a definition of all the eventual instances of the template.

There are two requirements for the job’s id field for the instances to be generated. It must be unique, and it must be template-based, for example:

unit: template
template-resource: graphics_card
template-engine: jinja2
template-unit: job
id: chromium_webcam_encoding_{{ driver }}_{{ bus }}

instead of:

unit: template
template-resource: graphics_card
template-engine: jinja2
template-unit: job
id: chromium_webcam_encoding

Template-Specific Fields

template-id

Unique identifier for this template.

This field is optional. If absent, a template-id value will be computed from the id field. For instance, if the id field is stress/reboot_{iterations}_times, the computed template-id field will be stress/reboot_iterations_times.

template-summary

A human readable name for the template. This value is available for translation into other languages. It must be one line long, ideally it should be short (50-70 characters max).

This field is optional (Checkbox will only advise you to provide one when running provider validation).

template-description

A long form description of what the template does or the kind of jobs it instantiates. This value is available for translation into other languages.

This field is optional.

template-unit

Name of the unit type this template will generate. By default job definition units are generated (as if the field was specified with the value of job) eventually but other values may be used as well.

This field is optional.

template-resource

Name of the resource job (if it is a compatible resource identifier) to use to parametrize the template. This must either be a name of a resource job available in the namespace the template unit belongs to or a valid resource identifier matching the definition in the template-imports field.

This field is mandatory.

template-imports

A resource import statement. It can be used to refer to arbitrary resource job by its full identifier and (optionally) give it a short variable name.

The syntax of each imports line is:

IMPORT_STMT ::  "from" <NAMESPACE> "import" <PARTIAL_ID>
              | "from" <NAMESPACE> "import" <PARTIAL_ID>
                 AS <IDENTIFIER>

The short syntax exposes PARTIAL_ID as the variable name available within all the fields defined within the template unit. If it is not a valid variable name then the second form must be used.

This field is sometimes optional. It becomes mandatory when the resource job definition is from another provider namespace or when it is not a valid resource identifier and needs to be aliased.

template-filter

A resource program that limits the set of records from which template instances will be made. The syntax of this field is the same as the syntax of typical job definition unit’s requires field, that is, it is a python expression.

When defined, the expression is evaluated once for each resource object and if it evaluates successfully to a True value then that particular resource object is used to instantiate a new unit.

This field is optional.

template-engine

Name of the template engine to use, default is python string formatting (See PEP 3101). The only other supported engine is jinja2.

This field is optional.

Instantiation

When a template is instantiated, a single record object is used to fill in the parametric values to all the applicable fields. Each field is formatted using the template-engine (default is python formatting language. Within each field the record is exposed as the variable named by the template_resource field. Record data is exposed as attributes of that object.

The special parameter __index__ can be used to iterate over the devices matching the template-filter field.

Examples

Basic example

The following example contains a simplified template that instantiates to a simple storage test. The test is only instantiated for devices that are considered physical. In this example we don’t want to spam the user with a long list of loopback devices. This is implemented by exposing that data in the resource job itself:

id: device
plugin: resource
command:
    echo 'path: /dev/sda'
    echo 'has_media: yes'
    echo 'physical: yes'
    echo
    echo 'path: /dev/cdrom'
    echo 'has_media: no'
    echo 'physical: yes'
    echo
    echo 'path: /dev/loop0'
    echo 'has_media: yes'
    echo 'physical: no'

The template defines a test-storage-XXX test where XXX is replaced by the path of the device. Only devices which are physical according to some definition are considered for testing. This means that the record related to /dev/loop0 will be ignored and will not instantiate a test job for that device. This feature can be coupled with the existing resource requirement to let the user know that we did see their CD-ROM device but it was not tested as there was no inserted media at the time:

unit: template
template-resource: device
template-filter: device.physical == 'yes'
requires: device.has_media == 'yes'
id: test-storage-{path}
plugin: shell
command: perform-testing-on --device {path}

Real life example

Here is a real life example of a template unit that generates a job for each hard drive available on the system:

unit: template
template-resource: device
template-filter: device.category == 'DISK'
plugin: shell
category_id: com.canonical.plainbox::disk
id: disk/stats_{name}
requires:
 device.path == "{path}"
 block_device.{name}_state != 'removable'
user: root
command: disk_stats_test {name}
_description: This test checks {name} disk stats, generates some activity
and rechecks stats to verify they've changed. It also verifies that disks
appear in the various files they're supposed to.

The template-resource used here (device) refers to a resource job using the udev_resource script to get information about the system. The udev_resource script returns a list of items with attributes such as path and name, so we can use these directly in our template.

block_device is an other resource unit used for setting a requirement on the state of the current device.

Simple Jinja templates example

Jinja2 can be used as the templating engine instead of python string formatting. This allows the author to access some powerful templating features including expressions.

First here is the previous disk stats example converted to jinja2:

unit: template
template-resource: device
template-filter: device.category == 'DISK'
template-engine: jinja2
plugin: shell
category_id: com.canonical.plainbox::disk
id: disk/stats_{{ name }}
requires:
 device.path == "{{ path }}"
 block_device.{{ name }}_state != 'removable'
user: root
command: disk_stats_test {{ name }}
_description: This test checks {{ name }} disk stats, generates some
activity and rechecks stats to verify they've changed. It also verifies
that disks appear in the various files they're supposed to.

Template engine additional features

Checkbox populates the template parameter dictionary with some extra keys to aid the author.

__index__:

If a template unit can result in N content jobs then this variable is equal to how many jobs have been created so far.

Following parameters are only available for templates based on the Jinja2 engine (see template-engine):

__system_env__:

When checkbox encounters a template to render it will populate this variable with the executing shell’s environment variables as os.environ

__on_ubuntucore__:

Helper function (boolean) checking if checkbox runs from on ubuntu core

__checkbox_env__:

Dictionary containing the checkbox config environment section