Provided by: libconfig-model-perl_2.082-1_all bug

NAME

       Config::Model::Node - Class for configuration tree node

VERSION

       version 2.082

SYNOPSIS

        use Config::Model;

        # define configuration tree object
        my $model = Config::Model->new;
        $model->create_config_class(
           name              => 'OneConfigClass',
           class_description => "OneConfigClass detailed description",

           element => [
               [qw/X Y Z/] => {
                   type       => 'leaf',
                   value_type => 'enum',
                   choice     => [qw/Av Bv Cv/]
               }
           ],

           status      => [ X => 'deprecated' ],
           description => [ X => 'X-ray description (can be long)' ],
           summary     => [ X => 'X-ray' ],

           accept => [
               'ip.*' => {
                   type       => 'leaf',
                   value_type => 'uniline',
                   summary    => 'ip address',
               }
           ]
        );
        my $instance = $model->instance (root_class_name => 'OneConfigClass');
        my $root = $instance->config_root ;

        # X is not shown below because of its deprecated status
        print $root->describe,"\n" ;
        # name         value        type         comment
        # Y            [undef]      enum         choice: Av Bv Cv
        # Z            [undef]      enum         choice: Av Bv Cv

        # add some data
        $root->load( step => 'Y=Av' );

        # add some accepted element, ipA and ipB are created on the fly
        $root->load( step => q!ipA=192.168.1.0 ipB=192.168.1.1"! );

        # show also ip* element created in the last "load" call
        print $root->describe,"\n" ;
        # name         value        type         comment
        # Y            Av           enum         choice: Av Bv Cv
        # Z            [undef]      enum         choice: Av Bv Cv
        # ipA          192.168.1.0  uniline
        # ipB          192.168.1.1  uniline

DESCRIPTION

       This class provides the nodes of a configuration tree. When created, a node object will get a set of
       rules that will define its properties within the configuration tree.

       Each node contain a set of elements. An element can contain:

       •   A leaf element implemented with Config::Model::Value. A leaf can be plain (unconstrained value) or be
           strongly typed (values are checked against a set of rules).

       •   Another node.

       •   A  collection  of  items:  a  list  element, implemented with Config::Model::ListId. Each item can be
           another node or a leaf.

       •   A collection of identified items: a hash element, implemented with Config::Model::HashId.  Each  item
           can be another node or a leaf.

Configuration class declaration

       A class declaration is made of the following parameters:

       name
           Mandatory  "string"  parameter.  This  config  class  name  can  be used by a node element in another
           configuration class.

       class_description
           Optional "string" parameter. This description will be used when generating user interfaces.

       class
           Optional  "string"   to   specify   a   Perl   class   to   override   the   default   implementation
           (Config::Model::Node).  This Perl Class must inherit Config::Model::Node. Use with care.

       element
           Mandatory "list ref" of elements of the configuration class :

             element => [ foo => { type = 'leaf', ... },
                          bar => { type = 'leaf', ... }
                        ]

           Element names can be grouped to save typing:

             element => [ [qw/foo bar/] => { type = 'leaf', ... } ]

           See below for details on element declaration.

       level
           Optional "list ref" of the elements whose level are different from default value ("normal"). Possible
           values are "important", "normal" or "hidden".

           The  level  is  used  to  set  how  configuration  data  is  presented  to the user in browsing mode.
           "Important" elements will be shown to the user no matter what. "hidden" elements  will  be  explained
           with the warp notion.

             level  => [ [qw/X Y/] => 'important' ]

       status
           Optional  "list  ref"  of  the  elements  whose status are different from default value ("standard").
           Possible values are "obsolete", "deprecated" or "standard".

           Using a deprecated element will issue a warning. Using an obsolete element will  raise  an  exception
           (See Config::Model::Exception.

             status  => [ [qw/X Y/] => 'obsolete' ]

       description
           Optional  "list  ref"  of  element  description. These descriptions will be used when generating user
           interfaces.

       description
           Optional "list ref" of element  summary.  These  descriptions  will  be  used  when  generating  user
           interfaces or as comment when writing configuration files.

       read_config
       write_config
       config_dir
           Parameters used to load on demand configuration data.  See Config::Model::BackendMgr for details.

       accept
           Optional  list  of  criteria  (i.e.  a regular expression to match ) to accept unknown elements. Each
           criteria will have a list of specification that will enable "Config::Model" to create a model snippet
           for the unknown element.

           Example:

            accept => [
               'list.*' => {
                   type  => 'list',
                   cargo => {
                       type       => 'leaf',
                       value_type => 'string',
                   },
               },
               'str.*' => {
                   type       => 'leaf',
                   value_type => 'uniline'
               },
             ]

           All "element" parameters can be used in specifying accepted elements.

           If Text::Levenshtein::Damerau is installed, a warning will be issued if an accepted  element  is  too
           close to an existing element.

           The  parameter  "accept_after" to specify where to insert the accepted element.  This will not change
           much the behavior of the tree, but will help generate more usable user interfaces.

           Example:

            element => [
               'Bug' => { type => 'leaf', value_type => 'uniline' } ,
            ]
            accept => [
               'Bug-.*' =>  {
                    value_type => 'uniline',
                    type => 'leaf'
                    accept_after => 'Bug' ,
               }
            ]

           The model snippet above will ensure that "Bug-Debian" will be shown right after "bug".

Element declaration

   Element type
       Each element is declared with a list ref that contains all necessary information:

         element => [
                      foo => { ... }
                    ]

       This most important information from this hash ref is the mandatory type parameter. The type type can be:

       "node"  The element is a simple node of a tree instantiated from a  configuration  class  (declared  with
               "create_config_class( ... )" in Config::Model).  See "Node element".

       "warped_node"
               The  element  is  a  node  whose  properties (mostly "config_class_name") can be changed (warped)
               according to  the  values  of  one  or  more  leaf  elements  in  the  configuration  tree.   See
               Config::Model::WarpedNode for details.

       "leaf"  The element is a scalar value. See "Leaf element"

       "hash"  The  element  is  a  collection  of nodes or values (default). Each element of this collection is
               identified by a string (Just like a regular hash, except that you can set up  constraint  of  the
               keys).  See "Hash element"

       "list"  The  element  is  a  collection  of nodes or values (default). Each element of this collection is
               identified by an integer (Just like a regular perl array, except that you can set  up  constraint
               of the keys).  See "List element"

       "check_list"
               The element is a collection of values which are unique in the check_list. See CheckList.

       "class" Override  the  default  class  for  leaf,  list  and hash elements. The override class be inherit
               Config::Model::Value   for   leaf   element,   Config::Model::HashId   for   hash   element   and
               Config::Model::ListId for list element.

   Node element
       When declaring a "node" element, you must also provide a "config_class_name" parameter. For instance:

        $model ->create_config_class
          (
          name => "ClassWithOneNode",
          element => [
                       the_node => {
                                     type => 'node',
                                     config_class_name => 'AnotherClass',
                                   },
                     ]
          ) ;

   Leaf element
       When declaring a "leaf" element, you must also provide a "value_type" parameter. See Config::Model::Value
       for more details.

   Hash element
       When declaring a "hash" element, you must also provide a "index_type" parameter.

       You can also provide a "cargo_type" parameter set to "node" or "leaf" (default).

       See Config::Model::HashId and Config::Model::AnyId for more details.

   List element
       You can also provide a "cargo_type" parameter set to "node" or "leaf" (default).

       See Config::Model::ListId and Config::Model::AnyId for more details.

Constructor

       The "new" constructor accepts the following parameters:

       config_file
           Specify  configuration file to be used by backend. This parameter may override a file declared in the
           model. Note that this parameter is not propagated in children nodes.

Introspection methods

   name
       Returns the location of the node, or its config class name (for root node).

   get_type
       Returns "node".

   config_model
       Returns the entire configuration model (Config::Model object).

   model
       Returns the configuration model of this node (data structure).

   config_class_name
       Returns the configuration class name of this node.

   instance
       Returns the instance object containing this node. Inherited from Config::Model::AnyThing

   has_element ( name => element_name, [ type => searched_type ] )
       Returns 1 if the class model has the element declared or if the element name is matched by  the  optional
       "accept" parameter. If "type" is specified, the element name must also match the type.

   find_element ( element_name , [ case => any ])
       Returns  $name  if  the  class  model  has  the element declared or if the element name is matched by the
       optional "accept" parameter.

       If case is set to any, has_element will return the element name who match the  passed  name  in  a  case-
       insensitive manner.

       Returns empty if no matching element is found.

   model_searcher ()
       Returns an object dedicated to search an element in the configuration model (respecting privilege level).

       This  method  returns a Config::Model::SearchElement object. See Config::Model::SearchElement for details
       on how to handle a search.

       This method is inherited from Config::Model::AnyThing.

   element_model ( element_name )
       Returns model of the element.

   element_type ( element_name )
       Returns the type (e.g. leaf, hash, list, checklist or node) of the element.

   element_name()
       Returns the element name that contain this object. Inherited from Config::Model::AnyThing

   index_value()
       See "index_value()" in Config::Model::AnyThing

   parent()
       See "parent()" in Config::Model::AnyThing

   root()
       See "root()" in Config::Model::AnyThing

   location()
       See "location()" in Config::Model::AnyThing

   backend_support_annotation
       Returns 1 if at least one of the backends attached to self or a parent node support  to  read  and  write
       annotations (aka comments) in the configuration file.

Element property management

   get_element_name (  ...  )
       Return all elements names available.

       Optional parameters are:

       •   type:  Returns  only  element  of requested type (e.g. "list", "hash", "leaf",...). By default return
           elements of any type.

       •   cargo_type: Returns only element which contain requested type.  E.g. if "get_element_name" is  called
           with "cargo_type => leaf", "get_element_name" will return simple leaf elements, but also hash or list
           element that contain leaf object. By default return elements of any type.

       •   check: "yes", "no" or "skip"

       Returns an array in array context, and a string (e.g. "join(' ',@array)") in scalar context.

   children
       Like  get_element_name  without  parameters. Returns the list of elements. This method is polymorphic for
       all non-leaf objects of the configuration tree.

   next_element ( ... )
       This method provides a way to iterate through the elements of a node.   Mandatory  parameter  is  "name".
       Optional parameter: "status".

       Returns  the  next  element  name  for  status  (default  "normal").  Returns undef if no next element is
       available.

   previous_element ( name => element_name )
       This method provides a way to iterate through the elements of a node.

       Returns the previous element name. Returns undef if no previous element is available.

   get_element_property ( element => ..., property => ... )
       Retrieve a property of an element.

       I.e. for a model :

         status     => [ X => 'deprecated' ]
         element    => [ X => { ... } ]

       This call will return "deprecated":

         $node->get_element_property ( element => 'X', property => 'status' )

   set_element_property ( element => ..., property => ... )
       Set a property of an element.

   reset_element_property ( element => ... )
       Reset a property of an element according to the original model.

Information management

   fetch_element ( name => .. , [ check => ..] )
       Fetch and returns an element from a node.

       check can be set to yes, no or skip. When check is "no" or "skip", can return "undef" when the element is
       unknown, or 0 if the element is not available (hidden).

   fetch_element_value ( name => ... [ check => ...] )
       Fetch and returns the value of a leaf element from a node.

   store_element_value ( name, value )
       Store a value in a leaf element from a node.

       Can be invoked with named parameters (name, value, check)

   is_element_available( name => ...,  )
       Returns 1 if the element "name" is available and if the element is not "hidden". Returns 0 otherwise.

       As a syntactic sugar, this method can be called with only one parameter:

          is_element_available( 'element_name' ) ;

   accept_element( name )
       Checks and returns the appropriate model of an acceptable element (be it explicitly declared, or part  of
       an "accept" declaration).  Returns undef if the element cannot be accepted.

   accept_regexp( name )
       Returns the list of regular expressions used to check for acceptable parameters.  Useful for diagnostics.

   element_exists( element_name )
       Returns 1 if the element is known in the model.

   is_element_defined( element_name )
       Returns 1 if the element is defined.

   grab(...)
       See "grab(...)" in Config::Model::AnyThing.

   grab_value(...)
       See "grab_value(...)" in Config::Model::AnyThing.

   grab_root()
       See "grab_root()" in Config::Model::AnyThing.

   get( path => ..., mode => ... ,  check => ... , get_obj => 1|0, autoadd => 1|0)
       Get  a  value  from  a  directory  like path. If "get_obj" is 1, "get" will return leaf object instead of
       returning their value.

   set( path  , value)
       Set a value from a directory like path.

data modification

   migrate
       Force a read of the configuration and perform all changes regarding deprecated elements or values. Return
       1 if data needs to be saved.

   apply_fixes
       Scan the tree from this  node  and  apply  fixes  that  are  attached  to  warning  specifications.   See
       "warn_if_match" or "warn_unless_match" in "" in Config::Model::Value.

   load ( step => string [ ... ])
       Load configuration data from the string into the node and its siblings.

       This   string   follows   the   syntax   defined  in  Config::Model::Loader.   See  "load  (  ...  )"  in
       Config::Model::Loader for details on parameters.

       This method can also be called with a single parameter:

         $node->load("some data:to be=loaded");

   load_data ( data => hash_ref, [ check => $check, ...  ])
       Load configuration data with a hash ref. The hash ref key must match the available elements of  the  node
       (or accepted element). The hash ref structure must match the structure of the configuration model.

       Use "check => skip" to make data loading more tolerant: bad data will be discarded.

       "load_data" can be called with a single hash ref parameter.

   needs_save
       return 1 if one of the elements of the node's sub-tree has been modified.

Serialization

   dump_tree ( ... )
       Dumps  the  configuration  data  of  the  node  and  its  siblings  into  a  string.   See "dump_tree" in
       Config::Model::Dumper for parameter details.

       This string follows the syntax defined in Config::Model::Loader. The string produced by  "dump_tree"  can
       be passed to "load".

   dump_annotations_as_pod ( ... )
       Dumps   the   configuration   annotations   of   the   node   and   its  siblings  into  a  string.   See
       "dump_annotations_as_pod" in Config::Model::Dumper for parameter details.

   describe ( [ element => ... ] )
       Provides a description of the node elements or of one element.

   report ()
       Provides a text report on the content of the configuration below this node.

   audit ()
       Provides a text audit on the content of the configuration below this node.  This  audit  will  show  only
       value different from their default value.

   copy_from ( from => another_node_object, [ check => ... ] )
       Copy  configuration  data  from  another  node into this node and its siblings. The copy can be made in a
       tolerant mode where invalid data is discarded with "check => skip". This method  can  be  called  with  a
       single argument: "copy_from($another_node)"

Help management

   get_help ( [ [ description | summary ] => element_name ] )
       If  called without element, returns the description of the class (Stored in "class_description" attribute
       of a node declaration).

       If called with an element name, returns the description of the element (Stored in "description" attribute
       of a node declaration).

       If called with 2 argument, either return the "summary" or the "description" of the element.

       Returns an empty string if no description was found.

   tree_searcher( type => ... )
       Returns an object able to search the configuration tree.  Parameters are :

       type
           Where to perform the search. It can be "element", "value", "key", "summary", "description", "help" or
           "all".

       Typically, you will have to call "search" on this object.

       Returns a Config::Model::TreeSearcher object.

   Lazy load of node data
       As  configuration  model  are  getting  bigger,  the   load   time   of   a   tree   gets   longer.   The
       Config::Model::BackendMgr class provides a way to load the configuration information only when needed.

AUTHOR

       Dominique Dumont, (ddumont at cpan dot org)

SEE ALSO

       Config::Model,        Config::Model::Instance,        Config::Model::HashId,       Config::Model::ListId,
       Config::Model::CheckList, Config::Model::WarpedNode, Config::Model::Value

AUTHOR

       Dominique Dumont

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2005-2016 by Dominique Dumont.

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The GNU Lesser General Public License, Version 2.1, February 1999

perl v5.22.1                                       2016-03-30                           Config::Model::Node(3pm)