Pino Toscano
2014-Jan-07 10:16 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] [Bug 1046905] New: RFE: add argument to virt-sysprep to disable individual default operations
On Friday 27 December 2013 10:58:15 you wrote:> virt-sysprep either runs with all default operations or a selected > list of operations with the --enable argument. A few times I've > found I'd like to use the default list, but minus one or two > operations in particular, however there's no easy way to specify > this. > > A --disable argument that took the default operation list and skipped > selected operations would be useful.A rough idea I had about this is adding a new --operations parameter, which would take a a comma-separated list of operations (just like the current --enable), but with the following differences: - a leading minus would disable the specified operation - it would recognize the meta-keywords "all" (for all the available operations) and "defaults" (for the ones enabled by default) Processing the list of operations would add/remove them from the current set of operations, bailing out whether the resulting set is empty (just like right now --enable rejects an empty string). This way, you could write e.g.: - --operations defaults,-hostname,user-account runs the default ones but not "hostname", and the non-default "user-account" - --operations all easy shortcut to run all the available operations and so on. --enable could just be an alias for --operations, or this new syntax could be added directly to --enable directly. Maybe I'm over-engineering, but IMHO seems a better way than potentially adding a --disable argument and deal with the order of --enable & --disable and their interactions. -- Pino Toscano
Richard W.M. Jones
2014-Jan-07 12:12 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] [Bug 1046905] New: RFE: add argument to virt-sysprep to disable individual default operations
On Tue, Jan 07, 2014 at 11:16:08AM +0100, Pino Toscano wrote:> On Friday 27 December 2013 10:58:15 you wrote: > > virt-sysprep either runs with all default operations or a selected > > list of operations with the --enable argument. A few times I've > > found I'd like to use the default list, but minus one or two > > operations in particular, however there's no easy way to specify > > this. > > > > A --disable argument that took the default operation list and skipped > > selected operations would be useful. > > A rough idea I had about this is adding a new --operations parameter, > which would take a a comma-separated list of operations (just like the > current --enable), but with the following differences: > - a leading minus would disable the specified operation > - it would recognize the meta-keywords "all" (for all the available > operations) and "defaults" (for the ones enabled by default) > Processing the list of operations would add/remove them from the current > set of operations, bailing out whether the resulting set is empty (just > like right now --enable rejects an empty string). > > This way, you could write e.g.: > - --operations defaults,-hostname,user-account > runs the default ones but not "hostname", and the non-default > "user-account" > - --operations all > easy shortcut to run all the available operations > and so on. > > --enable could just be an alias for --operations, or this new syntax > could be added directly to --enable directly. > > Maybe I'm over-engineering, but IMHO seems a better way than potentially > adding a --disable argument and deal with the order of > --enable & --disable and their interactions.Seems reasonable. I guess only one --operations opt is allowed? Or would we allow multiple and concatenate them together? So that --operations foo,bar --operations -baz would be equivalent to --operations foo,bar,-baz ? Multiple --operations could be useful for scripting, ie. it would let shell users write: opts="--operations all -a disk.img" if [ $disable_foo ]; then opts="$opts --operations -foo"; fi Another thing to test is whether the OCaml argument parser[1] can handle '--operations -foo' without thinking that -foo is a separate arg. Rich. [1] It is not as sophisticated as GNU getopt, and a very long way from Perl & Python's amazing command line handling. See: http://caml.inria.fr/mantis/view.php?id=5197 as an example of one of its shortcomings. -- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com Fedora now supports 80 OCaml packages (the OPEN alternative to F#)
Pino Toscano
2014-Jan-07 14:24 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] [Bug 1046905] New: RFE: add argument to virt-sysprep to disable individual default operations
On Tuesday 07 January 2014 12:12:43 Richard W.M. Jones wrote:> On Tue, Jan 07, 2014 at 11:16:08AM +0100, Pino Toscano wrote: > > On Friday 27 December 2013 10:58:15 you wrote: > > > virt-sysprep either runs with all default operations or a selected > > > list of operations with the --enable argument. A few times I've > > > found I'd like to use the default list, but minus one or two > > > operations in particular, however there's no easy way to specify > > > this. > > > > > > A --disable argument that took the default operation list and > > > skipped > > > selected operations would be useful. > > > > A rough idea I had about this is adding a new --operations > > parameter, > > which would take a a comma-separated list of operations (just like > > the current --enable), but with the following differences: > > - a leading minus would disable the specified operation > > - it would recognize the meta-keywords "all" (for all the available > > > > operations) and "defaults" (for the ones enabled by default) > > > > Processing the list of operations would add/remove them from the > > current set of operations, bailing out whether the resulting set is > > empty (just like right now --enable rejects an empty string). > > > > This way, you could write e.g.: > > - --operations defaults,-hostname,user-account > > > > runs the default ones but not "hostname", and the non-default > > "user-account" > > > > - --operations all > > > > easy shortcut to run all the available operations > > > > and so on. > > > > --enable could just be an alias for --operations, or this new syntax > > could be added directly to --enable directly. > > > > Maybe I'm over-engineering, but IMHO seems a better way than > > potentially adding a --disable argument and deal with the order of > > --enable & --disable and their interactions. > > Seems reasonable. > > I guess only one --operations opt is allowed? > > Or would we allow multiple and concatenate them together? So that > > --operations foo,bar --operations -baz > > would be equivalent to > > --operations foo,bar,-baz > > ? > > Multiple --operations could be useful for scripting, ie. it would let > shell users write: > > opts="--operations all -a disk.img" > if [ $disable_foo ]; then opts="$opts --operations -foo"; fiI agree, allowing multiple --operations is a good thing. After all, given the proposed behaviour, every --operation would alter the existing set of operations (empty at the first --operation invocation, as with --enable), instead of starting from scratch every time.> Another thing to test is whether the OCaml argument parser[1] can > handle '--operations -foo' without thinking that -foo is a separate > arg.Ah yes, I read about the unsupported --foo=arg syntax. OTOH, it seems that "--foo --foo", with --foo taking an Arg.String, gives "--foo" as value for it, so should be safe for us. -- Pino Toscano
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