Application Delivery Management

Dependency detection

Components in a StyleBook can refer to properties or sections of other components in the same StyleBook. Components are complete blocks by themselves and they may not be written in the same order that they have to be executed. The StyleBook compiler checks the order in which the components are written and then executes them in a logical order.

Example:

components:
  -
    name: lbvserver-comp
    type: ns::lbvserver
    properties:
      name: mylb
      ipv46: 10.102.190.15
      port: 80
      servicetype: HTTP
 -
    name: lb-sg-binding-comp
    type: ns::lbvserver_servicegroup_binding
    condition: $parameters.create-binding
    properties:
      name: $components.lbvserver-comp.properties.name
      servicegroupname: $components.sg-comp.properties.servicegroupname
-
    name: sg-comp
    type: ns::servicegroup
    properties:
      servicegroupname: mysg
      servicetype: HTTP
<!--NeedCopy-->

In the above example, there are three components defined - lbvserver-comp, lb-sg-binding-comp, and sg-comp. When this StyleBook is executed, the lbvserver-comp is first created. The lb-sg-binding-comp refers to lbvserver-comp properties, but it cannot be created next though it is the second component defined in the StyleBook. This is because the lb-sg-binding-comp also has a dependency on the sg-comp which is yet to be created. As a result, the compiler reorders the components so that the dependencies of a component are resolved by the time a component is created, and executes this reordered list of components. The order of execution of the above StyleBook is: lbvserver-comp, sg-comp, and lb-sg-binding-comp.

Thus, the author of a StyleBook need not worry about the correct order of the components. The components may appear in any order. The compiler computes the correct order of execution of the components based on how the components refer each other. Note that this dependency detection and reordering also works for substitutions and outputs sections as well.

Cyclic Dependencies

Since a component may refer another component, it is possible that cycle of dependencies may be introduced in the definition of the StyleBook. For example, if component A refers to a property defined in component B, which again refers to a property defined in component A. This kind of dependency is called cyclic dependencies. Cyclic dependencies cannot be resolved automatically. The author of the StyleBook should manually correct the StyleBook definition to eliminate such cyclic dependencies. The compiler will be able to identify cyclic dependencies - if they exist, and report it.

The following example shows a cyclic dependency of components:


components:
  -
    name: lbvserver-comp
    type: ns::lbvserver
    properties:
      name: $components.lb-sg-binding-comp.properties.name
      ipv46: 10.102.190.15
      port: 80
      servicetype: HTTP
  -
    name: lb-sg-binding-comp
    type: ns::lbvserver_servicegroup_binding
    condition: $parameters.create-binding
    properties:
     name: mylb
      servicegroupname: $components.sg-comp.properties.servicegroupname
  -
    name: sg-comp
    type: ns::servicegroup
    properties:
      servicegroupname: mysg
      servicetype: $components.lbvserver-comp.properties.servicetype
<!--NeedCopy-->

In the above example, there are three components: lbvserver-comp, lb-sg-binding-comp, and sg-comp. lbvserver-comp depends on lb-sg-binding-comp, lb-sg-binding comp depends on sg-comp and sg-comp depends on lbvserver-comp. Here, a cycle of dependencies among these components is formed and this cannot be resolved automatically. As a result, this StyleBook cannot be executed. The StyleBook compiler detects this and prevents the StyleBook from being imported into NetScaler Console.

Dependency detection