You define the ESX
agency scope of a solution by passing the managed object references (MoRefs) of
the vSphere compute resources to the solution.
You set the initial ESX agency scope in the scope property of the AgencyConfigInfo object. You can
change the scope when a solution runs by calling the Agency.update() method. For
example, in your solution, a user can select the ESXi hosts on which to run
the solution from a list on the solution Configuration page. The solution can update the
scope of the sample ESX agency according to the hosts that the user selects.
Your solution can define a function to update the scope
of the ESX agency in the MyAgentHandler.java class.
Procedure
-
Write a function that
implements the vSphere Web Services API to detect compute resources on which to
run the solution.
Your solution can provide a helper class,
MyVcUtils.java, that
defines functions to obtain the compute resources on which to run the solution.
MyAgentHandler.java calls the
MyVcUtils.getComputeResources() method to obtain a list of
ManagedObjectReference objects
for the
ESXi hosts running in
vCenter Server.
public void updateConfig(String[] updates) throws RuntimeFaultFaultMsg {
waitForSetup();
boolean changed = false;
Map<String, ManagedObjectReference> crs = _myvcUtils.getComputeResources();
-
Add the
ManagedObjectReference
objects for the compute resources to a
HashSet that defines
the ESX agency scope.
The
MyAgentHandler.java class adds
the list of
ManagedObjectReference objects that the
MyVcUtils.getComputeResources()
method returns to the existing scope and updates the list if additional compute resources
are present.
Set<ManagedObjectReference> newScope = new HashSet<ManagedObjectReference>();
for (String update : updates) {
String[] kv = update.split("=", 2);
if (kv[0].equals("scope")) {
try {
ManagedObjectReference cr = crs.get(kv[1]);
if (cr == null) {
continue;
}
ManagedObjectReference moRef = new ManagedObjectReference();
moRef.setType(cr.getType());
moRef.setValue(cr.getValue());
newScope.add(moRef);
}
catch (NullPointerException e) {
// ignore
}
}
}
-
Create an
AgencyComputeResourceScope
instance to contain the scope
HashSet.
AgencyComputeResourceScope scopeDO = (AgencyComputeResourceScope) _agencyConfigInfo.getScope();
Set<ManagedObjectReference> oldScope = new HashSet<ManagedObjectReference>(scopeDO.getComputeResource());
-
Compare the old scope to
the new scope to establish whether any compute resources have been added or
removed.
The
MyAgentHandler.java class
compares the size of the new scope to the initial scope and adds any new compute resources
to the
HashSet of
ManagedObjectReference
objects.
if (!oldScope.containsAll(newScope) || oldScope.size() != newScope.size()) {
AgencyComputeResourceScope scope = new AgencyComputeResourceScope();
scope.getComputeResource().addAll(newScope);
agencyConfigInfo.setScope(scope);
changed = true;
}
-
If the new scope differs
from the old scope, call
Agency.update() to add
the new scope to the ESX agency.
if (changed) {
assert _agency != null;
try {
_eamConnection.getStub().update(_agency, agencyConfigInfo);
} catch (Exception e) {
_log.error("Failed to update agency. Reason: " + e.getMessage());
}
updateConfiguration();
}
}
Results
You defined a function in a
solution to detect changes of scope and to update an ESX agency.