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title: PyAGL
---
-# PyAGL
+# 0. Intro
+## Main purpose
+PyAGL was written to be used as a testing framework replacing the Lua afb-test one,
+however the modules are written in a way that could be used as standalone utilities to query
+and evaluate apis and verbs from the App Framework Binder services in AGL.
+
+## High level overview
+Python compatibility:
+Initial development PyAGL was done with Python **3.6** in mind, heavily using f-strings and a few typings. As of writing this
+documentation(June 3rd 2021), current stable AGL version is Koi 11.0.2 which has Python 3.8, and further development is
+done using 3.8 and 3.9 runtimes although **no** version-specific features are used from later versions;
+features **used** are kept within features **offered** by Python version first used for PyAGL in AGL Jellyfish.
+
+The test suite is written in a relatively standard way of extending **pytest** with a couple tweaks
+tailored to Jenkins CI and LAVA for AGL with regards to output and timings/timeouts, and these tweaks are enabled by running `pytest -L`
+in order to enable LAVA logging behavior.
+
+The way PyAGL works could be summarized in several bullets below:
+ * `websockets` package is used to communicate to the services, `x-afb-ws-json1` is used as a subprotocol,
+ * base.py provides AGLBaseService to be extended for each service
+ * AGLBaseService has a portfinder() routine which will use `asyncssh` if used remotely,
+to figure out the port of the service's websocket that is listening on. When this was implemented services had a hardcoded listening port,
+and was often changed when a new service was introduced. If you specify port, pyagl will connect to it directly. If no port is specified and
+portfinder() cannot find the process or listening port should throw an exception and exit.
+ * main() implementations in most PyAGL services' bindings are intended to be used as a convenient standalone utility to query verbs, although
+not necessarily available.
+ * PyAGL bindings are organized in classes, method names and respective parameters mostly adhere to service verbs/apis described
+per service in https://git.automotivelinux.org/apps/agl-service-*/about
+For example, in https://git.automotivelinux.org/apps/agl-service-audiomixer/about/ the docs for the service describe 5 verbs -
+subscribe, unsubscribe, list_controls, volume, mute - and their respective methods in audiomixer.py.
+ * as mentioned above `pytest` package is required for unit tests.
+ * `pytest-async` is needed by pytest to cooperate with asyncio
+ * `pytest-dependency` is used in cases where specific testing order is needed and used via decorators
+
+# 1. Using PyAGL
+There are few prerequisites to start using it. First, your AGL image **must** be bitbaked with **agl-devel** feature when sourcing aglsetup.sh;
+if not - the running AGL instance won't have websocket services exposed to listening TCP ports and PyAGL will fail to connect.
+
+```bash
+git clone "https://gerrit.automotivelinux.org/gerrit/src/pyagl"
+```
+Preferably create a virtualenv and install the packages in the env
+```bash
+pip install -r requirements.txt
+```
+Hard requirements are asyncssh, websockets, pytest, pytest-dependency, pytest-async; the others in the file are dependencies of the mentioned packages.
+```
+cd pyagl/pyagl/services
+python3 audiomixer.py 192.168.234.34 --list_controls
+```
+or if you have installed PyAGL as python package
+```
+python3 -m pyagl.services.audiomixer --list_controls
+```
+should produce the following or similar result depending on how many controls are exposed and which AGL version you are running:
+```
+matching services: ['afm-service-agl-service-audiomixer--0.1--main@1001.service']
+Requesting list_controls with id 359450446
+[RESPONSE][Status: success][359450446][Info: None][Data: [{'control': 'Master Playback', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0},
+{'control': 'Playback: Speech-Low', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0}, {'control': 'Playback: Emergency', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0},
+{'control': 'Playback: Speech-High', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0}, {'control': 'Playback: Navigation', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0},
+{'control': 'Playback: Multimedia', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0}, {'control': 'Playback: Custom-Low', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0},
+{'control': 'Playback: Communication', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0}, {'control': 'Playback: Custom-High', 'volume': 1.0, 'mute': 0}]]
+```
+
+# 2. Running the tests
+
+## Locally - On the board itself
+There is the /usr/bin/pyagl script which invokes the tests residing in
+`/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pyagl/tests`
+
+```
+qemux86-64:~# pyagl
+=================== test session starts =============================
+platform linux -- Python 3.8.2, pytest-5.3.5, py-1.8.1, pluggy-0.13.1
+rootdir: /usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pyagl, inifile: pytest.ini
+plugins: dependency-0.5.1, asyncio-0.10.0, reverse-1.0.1
+collected 213 items
+
+test_audiomixer.py ....... [ 3%]
+test_bluetooth.py ............xxxsxx [ 11%]
+test_bluetooth_map.py .x.xs.
+...
+```
+
+## Remotely
+You must export `AGL_TGT_IP` environment variable first, containing a string with a reachable IP address
+configured(either DHCP or static) on one of the interfeces on the AGL instance(board or vm) on your network.
+`AGL_TGT_PORT` is not required, however can be exported to skip over connecting to the board via ssh first
+in order to figure out the listening port of service.
+
+```
+user@debian:~$ source ~/.virtualenvs/pyagl/bin/activate
+(pyagl) user@debian:~$ export AGL_TGT_IP=192.168.234.34
+(pyagl) user@debian:~$ cd pydev/pyagl/pyagl/tests
+(pyagl) user@debian:~/pydev/pyagl/pyagl/tests$ pytest test_geoclue.py
+========================= test session starts =========================
+platform linux -- Python 3.9.2, pytest-5.4.1, py-1.8.1, pluggy-0.13.1
+rootdir: /home/user/pydev/pyagl/pyagl, inifile: pytest.ini
+plugins: dependency-0.5.1, asyncio-0.11.0
+collected 3 items
+
+test_geoclue.py ... [100%]
+```
+# 3. Writing bindings and/or tests for new services
+Templates directory contains barebone _cookiecutter_ templates to create your project.
+If you do not intend to use cookiecutter, you need a simple service file in which you inherit AGLBaseService
+from base.py.
+You can take a look at pyagl/services/geoclue.py and pyagl/tests/test_geoclue.py which is probably the
+simplest binding in PyAGL for a reference and example. All basic methods like
+send|receive|un/subscribe|portfinder are implemented in the base class.
+You would need to do minimal work to create new service binding from scratch and by example of the geoclue you need to do the following:
+- do the basic imports
+```
+from pyagl.services.base import AGLBaseService, AFBResponse
+import asyncio
+import os
+```
+- inherit AGLBaseService and type in the service class member the service name presuming you are following the AGL naming convention:
+(if your new service does not follow the convention, the portfider routine wont work and you'll have to specify service port manually)
+```
+class GeoClueService(AGLBaseService):
+ service = 'agl-service-geoclue'
+```
+- if you intend to run the new service binding as a standalone utility, you might want to add your new options to the argparser
+```
+ parser = AGLBaseService.getparser()
+ parser.add_argument('--location', help='Get current location', action='store_true')
+```
+- override the __init__ method with the respective parameters as api(used in the binding) and systemd service slug
+```
+ def __init__(self, ip, port=None, api='geoclue'):
+ super().__init__(ip=ip, port=port, api=api, service='agl-service-geoclue')
+```
+- define your methods and send requests with .request() which prepares the data in a JSON format, request returns message id
+```
+ async def location(self):
+ return await self.request('location')
+```
+- get the raw response with data = await .response() or use .afbresponse() to get structured data
+
+README.md in the root directory of the project also contains useful information.
-FIXME.