an example for an alias would be nice, but could be done in a follow up
Reviewed-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csa...@proxmox.com>
On 11/06/2017 02:54 PM, Thomas Lamprecht wrote:
---
src/PVE/CLIHandler.pm | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 22 insertions(+)
diff --git a/src/PVE/CLIHandler.pm b/src/PVE/CLIHandler.pm
index 5111b7a..a771e40 100644
--- a/src/PVE/CLIHandler.pm
+++ b/src/PVE/CLIHandler.pm
@@ -10,6 +10,28 @@ use PVE::INotify;
use base qw(PVE::RESTHandler);
+# $cmddef defines which (sub)commands are available in a specific CLI class.
+# A real command is always an array consisting of its class, name, array of
+# position fixed (required) parameters and hash of predefined parameters when
+# mapping a CLI command t o an API call. Optionally an output method can be
+# passed at the end, e.g., for formatting or transformation purpose.
+#
+# [class, name, fixed_params, API_pre-set params, output_sub ]
+#
+# In case of so called 'simple commands', the $cmddef can be also just an
+# array.
+#
+# Examples:
+# $cmddef = {
+# command => [ 'PVE::API2::Class', 'command', [ 'arg1', 'arg2' ], { node
=> $nodename } ],
+# do => {
+# this => [ 'PVE::API2::OtherClass', 'method', [ 'arg1' ], undef, sub {
+# my ($res) = @_;
+# print "$res\n";
+# }],
+# that => [ 'PVE::API2::OtherClass', 'subroutine' [] ],
+# },
+# }
my $cmddef;
my $exename;
my $cli_handler_class;
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