Conductor Documentation

Widget Definition

Each widget.js file must have a call to the Stage.defineWidget global function.

Example

The following code demonstrates how easy it is to create a simple widget. You can copy this code and put it in a widget.js file to produce a fully working widget. See the previous section for the directory structure guidelines.

Stage.defineWidget({
    id: 'my-widget',
    name: 'My Widget',
    description: 'This widget displays "Hello World!" text',
    isReact: true,
    categories: [Stage.GenericConfig.CATEGORY.OTHERS],
    permission: Stage.GenericConfig.CUSTOM_WIDGET_PERMISSIONS.CUSTOM_ALL,

    render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
        return (
            <span>Hello World!</span>
        );
    }    
});

Widget Settings

As seen in the example above, there are some configuration fields that you can provide when you design a widget.

The Stage.defineWidget function receives a settings object with the options described in this table.

Option Type Required Default Description
categories array No ['Others'] This property specifies in which categories this widget is shown. It can take an array containing one or more of the values defined in Stage.GenericConfig.CATEGORY object: BLUEPRINTS (‘Blueprints’ category), DEPLOYMENTS (‘Deployments’), BUTTONS_AND_FILTERS (‘Buttons and Filters’), CHARTS_AND_STATISTICS (‘Charts and Statistics’), EXECUTIONS_NODES (‘Executions/Nodes’), SYSTEM_RESOURCES (‘System Resources’), OTHERS (‘Others’), ALL (‘All’).
color string No no color Widget’s top border color. One of the following: red, orange, yellow, olive, green, teal, blue, violet, purple, pink, brown, grey, black or undefined.
description string No translation bundle entry for widgets.[id].description, no value if not available Description of the widget that is displayed in the Add Widget modal.
fetchUrl string/object No - If fetchUrl exists, the data from the URL is fetched by the application and passed to the render and postRender methods. To fetch multiple URLs, you must pass an object where the key is a name you select for this data, and the value is the URL. It is important to note that the render is called once before the data is fetched (to enable information about loading or partial data can be displayed) and once after the data is fetched.
hasReadme boolean No false Whether to use README.md file. File must be present in widget’s main directory. If helpUrl is defined and hasReadme is set to true, then helpUrl is used.
hasStyle boolean No false Whether to use style.css file. File must be present in widget main directory.
hasTemplate boolean No false Whether to use widget.html file as template. File must be present in widget main directory.
helpUrl string No - URL to help webpage. If helpUrl is defined and hasReadme is set to true, then helpUrl is used.
id string Yes - The ID of the widget definition. Must match the name of the directory into which it is placed.
initialConfiguration array No [] A list of widget configuration options. The options are displayed when a user clicks the Configure icon in the top-right corner of the widget in Edit Mode.
initialHeight string No 12 The default height of the widget when added to a page.
initialWidth string No 3 The default width of the widget when added to a page.
isReact boolean No true Set as true when writing a React widget.
name string No translation bundle entry for widgets.[id].name, no value if not available The display name of the widget that is displayed in the Add Widget modal. It is also used as the default widget name.
showBorder boolean No true Whether to display border of the widget.
showHeader boolean No true Whether to display a header. If a header is not displayed, a user cannot change the widget name.
supportedEditions array No [] A list of Studio Conductor license editions (strings) that widget is supported by. Widget is available only on Studio Conductor with one of the listed license editions installed. If not set (default), then widget availability will not be restricted to any specific license edition.
permission string No CUSTOM_ALL This property specifies which user can later access and view this widget. It can take one of the following three values defined in Stage.GenericConfig.CUSTOM_WIDGET_PERMISSIONS object: CUSTOM_ADMIN_ONLY (applies for ‘sys_admin’ and ‘manager’ roles), CUSTOM_SYS_ADMIN_ONLY (applies for ‘sys_admin’ only, CUSTOM_ALL (applies to all user-roles).

initialConfiguration

initialConfiguration supports 4 generic pre-made configuration fields:

In addition to listed above, you can create your own configuration fields. Example of configuration with user-defined fields:

    initialConfiguration: [
        Stage.GenericConfig.PAGE_SIZE_CONFIG(3),
        {id: 'username', name: 'Fetch with', placeHolder: "GitHub user", description: "...", default: "cloudify-examples", type: Stage.Basic.GenericField.STRING_TYPE},
        {id: 'filter', name: 'Filter', placeHolder:"GitHub filter", description: "...", default: "blueprint in:name NOT local", type: Stage.Basic.GenericField.STRING_TYPE},
        {id: "displayStyle", name: "Display style", items: [{name:'Table', value:'table'}, {name:'Catalog', value:'catalog'}], default: "catalog", type: Stage.Basic.GenericField.LIST_TYPE},
        Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_COLUMN_CONFIG('created_at'),
        Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_ASCENDING_CONFIG(false)
    ]

Full list of available configuration field types (value of type property) you can see in the Widget Components Reference) at GenericField component page in Conductor UI Components documentation.

Configuration fields values can be fetched in render method using widget.configuration object. See Accessing data in render() for details.

fetchUrl

There are two primary ways of polling data from remote sources: fetchUrl and fetchData().

fetchUrl is an object member and may be defined either as a string or an object with multiple string properties (property:URL) where each property represents a separate URL to query.

The following special strings are allowed to be used in URLs: [manager], [backend], [params]. Description for each one of them is provided later in this section.

Single URL

A single URL results are available directly in the data object.

fetchUrl:  'localhost:50123/public/nodes'
// ...
render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    let your_data = data;
    //...
}

Mulitple URL

In case fetchUrl is defined with multiple URLs, the results are accessible by the property name of this URL (i.e. data.nodes).

fetchUrl: {
    nodes: '[manager]/nodes?_include=id,deployment_id,blueprint_id,type,type_hierarchy,number_of_instances,host_id,relationships,created_by[params:blueprint_id,deployment_id,gridParams]',
    deployments: '[manager]/deployments?_include=id,groups[params:blueprint_id,id]'
}
// ...
render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    let nodes = data.nodes.items;
    let deployments = data.nodeInstances.items;
    //...
}
Tokens

As seen in the example above, URLs provided in fetchUrl can be parametrized with several special tokens:

fetchUrl: '[manager]/executions?is_system_workflow=false[params]'
manager

The [manager] token is replaced with the current Conductor Management Console backend IP address and call is forwarded to the Conductor Manager’s REST API.

backend

The [backend] token is replaced with the current Conductor Management Console backend IP address.

params

The [params] token is quite special. This placeholder can be expanded into a number of things depending on the usage:

  1. [params] alone anywhere in the URL is expanded to default pagination parameters (_size, _offset, _sort) if available
  1. [params:param_name1(,param_name2)] is replaced with “&paramName1:paramValue1” in the URL.

When using selective param picking ([params:param_name]) you can use a pre-defined gridParams tag to include:

instead of specifying explicitly each of the four.

It means that

  fetchUrl: '[manager]/agents?[params:gridParams]'

is equivalent to

  fetchUrl: '[manager]/agents?[params:_offset,_size,_sort,_search]'

Useful resources:

Inclusive Params

The following example illustrates fetchUrl with both tokens along with their URL:

initialConfiguration: [
    Stage.GenericConfig.POLLING_TIME_CONFIG(60),
    Stage.GenericConfig.PAGE_SIZE_CONFIG(),
    Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_COLUMN_CONFIG('column_name'),
    Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_ASCENDING_CONFIG(false)
],
fetchUrl: {
    nodes: '[manager]/nodes[params]'
},
fetchParams: function(widget, toolbox) {
    return {
        sampleFuncParam: 'dummy'
    }
}

Result URL: http://<MANAGER_IP>/sp/?su=/api/v3.1/nodes?&_sort=-column_name&_size=5&_offset=0&sampleFuncParam=dummy

This url can be divided into separate parts:

Field Example Description
manager address http://<MANAGER_IP>/sp/?su=/api/v3.1/ The internal value of Conductor Manager [manager]
endpoint name nodes? Remaining part of the REST endpoint address
generic params &_sort=-column_name&_size=5&_offset=0 Parameters that were implicitly added to request. These parameters are inferred from the GenericConfig objects in initialConfiguration and are responsible for pagination of the results. It is possible to omit them by explicitly specifying param names to be used like so [params:my-param]. Alternatively, gridParams (sort, size, offset) can be simply removed from initialConfiguration.
custom params &sampleFuncParam=dummy Custom parameters can be defined in fetchParams() function. Each custom parameter must be returned as a property of an Object returned by fetchParams() function.

Exclusive Params

The same URL, this time with explicit param names (and the gridParams tag):

initialConfiguration: [
    Stage.GenericConfig.POLLING_TIME_CONFIG(60),
    Stage.GenericConfig.PAGE_SIZE_CONFIG(),
    Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_COLUMN_CONFIG('column_name'),
    Stage.GenericConfig.SORT_ASCENDING_CONFIG(false)
],
fetchUrl: {
    nodes: '[manager]/nodes[params:sampleFuncParam,gridParams]'
//  which is essentially the same as
//  nodes: '[manager]/nodes[params:sampleFuncParam,_size,_offset_,_sort]'
},
fetchParams: function(widget, toolbox) {
    return {
        sampleFuncParam: 'dummy'
    }
}

Result URL: http://<MANAGER_IP>/sp/?su=/api/v3.1/nodes?&sampleFuncParam=dummy&_sort=-column_name&_size=5&_offset=0

Widget Functions

The following functions are available to be defined for custom widgets (they must be provided as properties of object passed to Stage.defineWidget function).

init()

Called when the widget definition is loaded, which occurs after the system is loaded. Can be used to define certain elements, for example classes and objects that are used in the widget definition.

render(widget, data, error, toolbox)

Called each time that the widget needs to draw itself. This can occur when the page is loaded, widget data is changed, context data is changed, widget data is fetched, and so on.

render parameters are:

render() is focal to the appearance of the widget. The return value of this function should be one of these:

The following examples illustrates typical usages of render function.

Rendering ReactJS components

When isReact parameter is set to true:

render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    return (
        <span>Hello World!</span>
    );
}

You can learn how to render ReactJS elements and components starting from here.

Using ready components

Although using React DOM Elements (similar to plain HTML tags) gives you extreme flexibility, usually it is much quicker to design your widget with the use of Conductor Management Console ready-made components. These components were designed with Console uniformity and ease-of-use in mind, and as are very easy to learn and use.

The following example illustrates how to use a KeyIndicator component:

render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    let { KeyIndicator } = Stage.Basic;

    return (
        <KeyIndicator title='User Stars' icon='star' number={3} />
    );
}

Notice that the KeyIndicator component is imported into the widget. It is defined in the render method as:

const { KeyIndicator } = Stage.Basic;

You can also import multiple components in the same line, for example:

const { KeyIndicator, Checkmark } = Stage.Basic;

Description of other built-in components is available here.

Rendering HTML (plain JavaScript)

When isReact parameter is set to false:

render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    return "<span>Hello World!</span>";
}
HTML template

The widget template is an html file (widget.html) written with lodash template engine.

Widget template is fetched when the widget definition is loaded (only if hasTemplate parameter is set to true). The template is passed to the render function through widget argument. To access it use widget.definition.template.

To render the template using the built in lodash templates engine use _.template(widget.definition.template)(data);, where ‘data’ is any context you want to pass on to the template. For example, a simple render function looks like this:

render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    if (!widget.definition.template) {
        return 'missing template';
    }
    return _.template(widget.definition.template)(data);
}

Accessing data

There can be several independent data sources for your widget. Two most commonly used are the configuration and data objects. The following example illustrates how to access both of them:

Stage.defineWidget({
    id: 'my-widget',
    name: 'My widget',
    description: 'This widget polls data from two different sources',
    isReact: true,
    initialConfiguration: [
        {id: 'confText', name: 'Conf Item',  placeHolder: 'Configuration text item', default: 'Conf text', type: Stage.Basic.GenericField.STRING_TYPE}
    ],
    permission: Stage.GenericConfig.CUSTOM_WIDGET_PERMISSIONS.CUSTOM_ALL,

    fetchData: function(widget, toolbox, params) {
        return Promise.resolve({fetchedText: 'Fetched text'});
    },

    render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
        let {Loading} = Stage.Basic;

        if (_.isEmpty(data)) { // Make sure the data is already fetched, if not show a loading spinner
            return (<Loading message='Loading data...'></Loading>);
        } else {  
            return (
                <div>
                    <p>confItem value: {widget.configuration.confText}</p>
                    <p>fetchedText value: {data.fetchedText}</p>
                </div>
            );
        }
    }
});

The above widget will display two lines containing the strings defined in the data sources: “Conf text” and “Fetched Text”. Please note how the widget makes sure data has been loaded has completed before rendering it. Skipping this check would result in an error in browser console.

Default value of initialConfiguration fields, as the name suggests, is only used if there are no user defined values for these properties. A user can change them by entering the Edit Mode where he can modify widget’s configuration. From that point, the current widget will use the value provided by the user. To reset it to it’s default value, the widget must be removed and re-added to the page.

Moreover, please remember to remove and re-add the widget to the dashboard if changing the initialConfiguration field. It is only loaded for newly ‘mounted’ widgets.

postRender(container, widget, data, toolbox)

Non-React widgets only.

postRender is called immediately after the widget has been made visible in the Conductor Management Console. This function has access to the same objects as the render function with one addition - the container object containing a reference to the widget’s container (parent) object.

fetchData(widget, toolbox, params)

An alternative to using fetchUrl is the fetchData() function. It provides greater flexibility when you need to pre-process your results or chain them into nested Promises (ie. pull a list of URLs and resolve each of those URLs).

fetchData() parameters are:

The return value for fetchData() is expected to be a Promise. As such if you would like to return a primitive value you would need to wrap it in a promise:

fetchData: function(widget, toolbox, params) {
    return Promise.resolve({key:value});
}

Please note that should the result be a single primitive value you still need to return it as a property of an Object, since referencing the Object directly is illegal in ReactJS. With this in mind, the following example would not work:

// THIS WILL NOT WORK
fetchData: function(widget, toolbox, params) {
    return 10;
},

render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox){
    return (
        <div>
            {data}  // This will produce a runtime error
        </div>
    )
}

Instead, you can return the int value as a property of the object like so:

fetchData: function(widget, toolbox, params) {
    return {myInt: 10};
},
render: function(widget, data, error, toolbox) {
    return (
        <div>
            {data.myInt}  // OK
        </div>
    )
}

Note: fetchUrl and fetchData() are mutually exclusive, that is if you define fetchUrl in your widget, then fetchData() definition is ignored.

fetchParams(widget, toolbox)

fetchParams() function delivers query parameters to

Example for fetchUrl:

fetchUrl: '[manager]/nodes[params]',
fetchParams: function(widget, toolbox) {
    let deploymentId = toolbox.getContext().getValue('deploymentId');

    return {deployment_id: deploymentId};
}

Example for fetchData():

fetchData: function(widget, toolbox, params) {
    return toolbox.getManager().doGet('/nodes', params);
},
fetchParams: function(widget, toolbox) {
    let deploymentId = toolbox.getContext().getValue('deploymentId');

    return {deployment_id: deploymentId};
}