in order to test this you will need the freeopcua library. I want to offer the user a list of methods available on the server. The user can detect which methods exist. (through an enum)
All these functions have a variable amount of input args and output args.
now with freeopcua you call a method like
node.call_method("2:myMethod1", 1,2,3,4)
However what I have available is [1,2,3,4]. (is thats the user input I get) Would there be a way to parse this so it fits as myMethod arguments?
Minimal code to run the issue (not at all my code but it will give the idea of where I want to go:
myServer.py: (Only needed to have the methods no issue in here)
from opcua import Server, ua, uamethod
from enum import Enum
class methods(Enum):
add = "add"
multi = "more"
person = "notInt"
class myServer(Server):
def __init__(self):
Server.__init__(self)
self.set_endpoint("opc.tcp://0.0.0.0:4840/freeopcua/server/")
self.set_server_name("FreeOpcUa Example Server")
uri = "http://examples.freeopcua.github.io"
self.idx = self.register_namespace(uri)
# Automatically creates server methods of the methods I promise to offer
for mymethod in methods:
args = self.methodCreator(mymethod)
args[1]
self.nodes.objects.add_method(args[0], args[1], args[2], args[3], args[4])
self.start()
def methodCreator(self, method_type):
inargs = None
outargs = None
method = None
if method_type == methods.add:
inargs = []
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "first_number"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "second_number"
inargs.append(inarg)
method = self.multi
return [2, method_type.value, method, inargs, outargs]
elif method_type == methods.multi:
inargs = []
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "first_number"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "second_number"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "third_number"
inargs.append(inarg)
method = self.add
return [2, method_type.value, method, inargs, outargs]
elif method_type == methods.person:
inargs = []
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "Name"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "Age"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "Surname"
inargs.append(inarg)
inarg = ua.Argument()
inarg.Name = "Job"
inargs.append(inarg)
method = self.person
return [2, method_type.value, method, inargs, outargs]
@uamethod
def add(self, parent, x, y):
print(x+y)
@uamethod
def multi(self, parentm, x, y, z):
print(x*y*z)
@uamethod
def person(self, parent, name, age, surname, job):
print("I'm %s %s I'm %s years old and I do %s" % (name, surname, age, job))
Now the file it's all about:
myClient.py
from stack.server import myServer, methods
from opcua import Client
class myClient(Client):
def call_functions(self):
print("Implemented methods:")
values = []
for method in methods:
print(method.value)
values.append(method.value)
#In my real code I check input but here I'll trust the user
method = input("Select a method please: \n")
objects = self.nodes.objects
inarguments = objects.get_child(["2:" + method, "0:InputArguments"]).get_value()
inargs = []
for argument in inarguments:
inargs.append(input("%s: " % argument.Name))
# I disabled some methods to make sure I just need to show one case
if method == 'notInt':
print("Desired")
objects.call_method("2:" + method, inargs[0], inargs[1], inargs[2], inargs[3])
print("error")
objects.call_method("2:" + method, inargs) # This is the line that wont work
server = myServer()
with myClient("opc.tcp://localhost:4840/freeopcua/server/") as client:
client.call_functions()
server.stop()
So when I want to call the method generic like:
objects.call_method("2:" + method, inargs)
Which for 'notInt' would have the desired output as if I did:
objects.call_method("2:" + method, inargs[0], inargs[1], inargs[2], inargs[3])
Is there a way in python to get this parsed from array to list of input args seperated by ,? So that I can keep my generic way to call each method? Or in freeopcua is there a way to get the desired affect (keep in mind that I use the argument names to ask the user for his input so just making it take a list as input wont be a sollution)