import org.apache.commons.text.WordUtils;
import org.checkerframework.checker.lock.qual.GuardedBy;
import org.opendaylight.controller.cluster.datastore.DatastoreContext.Builder;
-import org.opendaylight.yang.gen.v1.urn.opendaylight.params.xml.ns.yang.controller.config.distributed.datastore.provider.rev140612.DataStoreProperties;
-import org.opendaylight.yang.gen.v1.urn.opendaylight.params.xml.ns.yang.controller.config.distributed.datastore.provider.rev140612.DataStorePropertiesContainer;
+import org.opendaylight.yang.gen.v1.urn.opendaylight.params.xml.ns.yang.controller.config.distributed.datastore.provider.rev231229.DataStoreProperties;
+import org.opendaylight.yang.gen.v1.urn.opendaylight.params.xml.ns.yang.controller.config.distributed.datastore.provider.rev231229.DataStorePropertiesContainer;
import org.opendaylight.yangtools.yang.common.Uint16;
import org.opendaylight.yangtools.yang.common.Uint32;
import org.opendaylight.yangtools.yang.common.Uint64;
// This must be a yang-defined type. We need to find the constructor that takes a
// primitive as the only argument. This will be used to construct instances to perform
// validation (eg range checking). The yang-generated types have a couple single-argument
- // constructors but the one we want has the bean ConstructorProperties annotation.
+ // constructors but the one we want has the ConstructorParameters annotation.
for (final Constructor<?> ctor: propertyType.getConstructors()) {
final ConstructorParameters ctorParAnnotation = ctor.getAnnotation(ConstructorParameters.class);
if (ctor.getParameterCount() == 1 && ctorParAnnotation != null) {