I've a class that has some callbacks and its own interface, something like:
class Service:
     def __init__(self):
         connect("service_resolved", self.service_resolved)
     def service_resolved(self, a,b c):
         ''' This function is called when it's triggered 
             service resolved signal and has a lot of parameters'''
the connect function is for example the gtkwidget.connect, but I want that this connection is something more general, so I've decided to use a "twisted like" approach:
class MyService(Service):
   def my_on_service_resolved(self, little_param):
          ''' it's a decorated version of srvice_resolved '''
   def service_resolved(self,a,b,c):
       super(MyService,self).service_resolved(a,b,c)
       little_param = "something that's obtained from a,b,c"
       self.my_on_service_resolved(little_param)
So I can use MyService by overriding my_on_service_resolved.
The problem is the "attributes" pollution. In the real implementation, Service has some attributes that can accidentally be overriden in MyService and those who subclass MyService.
How can I avoid attribute pollution?
What I've thought is a "wrapper" like approach but I don't know if it's a good solution:
class WrapperService():
    def __init__(self):
        self._service = service_resolved
        # how to override self._service.service_resolved callback?
    def my_on_service_resolved(self,param):
        '''
        '''