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RELEASE_PROCESS.markdown |
Puppet Labs Standard Library
This module provides a "standard library" of resources for developing Puppet Modules. This modules will include the following additions to Puppet
- Stages
- Facts
- Functions
- Defined resource types
- Types
- Providers
This module is officially curated and provided by Puppet Labs. The modules Puppet Labs writes and distributes will make heavy use of this standard library.
To report or research a bug with any part of this module, please go to http://tickets.puppetlabs.com/browse/PUP
Versions
This module follows semver.org (v1.0.0) versioning guidelines. The standard library module is released as part of Puppet Enterprise and as a result older versions of Puppet Enterprise that Puppet Labs still supports will have bugfix maintenance branches periodically "merged up" into master. The current list of integration branches are:
- v2.1.x (v2.1.1 released in PE 1)
- v2.2.x (Never released as part of PE, only to the Forge)
- v2.3.x (Released in PE 2)
- v3.0.x (Released in PE 3)
- v4.0.x (Maintains compatibility with v3.x despite the major semantic version bump. Compatible with Puppet 2.7.x)
- v5.x (To be released when stdlib can drop support for Puppet 2.7.x. Please see this discussion)
- master (mainline development branch)
The first Puppet Enterprise version including the stdlib module is Puppet Enterprise 1.2.
Compatibility
Puppet Versions | < 2.6 | 2.6 | 2.7 | 3.x |
---|---|---|---|---|
stdlib 2.x | no | yes | yes | no |
stdlib 3.x | no | no | yes | yes |
stdlib 4.x | no | no | yes | yes |
The stdlib module does not work with Puppet versions released prior to Puppet 2.6.0.
stdlib 2.x
All stdlib releases in the 2.0 major version support Puppet 2.6 and Puppet 2.7.
stdlib 3.x
The 3.0 major release of stdlib drops support for Puppet 2.6. Stdlib 3.x supports Puppet 2 and Puppet 3.
stdlib 4.x
The 4.0 major release of stdlib was intended to drop support for Puppet 2.7, but the impact on end users was too high. The decision was made to treat stdlib 4.x as a continuation of stdlib 3.x support. Stdlib 4.x supports Puppet 2.7 and 3. Notably, ruby 1.8.5 is no longer supported though ruby 1.8.7, 1.9.3, and 2.0.0 are fully supported.
Functions
abs
Returns the absolute value of a number, for example -34.56 becomes 34.56. Takes a single integer and float value as an argument.
- Type: rvalue
any2array
This converts any object to an array containing that object. Empty argument lists are converted to an empty array. Arrays are left untouched. Hashes are converted to arrays of alternating keys and values.
- Type: rvalue
base64
Converts a string to and from base64 encoding. Requires an action ['encode','decode'] and either a plain or base64 encoded string
- Type: rvalue
bool2num
Converts a boolean to a number. Converts the values: false, f, 0, n, and no to 0 true, t, 1, y, and yes to 1 Requires a single boolean or string as an input.
- Type: rvalue
capitalize
Capitalizes the first letter of a string or array of strings. Requires either a single string or an array as an input.
- Type: rvalue
chomp
Removes the record separator from the end of a string or an array of
strings, for example hello\n
becomes hello
.
Requires a single string or array as an input.
- Type: rvalue
chop
Returns a new string with the last character removed. If the string ends
with \r\n
, both characters are removed. Applying chop to an empty
string returns an empty string. If you wish to merely remove record
separators then you should use the chomp
function.
Requires a string or array of strings as input.
- Type: rvalue
concat
Appends the contents of array 2 onto array 1.
Example:
concat(['1','2','3'],['4','5','6'])
Would result in:
['1','2','3','4','5','6']
concat(['1','2','3'],'4')
Would result in:
['1','2','3','4']
- Type: rvalue
count
Takes an array as first argument and an optional second argument. Count the number of elements in array that matches second argument. If called with only an array it counts the number of elements that are not nil/undef.
- Type: rvalue
defined_with_params
Takes a resource reference and an optional hash of attributes.
Returns true if a resource with the specified attributes has already been added to the catalog, and false otherwise.
user { 'dan':
ensure => present,
}
if ! defined_with_params(User[dan], {'ensure' => 'present' }) {
user { 'dan': ensure => present, }
}
- Type: rvalue
delete
Deletes all instances of a given element from an array, substring from a string, or key from a hash.
Examples:
delete(['a','b','c','b'], 'b')
Would return: ['a','c']
delete({'a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3}, 'b')
Would return: {'a'=>1,'c'=>3}
delete('abracadabra', 'bra')
Would return: 'acada'
- Type: rvalue
delete_at
Deletes a determined indexed value from an array.
Examples:
delete_at(['a','b','c'], 1)
Would return: ['a','c']
- Type: rvalue
delete_values
Deletes all instances of a given value from a hash.
Examples:
delete_values({'a'=>'A','b'=>'B','c'=>'C','B'=>'D'}, 'B')
Would return: {'a'=>'A','c'=>'C','B'=>'D'}
- Type: rvalue
delete_undef_values
Deletes all instances of the undef value from an array or hash.
Examples:
$hash = delete_undef_values({a=>'A', b=>'', c=>undef, d => false})
Would return: {a => 'A', b => '', d => false}
$array = delete_undef_values(['A','',undef,false])
Would return: ['A','',false]
- Type: rvalue
difference
This function returns the difference between two arrays. The returned array is a copy of the original array, removing any items that also appear in the second array.
Examples:
difference(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
Would return: ["a"]
dirname
Returns the dirname
of a path.
Examples:
dirname('/path/to/a/file.ext')
Would return: '/path/to/a'
downcase
Converts the case of a string or all strings in an array to lower case.
- Type: rvalue
empty
Returns true if the variable is empty.
- Type: rvalue
ensure_packages
Takes a list of packages and only installs them if they don't already exist. It optionally takes a hash as a second parameter that will be passed as the third argument to the ensure_resource() function.
- Type: statement
ensure_resource
Takes a resource type, title, and a list of attributes that describe a resource.
user { 'dan':
ensure => present,
}
This example only creates the resource if it does not already exist:
ensure_resource('user', 'dan', {'ensure' => 'present' })
If the resource already exists but does not match the specified parameters, this function will attempt to recreate the resource leading to a duplicate resource definition error.
An array of resources can also be passed in and each will be created with the type and parameters specified if it doesn't already exist.
ensure_resource('user', ['dan','alex'], {'ensure' => 'present'})
- Type: statement
file_line
This resource ensures that a given line is contained within a file. You can also use "match" to replace existing lines.
Examples:
file_line { 'sudo_rule':
path => '/etc/sudoers',
line => '%sudo ALL=(ALL) ALL',
}
file_line { 'change_mount':
path => '/etc/fstab',
line => '10.0.0.1:/vol/data /opt/data nfs defaults 0 0',
match => '^172.16.17.2:/vol/old',
}
- Type: resource
flatten
This function flattens any deeply nested arrays and returns a single flat array as a result.
Examples:
flatten(['a', ['b', ['c']]])
Would return: ['a','b','c']
- Type: rvalue
floor
Returns the largest integer less or equal to the argument. Takes a single numeric value as an argument.
- Type: rvalue
fqdn_rotate
Rotates an array a random number of times based on a nodes fqdn.
- Type: rvalue
get_module_path
Returns the absolute path of the specified module for the current environment.
Example: $module_path = get_module_path('stdlib')
- Type: rvalue
getparam
Takes a resource reference and name of the parameter and returns value of resource's parameter.
Examples:
define example_resource($param) {
}
example_resource { "example_resource_instance":
param => "param_value"
}
getparam(Example_resource["example_resource_instance"], "param")
Would return: param_value
- Type: rvalue
getvar
Lookup a variable in a remote namespace.
For example:
$foo = getvar('site::data::foo')
# Equivalent to $foo = $site::data::foo
This is useful if the namespace itself is stored in a string:
$datalocation = 'site::data'
$bar = getvar("${datalocation}::bar")
# Equivalent to $bar = $site::data::bar
- Type: rvalue
grep
This function searches through an array and returns any elements that match the provided regular expression.
Examples:
grep(['aaa','bbb','ccc','aaaddd'], 'aaa')
Would return:
['aaa','aaaddd']
- Type: rvalue
has_interface_with
Returns boolean based on kind and value:
- macaddress
- netmask
- ipaddress
- network
Examples:
has_interface_with("macaddress", "x:x:x:x:x:x")
has_interface_with("ipaddress", "127.0.0.1") => true
etc.
If no "kind" is given, then the presence of the interface is checked:
has_interface_with("lo") => true
- Type: rvalue
has_ip_address
Returns true if the client has the requested IP address on some interface.
This function iterates through the 'interfaces' fact and checks the 'ipaddress_IFACE' facts, performing a simple string comparison.
- Type: rvalue
has_ip_network
Returns true if the client has an IP address within the requested network.
This function iterates through the 'interfaces' fact and checks the 'network_IFACE' facts, performing a simple string comparision.
- Type: rvalue
has_key
Determine if a hash has a certain key value.
Example:
$my_hash = {'key_one' => 'value_one'}
if has_key($my_hash, 'key_two') {
notice('we will not reach here')
}
if has_key($my_hash, 'key_one') {
notice('this will be printed')
}
- Type: rvalue
hash
This function converts an array into a hash.
Examples:
hash(['a',1,'b',2,'c',3])
Would return: {'a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3}
- Type: rvalue
intersection
This function returns an array an intersection of two.
Examples:
intersection(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
Would return: ["b","c"]
is_array
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is an array.
- Type: rvalue
is_bool
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is a boolean.
- Type: rvalue
is_domain_name
Returns true if the string passed to this function is a syntactically correct domain name.
- Type: rvalue
is_float
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is a float.
- Type: rvalue
is_function_available
This function accepts a string as an argument, determines whether the Puppet runtime has access to a function by that name. It returns a true if the function exists, false if not.
- Type: rvalue
is_hash
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is a hash.
- Type: rvalue
is_integer
Returns true if the variable returned to this string is an integer.
- Type: rvalue
is_ip_address
Returns true if the string passed to this function is a valid IP address.
- Type: rvalue
is_mac_address
Returns true if the string passed to this function is a valid mac address.
- Type: rvalue
is_numeric
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is a number.
- Type: rvalue
is_string
Returns true if the variable passed to this function is a string.
- Type: rvalue
join
This function joins an array into a string using a separator.
Examples:
join(['a','b','c'], ",")
Would result in: "a,b,c"
- Type: rvalue
join_keys_to_values
This function joins each key of a hash to that key's corresponding value with a separator. Keys and values are cast to strings. The return value is an array in which each element is one joined key/value pair.
Examples:
join_keys_to_values({'a'=>1,'b'=>2}, " is ")
Would result in: ["a is 1","b is 2"]
- Type: rvalue
keys
Returns the keys of a hash as an array.
- Type: rvalue
loadyaml
Load a YAML file containing an array, string, or hash, and return the data in the corresponding native data type.
For example:
$myhash = loadyaml('/etc/puppet/data/myhash.yaml')
- Type: rvalue
lstrip
Strips leading spaces to the left of a string.
- Type: rvalue
max
Returns the highest value of all arguments. Requires at least one argument.
- Type: rvalue
member
This function determines if a variable is a member of an array.
Examples:
member(['a','b'], 'b')
Would return: true
member(['a','b'], 'c')
Would return: false
- Type: rvalue
merge
Merges two or more hashes together and returns the resulting hash.
For example:
$hash1 = {'one' => 1, 'two' => 2}
$hash2 = {'two' => 'dos', 'three' => 'tres'}
$merged_hash = merge($hash1, $hash2)
# The resulting hash is equivalent to:
# $merged_hash = {'one' => 1, 'two' => 'dos', 'three' => 'tres'}
When there is a duplicate key, the key in the rightmost hash will "win."
- Type: rvalue
min
Returns the lowest value of all arguments. Requires at least one argument.
- Type: rvalue
num2bool
This function converts a number or a string representation of a number into a true boolean. Zero or anything non-numeric becomes false. Numbers higher then 0 become true.
- Type: rvalue
parsejson
This function accepts JSON as a string and converts into the correct Puppet structure.
- Type: rvalue
parseyaml
This function accepts YAML as a string and converts it into the correct Puppet structure.
- Type: rvalue
pick
This function is similar to a coalesce function in SQL in that it will return the first value in a list of values that is not undefined or an empty string (two things in Puppet that will return a boolean false value). Typically, this function is used to check for a value in the Puppet Dashboard/Enterprise Console, and failover to a default value like the following:
$real_jenkins_version = pick($::jenkins_version, '1.449')
The value of $real_jenkins_version will first look for a top-scope variable called 'jenkins_version' (note that parameters set in the Puppet Dashboard/ Enterprise Console are brought into Puppet as top-scope variables), and, failing that, will use a default value of 1.449.
- Type: rvalue
prefix
This function applies a prefix to all elements in an array.
Examples:
prefix(['a','b','c'], 'p')
Will return: ['pa','pb','pc']
- Type: rvalue
range
When given range in the form of (start, stop) it will extrapolate a range as an array.
Examples:
range("0", "9")
Will return: [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
range("00", "09")
Will return: [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9] - Zero padded strings are converted to integers automatically
range("a", "c")
Will return: ["a","b","c"]
range("host01", "host10")
Will return: ["host01", "host02", ..., "host09", "host10"]
- Type: rvalue
reject
This function searches through an array and rejects all elements that match the provided regular expression.
Examples:
reject(['aaa','bbb','ccc','aaaddd'], 'aaa')
Would return:
['bbb','ccc']
- Type: rvalue
reverse
Reverses the order of a string or array.
- Type: rvalue
rstrip
Strips leading spaces to the right of the string.
- Type: rvalue
shuffle
Randomizes the order of a string or array elements.
- Type: rvalue
size
Returns the number of elements in a string or array.
- Type: rvalue
sort
Sorts strings and arrays lexically.
- Type: rvalue
squeeze
Returns a new string where runs of the same character that occur in this set are replaced by a single character.
- Type: rvalue
str2bool
This converts a string to a boolean. This attempts to convert strings that contain things like: y, 1, t, true to 'true' and strings that contain things like: 0, f, n, false, no to 'false'.
- Type: rvalue
str2saltedsha512
This converts a string to a salted-SHA512 password hash (which is used for OS X versions >= 10.7). Given any simple string, you will get a hex version of a salted-SHA512 password hash that can be inserted into your Puppet manifests as a valid password attribute.
- Type: rvalue
strftime
This function returns formatted time.
Examples:
To return the time since epoch:
strftime("%s")
To return the date:
strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
Format meaning:
%a - The abbreviated weekday name (``Sun'')
%A - The full weekday name (``Sunday'')
%b - The abbreviated month name (``Jan'')
%B - The full month name (``January'')
%c - The preferred local date and time representation
%C - Century (20 in 2009)
%d - Day of the month (01..31)
%D - Date (%m/%d/%y)
%e - Day of the month, blank-padded ( 1..31)
%F - Equivalent to %Y-%m-%d (the ISO 8601 date format)
%h - Equivalent to %b
%H - Hour of the day, 24-hour clock (00..23)
%I - Hour of the day, 12-hour clock (01..12)
%j - Day of the year (001..366)
%k - hour, 24-hour clock, blank-padded ( 0..23)
%l - hour, 12-hour clock, blank-padded ( 0..12)
%L - Millisecond of the second (000..999)
%m - Month of the year (01..12)
%M - Minute of the hour (00..59)
%n - Newline (\n)
%N - Fractional seconds digits, default is 9 digits (nanosecond)
%3N millisecond (3 digits)
%6N microsecond (6 digits)
%9N nanosecond (9 digits)
%p - Meridian indicator (``AM'' or ``PM'')
%P - Meridian indicator (``am'' or ``pm'')
%r - time, 12-hour (same as %I:%M:%S %p)
%R - time, 24-hour (%H:%M)
%s - Number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC.
%S - Second of the minute (00..60)
%t - Tab character ( )
%T - time, 24-hour (%H:%M:%S)
%u - Day of the week as a decimal, Monday being 1. (1..7)
%U - Week number of the current year,
starting with the first Sunday as the first
day of the first week (00..53)
%v - VMS date (%e-%b-%Y)
%V - Week number of year according to ISO 8601 (01..53)
%W - Week number of the current year,
starting with the first Monday as the first
day of the first week (00..53)
%w - Day of the week (Sunday is 0, 0..6)
%x - Preferred representation for the date alone, no time
%X - Preferred representation for the time alone, no date
%y - Year without a century (00..99)
%Y - Year with century
%z - Time zone as hour offset from UTC (e.g. +0900)
%Z - Time zone name
%% - Literal ``%'' character
- Type: rvalue
strip
This function removes leading and trailing whitespace from a string or from every string inside an array.
Examples:
strip(" aaa ")
Would result in: "aaa"
- Type: rvalue
suffix
This function applies a suffix to all elements in an array.
Examples:
suffix(['a','b','c'], 'p')
Will return: ['ap','bp','cp']
- Type: rvalue
swapcase
This function will swap the existing case of a string.
Examples:
swapcase("aBcD")
Would result in: "AbCd"
- Type: rvalue
time
This function will return the current time since epoch as an integer.
Examples:
time()
Will return something like: 1311972653
- Type: rvalue
to_bytes
Converts the argument into bytes, for example 4 kB becomes 4096. Takes a single string value as an argument.
- Type: rvalue
type
Returns the type when passed a variable. Type can be one of:
- string
- array
- hash
- float
- integer
- boolean
- Type: rvalue
union
This function returns a union of two arrays.
Examples:
union(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
Would return: ["a","b","c","d"]
unique
This function will remove duplicates from strings and arrays.
Examples:
unique("aabbcc")
Will return:
abc
You can also use this with arrays:
unique(["a","a","b","b","c","c"])
This returns:
["a","b","c"]
- Type: rvalue
upcase
Converts a string or an array of strings to uppercase.
Examples:
upcase("abcd")
Will return:
ABCD
- Type: rvalue
uriescape
Urlencodes a string or array of strings. Requires either a single string or an array as an input.
- Type: rvalue
validate_absolute_path
Validate the string represents an absolute path in the filesystem. This function works for windows and unix style paths.
The following values will pass:
$my_path = "C:/Program Files (x86)/Puppet Labs/Puppet"
validate_absolute_path($my_path)
$my_path2 = "/var/lib/puppet"
validate_absolute_path($my_path2)
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
validate_absolute_path(true)
validate_absolute_path([ 'var/lib/puppet', '/var/foo' ])
validate_absolute_path([ '/var/lib/puppet', 'var/foo' ])
$undefined = undef
validate_absolute_path($undefined)
- Type: statement
validate_array
Validate that all passed values are array data structures. Abort catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values will pass:
$my_array = [ 'one', 'two' ]
validate_array($my_array)
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
validate_array(true)
validate_array('some_string')
$undefined = undef
validate_array($undefined)
- Type: statement
validate_augeas
Perform validation of a string using an Augeas lens The first argument of this function should be a string to test, and the second argument should be the name of the Augeas lens to use. If Augeas fails to parse the string with the lens, the compilation will abort with a parse error.
A third argument can be specified, listing paths which should
not be found in the file. The $file
variable points to the location
of the temporary file being tested in the Augeas tree.
For example, if you want to make sure your passwd content never contains
a user foo
, you could write:
validate_augeas($passwdcontent, 'Passwd.lns', ['$file/foo'])
Or if you wanted to ensure that no users used the '/bin/barsh' shell, you could use:
validate_augeas($passwdcontent, 'Passwd.lns', ['$file/*[shell="/bin/barsh"]']
If a fourth argument is specified, this will be the error message raised and seen by the user.
A helpful error message can be returned like this:
validate_augeas($sudoerscontent, 'Sudoers.lns', [], 'Failed to validate sudoers content with Augeas')
- Type: statement
validate_bool
Validate that all passed values are either true or false. Abort catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values will pass:
$iamtrue = true
validate_bool(true)
validate_bool(true, true, false, $iamtrue)
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
$some_array = [ true ]
validate_bool("false")
validate_bool("true")
validate_bool($some_array)
- Type: statement
validate_cmd
Perform validation of a string with an external command. The first argument of this function should be a string to test, and the second argument should be a path to a test command taking a file as last argument. If the command, launched against a tempfile containing the passed string, returns a non-null value, compilation will abort with a parse error.
If a third argument is specified, this will be the error message raised and seen by the user.
A helpful error message can be returned like this:
Example:
validate_cmd($sudoerscontent, '/usr/sbin/visudo -c -f', 'Visudo failed to validate sudoers content')
- Type: statement
validate_hash
Validate that all passed values are hash data structures. Abort catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values will pass:
$my_hash = { 'one' => 'two' }
validate_hash($my_hash)
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
validate_hash(true)
validate_hash('some_string')
$undefined = undef
validate_hash($undefined)
- Type: statement
validate_re
Perform simple validation of a string against one or more regular expressions. The first argument of this function should be a string to test, and the second argument should be a stringified regular expression (without the // delimiters) or an array of regular expressions. If none of the regular expressions match the string passed in, compilation will abort with a parse error.
If a third argument is specified, this will be the error message raised and seen by the user.
The following strings will validate against the regular expressions:
validate_re('one', '^one$')
validate_re('one', [ '^one', '^two' ])
The following strings will fail to validate, causing compilation to abort:
validate_re('one', [ '^two', '^three' ])
A helpful error message can be returned like this:
validate_re($::puppetversion, '^2.7', 'The $puppetversion fact value does not match 2.7')
- Type: statement
validate_slength
Validate that the first argument is a string (or an array of strings), and less/equal to than the length of the second argument. It fails if the first argument is not a string or array of strings, and if arg 2 is not convertable to a number.
The following values will pass:
validate_slength("discombobulate",17)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","moo"],17)
The following values will not:
validate_slength("discombobulate",1)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","thermometer"],5)
- Type: statement
validate_string
Validate that all passed values are string data structures. Abort catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values will pass:
$my_string = "one two"
validate_string($my_string, 'three')
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
validate_string(true)
validate_string([ 'some', 'array' ])
$undefined = undef
validate_string($undefined)
- Type: statement
values
When given a hash this function will return the values of that hash.
Examples:
$hash = {
'a' => 1,
'b' => 2,
'c' => 3,
}
values($hash)
This example would return:
[1,2,3]
- Type: rvalue
values_at
Finds value inside an array based on location.
The first argument is the array you want to analyze, and the second element can be a combination of:
- A single numeric index
- A range in the form of 'start-stop' (eg. 4-9)
- An array combining the above
Examples:
values_at(['a','b','c'], 2)
Would return ['c'].
values_at(['a','b','c'], ["0-1"])
Would return ['a','b'].
values_at(['a','b','c','d','e'], [0, "2-3"])
Would return ['a','c','d'].
- Type: rvalue
zip
Takes one element from first array and merges corresponding elements from second array. This generates a sequence of n-element arrays, where n is one more than the count of arguments.
Example:
zip(['1','2','3'],['4','5','6'])
Would result in:
["1", "4"], ["2", "5"], ["3", "6"]
- Type: rvalue
This page autogenerated on 2013-04-11 13:54:25 -0700