- Description
- Setup - The basics of getting started with yaml_settings
- Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
- Creating files with only the keys specified
- Reference
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
This module introduces a native type (yaml_settings
) that allows for modifying
yaml files. It is similar to reidmv/yamlfile, with the following
improvements:
- forward slashes are allowed in key names,
- portions of the key can be symbols,
- it is possible to use a separate file as a template.
The setting pluginsync needs to be enabled for at least one run so that the ruby files of the native type are synced to the agents.
Note that pluginsync is deprecated in Puppet 4, which defaults to enabling pluginsync when applying a non-cached catalog. See PUP-5708.
This modules provides only one resource type: yaml_settings
. Example usage:
yaml_settings { '/tmp/foo.yaml':
values => {
'uuu/vvv/www' => { 'yyy' => 'zzz' },
}
}
This will create the file /tmp/foo.yaml
(or modify it, if it already exists,
to add/change the value of uuu/vvv/www
):
---
uuu:
vvv:
www:
yyy: zzz
If a key (portion) should include a /
, then you must quote that key with a
single quote ('
). If you need then a single quote, then you must double it. If
you prepend a colon (:
) to the opening single quote, you will be referring to
a symbol key. Example:
yaml_settings { '/tmp/foo.yaml':
values => {
"uuu/'a''b'/:'www'" => { 'yyy' => 'zzz' },
}
}
Will result in:
---
uuu:
"a'b":
!ruby/sym www:
yyy: zzz
The ugly !rby/sym
and indentation of the first member doesn't happen in Puppet
4, as it uses a different YAML library. Beware that Puppet 4 behaves differently
with respect to number literals. While Puppet 3 converts these to strings,
Puppet 4 will not. So in Puppet 3, this example:
yaml_settings { '/tmp/foo.yaml':
values => { 'a' => 1 }
}
will create
---
a: "1"
while in Puppet 4:
---
a: 1
Because the Puppet 4 behavior makes more sense (notice that other types like
booleans and the undef
symbol are also not converted under Puppet 3), this
module doesn't attempt to have Puppet 4 behave like Puppet 3 by converting the
numbers to strings.
In Puppet 4 or in versions of Puppet 3 with the future parser, there is also a
(rather hacky) way to specify symbols in the values, this is done by abusing the
Enum
type:
yaml_settings { '/tmp/foo.yml':
values => { ":'a'" => { Enum['foo'] => [Enum['bar'], 'bar'] } }
}
results in:
---
:a:
:foo:
- :bar
- bar
This is not the main use case for this module, as this can be achieved without
dependencies by using inline_template
:
$values = {
'uuu' => { 'vvv' => { 'www' => 'yyy' } },
}
file { '/tmp/foo.yaml':
content => inline_template('<%= require "yaml"; @values.to_yaml %>'),
}
will result in:
---
uuu:
vvv:
www: yyy
Nevertheless, you can still use this module, if you provide an empty file as a template:
yaml_settings { '/tmp/foo.yaml':
source => '/dev/null',
values => { 'a' => 'b', }
}
This is the full list of parameters:
yaml_settings { 'my settings':
target => '/tmp/foo.yaml', # defaults to title
source => '/tmp/source.yaml',
allow_new_values => true,
allow_new_file => true,
user => 'root', # user used to read/write file,
# doesn't change ownership like 'file'!
}
It autorequires a file resource with a title (not path!) equal to the source
parameter, if present in the catalog.
For more information, see the type file source file.
There is no support yet for removing keys, though you can set them to nil
.
Make sure that you run rubocop
and rake test
before committing.