- Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful
- Setup - The basics of getting started with stdlib
- Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
- Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
- Contributors
This module provides a standard library of resources for Puppet modules. Puppet modules make heavy use of this standard library. The stdlib module adds the following resources to Puppet:
- Stages
- Facts
- Functions
- Defined types
- Data types
- Providers
Note: As of version 3.7, Puppet Enterprise no longer includes the stdlib module. If you're running Puppet Enterprise, you should install the most recent release of stdlib for compatibility with Puppet modules.
Install the stdlib module to add the functions, facts, and resources of this standard library to Puppet.
If you are authoring a module that depends on stdlib, be sure to specify dependencies in your metadata.json.
Most of stdlib's features are automatically loaded by Puppet. To use standardized run stages in Puppet, declare this class in your manifest with include stdlib
.
When declared, stdlib declares all other classes in the module. The only other class currently included in the module is stdlib::stages
.
The stdlib::stages
class declares various run stages for deploying infrastructure, language runtimes, and application layers. The high level stages are (in order):
- setup
- main
- runtime
- setup_infra
- deploy_infra
- setup_app
- deploy_app
- deploy
Sample usage:
node default {
include stdlib
class { java: stage => 'runtime' }
}
The stdlib
class has no parameters.
stdlib::stages
: Manages a standard set of run stages for Puppet.
Ensures that a given line is contained within a file. The implementation matches the full line, including whitespace at the beginning and end. If the line is not contained in the given file, Puppet appends the line to the end of the file to ensure the desired state. Multiple resources can be declared to manage multiple lines in the same file.
Example:
file_line { 'sudo_rule':
path => '/etc/sudoers',
line => '%sudo ALL=(ALL) ALL',
}
file_line { 'sudo_rule_nopw':
path => '/etc/sudoers',
line => '%sudonopw ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL',
}
In the example above, Puppet ensures that both of the specified lines are contained in the file /etc/sudoers
.
Match Example:
file_line { 'bashrc_proxy':
ensure => present,
path => '/etc/bashrc',
line => 'export HTTP_PROXY=http://squid.puppetlabs.vm:3128',
match => '^export\ HTTP_PROXY\=',
}
In the example above, match
looks for a line beginning with 'export' followed by 'HTTP_PROXY' and replaces it with the value in line.
Match Example:
file_line { 'bashrc_proxy':
ensure => present,
path => '/etc/bashrc',
line => 'export HTTP_PROXY=http://squid.puppetlabs.vm:3128',
match => '^export\ HTTP_PROXY\=',
append_on_no_match => false,
}
In this code example, match
looks for a line beginning with export followed by 'HTTP_PROXY' and replaces it with the value in line. If a match is not found, then no changes are made to the file.
Examples of ensure => absent
:
This type has two behaviors when ensure => absent
is set.
The first is to set match => ...
and match_for_absence => true
. Match looks for a line beginning with 'export', followed by 'HTTP_PROXY', and then deletes it. If multiple lines match, an error is raised unless the multiple => true
parameter is set.
The line => ...
parameter in this example would be accepted but ignored.
For example:
file_line { 'bashrc_proxy':
ensure => absent,
path => '/etc/bashrc',
match => '^export\ HTTP_PROXY\=',
match_for_absence => true,
}
The second way of using ensure => absent
is to specify a line => ...
and no match. When ensuring lines are absent, the default behavior is to remove all lines matching. This behavior can't be disabled.
For example:
file_line { 'bashrc_proxy':
ensure => absent,
path => '/etc/bashrc',
line => 'export HTTP_PROXY=http://squid.puppetlabs.vm:3128',
}
Encoding example:
file_line { "XScreenSaver":
ensure => present,
path => '/root/XScreenSaver'
line => "*lock: 10:00:00",
match => '^*lock:',
encoding => "iso-8859-1",
}
Files with special characters that are not valid UTF-8 give the error message "Invalid byte sequence in UTF-8". In this case, determine the correct file encoding and specify it with the encoding
attribute.
Autorequires: If Puppet is managing the file that contains the line being managed, the file_line
resource autorequires that file.
Parameters
All parameters are optional, unless otherwise noted.
Specifies the line after which Puppet adds any new lines using a regular expression. (Existing lines are added in place.)
Values: String containing a regex.
Default value: undef
.
Specifies the correct file encoding.
Values: String specifying a valid Ruby character encoding.
Default: 'UTF-8'.
Values: 'present', 'absent'.
Default value: 'present'.
Required.
Sets the line to be added to the file located by the path
parameter.
Values: String.
Specifies a regular expression to compare against existing lines in the file; if a match is found, it is replaced rather than adding a new line.
Values: String containing a regex.
Default value: undef
.
Specifies whether a match should be applied when ensure => absent
. If set to true
and match is set, the line that matches is deleted. If set to false
(the default), match is ignored when ensure => absent
and the value of line
is used instead. Ignored when ensure => present
.
Boolean.
Default value: false
.
Specifies whether match
and after
can change multiple lines. If set to false
, allows file_line to replace only one line and raises an error if more than one will be replaced. If set to true
, allows file_line to replace one or more lines.
Values: true
, false
.
Default value: false
.
Specifies the name to use as the identity of the resource. If you want the resource namevar to differ from the supplied title
of the resource, specify it with name
.
Values: String.
Default value: The value of the title.
Required.
Specifies the file in which Puppet ensures the line specified by line
.
Value: String specifying an absolute path to the file.
Specifies whether the resource overwrites an existing line that matches the match
parameter when line
does not otherwise exist.
If set to false
and a line is found matching the match
parameter, the line is not placed in the file.
Boolean.
Default value: true
.
Replaces all lines matched by match
parameter, even if line
already exists in the file.
Default value: false
.
A strict absolute path type. Uses a variant of Unixpath and Windowspath types.
Acceptable input examples:
/var/log
/usr2/username/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:.
C:\\WINDOWS\\System32
Unacceptable input example:
../relative_path
Matches acceptable ensure values for service resources.
Acceptable input examples:
stopped
running
Unacceptable input example:
true
false
Matches HTTPS URLs. It is a case insensitive match.
Acceptable input example:
https://hello.com
HTTPS://HELLO.COM
Unacceptable input example:
httds://notquiteright.org`
Matches both HTTPS and HTTP URLs. It is a case insensitive match.
Acceptable input example:
https://hello.com
http://hello.com
HTTP://HELLO.COM
Unacceptable input example:
httds://notquiteright.org
Matches MAC addresses defined in RFC5342.
Matches absolute paths on Unix operating systems.
Acceptable input example:
/usr2/username/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:
/var/tmp
Unacceptable input example:
C:/whatever
some/path
../some/other/path
Matches octal file modes consisting of one to four numbers and symbolic file modes.
Acceptable input examples:
0644
1777
a=Xr,g=w
Unacceptable input examples:
x=r,a=wx
0999
Matches paths on Windows operating systems.
Acceptable input example:
C:\\WINDOWS\\System32
C:\\
\\\\host\\windows
Valid values: A windows filepath.
Matches paths valid values for the source parameter of the Puppet file type.
Acceptable input example:
http://example.com
https://example.com
file:///hello/bla
Valid values: A filepath.
Matches paths on fully qualified domain name.
Acceptable input example:
localhost
example.com
www.example.com
Valid values: Domain name of a server.
Matches a valid host which could be a valid ipv4, ipv6 or fqdn.
Acceptable input example:
localhost
www.example.com
192.0.2.1
Valid values: An IP address or domain name.
Matches a valid TCP/UDP Port number.
Acceptable input examples:
80
443
65000
Valid values: An Integer.
Matches a valid TCP/UDP Privileged port i.e. < 1024.
Acceptable input examples:
80
443
1023
Valid values: A number less than 1024.
Matches a valid TCP/UDP Privileged port i.e. >= 1024.
Acceptable input examples:
1024
1337
65000
Valid values: A number more than or equal to 1024.
Matches paths a valid base32 string.
Acceptable input example:
ASDASDDASD3453453
asdasddasd3453453=
ASDASDDASD3453453==
Valid values: A base32 string.
Matches paths a valid base64 string.
Acceptable input example:
asdasdASDSADA342386832/746+=
asdasdASDSADA34238683274/6+
asdasdASDSADA3423868327/46+==
Valid values: A base64 string.
This type is no longer available. To make use of this functionality, use Stdlib::IP::Address::V4.
This type is no longer available. To make use of this functionality, use Stdlib::IP::Address::V6.
This type is no longer available. To make use of this functionality, use Stdlib::IP::Address
Matches any IP address, including both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. It will match them either with or without an address prefix as used in CIDR format IPv4 addresses.
Examples:
'127.0.0.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # true
'10.1.240.4/24' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # true
'52.10.10.141' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # true
'192.168.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # false
'FEDC:BA98:7654:3210:FEDC:BA98:7654:3210' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # true
'FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:101' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address # true
Match any string consisting of an IPv4 address in the quad-dotted decimal format, with or without a CIDR prefix. It will not match any abbreviated form (for example, 192.168.1) because these are poorly documented and inconsistently supported.
Examples:
'127.0.0.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V4 # true
'10.1.240.4/24' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V4 # true
'192.168.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V4 # false
'FEDC:BA98:7654:3210:FEDC:BA98:7654:3210' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V4 # false
'12AB::CD30:192.168.0.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V4 # false
Valid values: An IPv4 address.
Match any string consistenting of an IPv6 address in any of the documented formats in RFC 2373, with or without an address prefix.
Examples:
'127.0.0.1' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V6 # false
'10.1.240.4/24' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V6 # false
'FEDC:BA98:7654:3210:FEDC:BA98:7654:3210' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V6 # true
'FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:101' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V6 # true
'FF01::101' =~ Stdlib::IP::Address::V6 # true
Valid values: An IPv6 address.
Match the same things as the Stdlib::IP::Address
alias, except it will not match an address that includes an address prefix (for example, it will match '192.168.0.6' but not '192.168.0.6/24').
Valid values: An IP address with no subnet.
Match an IPv4 address in the CIDR format. It will only match if the address contains an address prefix (for example, it will match '192.168.0.6/24' but not '192.168.0.6').
Valid values: An IPv4 address with a CIDR provided eg: '192.186.8.101/105'. This will match anything inclusive of '192.186.8.101' to '192.168.8.105'.
Match an IPv4 address only if the address does not contain an address prefix (for example, it will match '192.168.0.6' but not '192.168.0.6/24').
Valid values: An IPv4 address with no subnet.
Match an IPv6 address formatted in the "preferred form" as documented in section 2.2 of RFC 2373, with or without an address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Match an IPv6 address formatted in the "alternative form" allowing for representing the last two 16-bit pieces of the address with a quad-dotted decimal, as documented in section 2.2.1 of RFC 2373. It will match addresses with or without an address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Match an IPv6 address which may contain ::
used to compress zeros as documented in section 2.2.2 of RFC 2373. It will match addresses with or without an address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Alias to allow Stdlib::IP::Address::V6::Nosubnet::Full
, Stdlib::IP::Address::V6::Nosubnet::Alternate
and Stdlib::IP::Address::V6::Nosubnet::Compressed
.
Match an IPv6 address formatted in the "preferred form" as documented in section 2.2 of RFC 2373. It will not match addresses with address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Match an IPv6 address formatted in the "alternative form" allowing for representing the last two 16-bit pieces of the address with a quad-dotted decimal, as documented in section 2.2.1 of RFC 2373. It will only match addresses without an address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Match an IPv6 address which may contain ::
used to compress zeros as documented in section 2.2.2 of RFC 2373. It will only match addresses without an address prefix as documented in section 2.3 of RFC 2373.
Returns the default provider Puppet uses to manage packages on this system.
Returns whether Puppet Enterprise is installed. Does not report anything on platforms newer than PE 3.x.
Returns the version of Puppet Enterprise installed. Does not report anything on platforms newer than PE 3.x.
Returns the major version Puppet Enterprise that is installed. Does not report anything on platforms newer than PE 3.x.
Returns the minor version of Puppet Enterprise that is installed. Does not report anything on platforms newer than PE 3.x.
Returns the patch version of Puppet Enterprise that is installed.
Returns the value of the Puppet vardir setting for the node running Puppet or Puppet agent.
Returns the value of the Puppet environment path settings for the node running Puppet or Puppet agent.
Returns the Puppet agent's server
value, which is the hostname of the Puppet master with which the agent should communicate.
Determines the root home directory.
Determines the root home directory, which depends on your operating system. Generally this is '/root'.
Returns the default provider Puppet uses to manage services on this system
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in abs
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Returns the absolute value of a number. For example, '-34.56' becomes '34.56'.
Argument: A single argument of either an integer or float value.
Type: rvalue.
Converts any object to an array containing that object. Converts empty argument lists are to empty arrays. Hashes are converted to arrays of alternating keys and values. Arrays are not touched.
Since Puppet 5.0.0, you can create new values of almost any datatype using the type system — you can use the built-in Array.new
function to create a new array:
$hsh = {'key' => 42, 'another-key' => 100}
notice(Array($hsh))
Would notice [['key', 42], ['another-key', 100]]
The array data type also has a special mode to "create an array if not already an array":
notice(Array({'key' => 42, 'another-key' => 100}, true))
Would notice [{'key' => 42, 'another-key' => 100}]
, as the true
flag prevents the hash from being transformed into an array.
Type: rvalue.
Converts any object to a Boolean:
- Strings such as 'Y', 'y', '1', 'T', 't', 'TRUE', 'yes', 'true' return
true
. - Strings such as '0', 'F', 'f', 'N', 'n', 'FALSE', 'no', 'false' return
false
. - Booleans return their original value.
- A number (or a string representation of a number) greater than 0 returns
true
, otherwisefalse
. - An undef value returns
false
. - Anything else returns
true
.
See the built-in Boolean.new
Type: rvalue.
Sets the current class or definition as private. Calling the class or defined type from outside the current module fails.
For example, assert_private()
called in class foo::bar
outputs the following message if class is called from outside module foo
: Class foo::bar is private.
To specify the error message you want to use:
assert_private("You're not supposed to do that!")
Type: statement.
Converts a string to and from base64 encoding. Requires an action
('encode', 'decode') and either a plain or base64-encoded string
, and an optional method
('default', 'strict', 'urlsafe').
For backward compatibility, method
is set as default
if not specified.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Since Puppet 4.8.0, the Binary
data type can be used to produce base 64 encoded strings.
See the built-in String.new
and Binary.new
functions.
See the built-in binary_file
function for reading a file with binary (non UTF-8) content.
# encode a string as if it was binary
$encodestring = String(Binary('thestring', '%s'))
# decode a Binary assuming it is an UTF-8 String
$decodestring = String(Binary("dGhlc3RyaW5n"), "%s")
Examples:
base64('encode', 'hello')
base64('encode', 'hello', 'default')
# return: "aGVsbG8=\n"
base64('encode', 'hello', 'strict')
# return: "aGVsbG8="
base64('decode', 'aGVsbG8=')
base64('decode', 'aGVsbG8=\n')
base64('decode', 'aGVsbG8=', 'default')
base64('decode', 'aGVsbG8=\n', 'default')
base64('decode', 'aGVsbG8=', 'strict')
# return: "hello"
base64('encode', 'https://puppetlabs.com', 'urlsafe')
# return: "aHR0cHM6Ly9wdXBwZXRsYWJzLmNvbQ=="
base64('decode', 'aHR0cHM6Ly9wdXBwZXRsYWJzLmNvbQ==', 'urlsafe')
# return: "https://puppetlabs.com"
Type: rvalue.
Returns the basename
of a path. An optional argument strips the extension. For example:
basename('/path/to/a/file.ext') => 'file.ext'
basename('relative/path/file.ext') => 'file.ext'
basename('/path/to/a/file.ext', '.ext') => 'file'
Type: rvalue.
Converts a Boolean to a number. Converts values:
false
, 'f', '0', 'n', and 'no' to 0.true
, 't', '1', 'y', and 'yes' to 1.
Argument: a single Boolean or string as an input.
Since Puppet 5.0.0, you can create values for almost any data type using the type system — you can use the built-in Numeric.new
, Integer.new
, and Float.new
functions to convert to numeric values:
notice(Integer(false)) # Notices 0
notice(Float(true)) # Notices 1.0
Type: rvalue.
Converts a Boolean to a string using optionally supplied arguments. The optional second and third arguments represent what true and false are converted to respectively. If only one argument is given, it is converted from a Boolean to a string containing true
or false
.
Examples:
bool2str(true) => `true`
bool2str(true, 'yes', 'no') => 'yes'
bool2str(false, 't', 'f') => 'f'
Arguments: Boolean.
Since Puppet 5.0.0, you can create new values for almost any
data type using the type system — you can use the built-in
String.new
function to convert to String, with many different format options:
notice(String(false)) # Notices 'false'
notice(String(true)) # Notices 'true'
notice(String(false, '%y')) # Notices 'yes'
notice(String(true, '%y')) # Notices 'no'
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in camelcase
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Converts the case of a string or all strings in an array to CamelCase (mixed case).
Arguments: Either an array or string. Returns the same type of argument as it received, but in CamelCase form.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in capitalize
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Capitalizes the first character of a string or array of strings and lowercases the remaining characters of each string.
Arguments: either a single string or an array as an input. Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in ceiling
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Returns the smallest integer greater than or equal to the argument.
Arguments: A single numeric value.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in chomp
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Removes the record separator from the end of a string or an array of strings; for example, 'hello\n' becomes 'hello'.
Arguments: a single string or array.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in chop
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
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. To only remove record separators, use the chomp
function.
Arguments: A string or an array of strings as input.
Type: rvalue.
Keeps value within the range [Min, X, Max] by sort based on integer value (parameter order doesn't matter). Strings are converted and compared numerically. Arrays of values are flattened into a list for further handling. For example:
clamp('24', [575, 187])
returns 187.clamp(16, 88, 661)
returns 88.clamp([4, 3, '99'])
returns 4.
Arguments: strings, arrays, or numerics.
Since Puppet 6.0.0, you can use built-in functions to get the same result:
[$minval, $maxval, $value_to_clamp].sort[1]
Type: rvalue.
Appends the contents of multiple arrays onto the first array given. For example:
concat(['1','2','3'],'4')
returns ['1','2','3','4'].concat(['1','2','3'],'4',['5','6','7'])
returns ['1','2','3','4','5','6','7'].
Since Puppet 4.0, you can use the +
operator for concatenation of arrays and merge of hashes, and the <<
operator for appending:
['1','2','3'] + ['4','5','6'] + ['7','8','9'] # returns ['1','2','3','4','5','6','7']
[1, 2, 3] << 4 # returns [1, 2, 3, 4]
[1, 2, 3] << [4, 5] # returns [1, 2, 3, [4, 5]]
Type: rvalue.
Converts a given integer or base 10 string representing an integer to a specified base, as a string. For example:
convert_base(5, 2)
results in: '101'convert_base('254', '16')
results in: 'fe'
Since Puppet 4.5.0, you can do this with the built-in String.new
function, with various formatting options:
$binary_repr = String(5, '%b') # results in "101"
$hex_repr = String(254, '%x') # results in "fe"
$hex_repr = String(254, '%#x') # results in "0xfe"
Takes an array as the first argument and an optional second argument. It counts the number of elements in an array that is equal to the second argument. If called with only an array, it counts the number of elements that are not nil/undef/empty-string.
Note: Equality is tested with a Ruby method. It is subject to what Ruby considers to be equal. For strings, equality is case sensitive.
In Puppet core, counting is done using a combination of the built-in functions
filter
(since Puppet 4.0.0) and
length
(since Puppet 5.5.0, before that in stdlib).
This example shows counting values that are not undef
:
notice([42, "hello", undef].filter |$x| { $x =~ NotUndef }.length)
Would notice 2.
Type: rvalue.
Recursively merges two or more hashes together and returns the resulting hash.
$hash1 = {'one' => 1, 'two' => 2, 'three' => { 'four' => 4 } }
$hash2 = {'two' => 'dos', 'three' => { 'five' => 5 } }
$merged_hash = deep_merge($hash1, $hash2)
The resulting hash is equivalent to:
$merged_hash = { 'one' => 1, 'two' => 'dos', 'three' => { 'four' => 4, 'five' => 5 } }
If there is a duplicate key that is a hash, they are recursively merged. If there is a duplicate key that is not a hash, the key in the rightmost hash takes precedence.
Type: rvalue.
Takes a resource reference and an optional hash of attributes. Returns true
if a resource with the specified attributes has already been added to the catalog. Returns false
otherwise.
user { 'dan':
ensure => present,
}
if ! defined_with_params(User[dan], {'ensure' => 'present' }) {
user { 'dan': ensure => present, }
}
Type: rvalue.
Deletes all instances of a given element from an array, substring from a string, or key from a hash.
For example:
delete(['a','b','c','b'], 'b')
returns ['a','c'].delete('abracadabra', 'bra')
returns 'acada'.delete({'a' => 1,'b' => 2,'c' => 3},['b','c'])
returns {'a'=> 1}.delete(['ab', 'b'], 'b')
returns ['ab'].
Since Puppet 4.0.0, the minus (-
) operator deletes values from arrays and deletes keys from a hash:
['a', 'b', 'c', 'b'] - 'b'
# would return ['a', 'c']
{'a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3} - ['b','c'])
# would return {'a' => '1'}
You can perform a global delete from a string with the built-in
regsubst
function.
'abracadabra'.regsubst(/bra/, '', 'G')
# would return 'acada'
In general, the built-in
filter
function
can filter out entries from arrays and hashes based on a combination of keys and values.
Type: rvalue.
Deletes a determined indexed value from an array.
For example: delete_at(['a','b','c'], 1)
returns ['a','c'].
Since Puppet 4, this can be done with the built-in
filter
function:
['a', 'b', 'c'].filter |$pos, $val | { $pos != 1 } # returns ['a', 'c']
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'].filter |$pos, $val | { $pos % 2 != 0 } # returns ['b', 'd']
Or, if you want to delete from the beginning or the end of the array — or from both ends at the same time — use the slice operator [ ]
:
$array[0, -1] # the same as all the values
$array[2, -1] # all but the first 2 elements
$array[0, -3] # all but the last 2 elements
$array[1, -2] # all but the first and last element
Type: rvalue.
Deletes all instances of a given element from an array or hash that match a provided regular expression. A string is treated as a one-item array.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
For example
delete_regex(['a','b','c','b'], 'b')
returns ['a','c'].delete_regex({'a' => 1,'b' => 2,'c' => 3},['b','c'])
returns {'a'=> 1}.delete_regex(['abf', 'ab', 'ac'], '^ab.*')
returns ['ac'].delete_regex(['ab', 'b'], 'b')
returns ['ab'].
Since Puppet 4.0.0, do the equivalent with the built-in
filter
function:
["aaa", "aba", "aca"].filter |$val| { $val !~ /b/ }
# Would return: ['aaa', 'aca']
Type: rvalue.
Deletes all instances of a given value from a hash.
For example:
delete_values({'a'=>'A','b'=>'B','c'=>'C','B'=>'D'}, 'B')
returns {'a'=>'A','c'=>'C','B'=>'D'}
Since Puppet 4.0.0, do the equivalent with the built-in
filter
function:
$array.filter |$val| { $val != 'B' }
$hash.filter |$key, $val| { $val != 'B' }
Type: rvalue.
Deletes all instances of the undef
value from an array or hash.
For example:
$hash = delete_undef_values({a=>'A', b=>'', c=>
undef, d => false})
returns {a => 'A', b => '', d => false}.
Since Puppet 4.0.0, do the equivalent with the built-in
filter
function:
$array.filter |$val| { $val =~ NotUndef }
$hash.filter |$key, $val| { $val =~ NotUndef }
Type: rvalue.
Prints deprecation warnings and logs a warning once for a given key:
deprecation(key, message)
Arguments:
- A string specifying the key: To keep the number of messages low during the lifetime of a Puppet process, only one message per key is logged.
- A string specifying the message: the text to be logged.
Type: Statement.
Settings that affect deprecation
Other settings in Puppet affect the stdlib deprecation
function:
-
error
: Fails immediately with the deprecation messageoff
: Output emits no messages.warning
: Logs all warnings. This is the default setting.
-
The environment variable
STDLIB_LOG_DEPRECATIONS
Specifies whether or not to log deprecation warnings. This is especially useful for automated tests to avoid flooding your logs before you are ready to migrate.
This variable is Boolean, with the following effects:
true
: Functions log a warning.false
: No warnings are logged.- No value set: Puppet 4 emits warnings, but Puppet 3 does not.
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.
For example:
difference(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
returns ["a"].
Since Puppet 4, the minus (-
) operator in the Puppet language does the same:
['a', 'b', 'c'] - ['b', 'c', 'd']
# would return ['a']
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in dig
function as of Puppet 4.5.0. Use dig44()
for backwards compatibility or use the new version.
Retrieves a value within multiple layers of hashes and arrays via an array of keys containing a path. The function goes through the structure by each path component and tries to return the value at the end of the path.
In addition to the required path argument, the function accepts the default argument. It is returned if the path is not correct, if no value was found, or if any other error has occurred.
$data = {
'a' => {
'b' => [
'b1',
'b2',
'b3',
]
}
}
$value = dig($data, ['a', 'b', 2])
# $value = 'b3'
# with all possible options
$value = dig($data, ['a', 'b', 2], 'not_found')
# $value = 'b3'
# using the default value
$value = dig($data, ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], 'not_found')
# $value = 'not_found'
- $data The data structure we are working with.
- ['a', 'b', 2] The path array.
- 'not_found' The default value. It is returned if nothing is found.
Default value: undef
.
Type: rvalue.
Retrieves a value within multiple layers of hashes and arrays via an array of keys containing a path. The function goes through the structure by each path component and tries to return the value at the end of the path.
In addition to the required path argument, the function accepts the default argument. It is returned if the path is incorrect, if no value was found, or if any other error has occurred.
$data = {
'a' => {
'b' => [
'b1',
'b2',
'b3',
]
}
}
$value = dig44($data, ['a', 'b', 2])
# $value = 'b3'
# with all possible options
$value = dig44($data, ['a', 'b', 2], 'not_found')
# $value = 'b3'
# using the default value
$value = dig44($data, ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], 'not_found')
# $value = 'not_found'
Type: rvalue.
- $data The data structure we are working with.
- ['a', 'b', 2] The path array.
- 'not_found' The default value. It will be returned if nothing is found.
(optional, defaults to
undef
)
Returns the dirname
of a path. For example, dirname('/path/to/a/file.ext')
returns '/path/to/a'.
Type: rvalue.
Returns the Unix version of the given string. Very useful when using a File resource with a cross-platform template.
file { $config_file:
ensure => file,
content => dos2unix(template('my_module/settings.conf.erb')),
}
See also unix2dos.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in downcase
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Converts the case of a string or of all strings in an array to lowercase.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in empty
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Returns true
if the argument is an array or hash that contains no elements, or an empty string. Returns false
when the argument is a numerical value.
Type: rvalue.
Takes an array of IP addresses and encloses the ipv6 addresses with square brackets.
Type: rvalue.
Takes a list of packages in an array or hash and installs them only if they don't already exist. Optionally takes a hash as a second parameter to be passed as the third argument to the ensure_resource()
or ensure_resources()
function.
Type: statement.
For an array:
ensure_packages(['ksh','openssl'], {'ensure' => 'present'})
For a hash:
ensure_packages({'ksh' => { ensure => '20120801-1' } , 'mypackage' => { source => '/tmp/myrpm-1.0.0.x86_64.rpm', provider => "rpm" }}, {'ensure' => 'present'})
Takes a resource type, title, and a hash of attributes that describe the resource(s).
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 attempts 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.
Creates resource declarations from a hash, but doesn't conflict with resources that are already declared.
Specify a resource type and title and a hash of attributes that describe the resource(s).
user { 'dan':
gid => 'mygroup',
ensure => present,
}
ensure_resources($user)
Pass in a hash of resources. Any listed resources that don't already exist will be created with the type and parameters specified:
ensure_resources('user', {'dan' => { gid => 'mygroup', uid => '600' } , 'alex' => { gid => 'mygroup' }}, {'ensure' => 'present'})
From Hiera backend:
userlist:
dan:
gid: 'mygroup'
uid: '600'
alex:
gid: 'mygroup'
ensure_resources('user', hiera_hash('userlist'), {'ensure' => 'present'})
Return the value of a given fact. Supports the use of dot-notation for referring to structured facts. If a fact requested does not exist, returns Undef.
Example usage:
fact('kernel')
fact('osfamily')
fact('os.architecture')
Array indexing:
$first_processor = fact('processors.models.0')
$second_processor = fact('processors.models.1')
Fact containing a "." in the fact name:
fact('vmware."VRA.version"')
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in flatten
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Flattens deeply nested arrays and returns a single flat array as a result.
For example, flatten(['a', ['b', ['c']]])
returns ['a','b','c'].
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in floor
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Returns the largest integer less than or equal to the argument.
Arguments: A single numeric value.
Type: rvalue.
Generates a random alphanumeric string, combining the $fqdn
fact and an optional seed for repeatable randomness. Optionally, you can specify a character set for the function (defaults to alphanumeric).
Usage:
fqdn_rand_string(LENGTH, [CHARSET], [SEED])
Examples:
fqdn_rand_string(10)
fqdn_rand_string(10, 'ABCDEF!@#$%^')
fqdn_rand_string(10, '', 'custom seed')
Arguments:
- An integer, specifying the length of the resulting string.
- Optionally, a string specifying the character set.
- Optionally, a string specifying the seed for repeatable randomness.
Type: rvalue.
Rotates an array or string a random number of times, combining the $fqdn
fact and an optional seed for repeatable randomness.
Usage:
fqdn_rotate(VALUE, [SEED])
Examples:
fqdn_rotate(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
fqdn_rotate('abcd')
fqdn_rotate([1, 2, 3], 'custom seed')
Type: rvalue.
Returns a RFC 4122 valid version 5 UUID based on an FQDN string under the DNS namespace:
- fqdn_uuid('puppetlabs.com') returns '9c70320f-6815-5fc5-ab0f-debe68bf764c'
- fqdn_uuid('google.com') returns '64ee70a4-8cc1-5d25-abf2-dea6c79a09c8'
Type: rvalue.
Returns the absolute path of the specified module for the current environment.
$module_path = get_module_path('stdlib')
Since Puppet 5.4.0, the built-in module_directory
function does the same thing and will return the path to the first module found, if given multiple values or an array.
Type: rvalue.
Returns the value of a resource's parameter.
Arguments: A resource reference and the name of the parameter.
Note: User defined resource types are evaluated lazily.
Examples:
# define a resource type with a parameter
define example_resource($param) {
}
# declare an instance of that type
example_resource { "example_resource_instance":
param => "'the value we are getting in this example''"
}
# Because of order of evaluation, a second definition is needed
# that will be evaluated after the first resource has been declared
#
define example_get_param {
# This will notice the value of the parameter
notice(getparam(Example_resource["example_resource_instance"], "param"))
}
# Declare an instance of the second resource type - this will call notice
example_get_param { 'show_notify': }
Would notice: 'the value we are getting in this example'
Since Puppet 4.0.0, you can get a parameter value by using its data type and the [ ] operator. The example below is equivalent to a call to getparam():
Example_resource['example_resource_instance']['param']
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in getvar
function as of Puppet 6.0.0. The new version also supports digging into a structured value.
Looks up 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.
Returns an array of strings of paths matching path patterns.
Arguments: A string or an array of strings specifying path patterns.
$confs = glob(['/etc/**/*.conf', '/opt/**/*.conf'])
Type: rvalue.
Searches through an array and returns any elements that match the provided regular expression.
For example, grep(['aaa','bbb','ccc','aaaddd'], 'aaa')
returns ['aaa','aaaddd'].
Since Puppet 4.0.0, the built-in filter
function does the "same" — as any logic can be used to filter, as opposed to just regular expressions:
['aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc', 'aaaddd']. filter |$x| { $x =~ 'aaa' }
Type: rvalue.
Returns a 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
If no kind is given, then the presence of the interface is checked:
has_interface_with("lo") => true
Type: rvalue.
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.
Arguments: A string specifying an IP address.
Type: rvalue.
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.
Arguments: A string specifying an IP address.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with the built-in operator in
.
Determines 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')
}
Since Puppet 4.0.0, this can be achieved in the Puppet language with the following equivalent expression:
$my_hash = {'key_one' => 'value_one'}
if 'key_one' in $my_hash {
notice('this will be printed')
}
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with the built-in ability to create a new value of almost any
data type - see the built-in Hash.new
function
in Puppet.
Converts an array into a hash.
For example (deprecated), hash(['a',1,'b',2,'c',3])
returns {'a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3}.
For example (built-in), Hash(['a',1,'b',2,'c',3])
returns {'a'=>1,'b'=>2,'c'=>3}.
Type: rvalue.
Returns an array an intersection of two.
For example, intersection(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
returns ["b","c"].
Type: rvalue.
Boolean check to determine whether a variable is of a given data type. This is equivalent to the =~
type checks. This function is available only in Puppet 4, or in Puppet 3 with the "future" parser.
foo = 3
$bar = [1,2,3]
$baz = 'A string!'
if $foo.is_a(Integer) {
notify { 'foo!': }
}
if $bar.is_a(Array) {
notify { 'bar!': }
}
if $baz.is_a(String) {
notify { 'baz!': }
}
- See the the Puppet type system for more information about types.
- See the
assert_type()
function for flexible ways to assert the type of a value.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the given path is absolute.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is an array.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is a Boolean.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the string passed to this function is a syntactically correct domain name.
Type: rvalue.
Returns true if the string passed to this function is a valid email address.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is a float.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Accepts a string as an argument and determines whether the Puppet runtime has access to a function by that name. It returns true
if the function exists, false
if not.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is a hash.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable returned to this string is an integer.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the string passed to this function is a valid IP address.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the string passed to this function is a valid IPv6 address.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the string passed to this function is a valid IPv4 address.
Type: rvalue.
Returns true
if the string passed to this function is a valid MAC address.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is a number.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Returns true
if the variable passed to this function is a string.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in join
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Joins an array into a string using a separator. For example, join(['a','b','c'], ",")
results in: "a,b,c".
Type: rvalue.
Joins each key of a hash to that key's corresponding value with a separator, returning the result as strings.
If a value is an array, the key is prefixed to each element. The return value is a flattened array.
For example, join_keys_to_values({'a'=>1,'b'=>[2,3]}, " is ")
results in ["a is 1","b is 2","b is 3"].
Since Puppet 5.0.0, there is more control over the formatting (including indentations and line breaks, delimiters around arrays and hash entries, between key/values in hash entries, and individual
formatting of values in the array) - see the
built-in String.new
function and its formatting options for Array
and Hash
.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in keys
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Returns the keys of a hash as an array.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in length
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Returns the length of a given string, array or hash. Replaces the deprecated size()
function.
Type: rvalue.
Loads a YAML file containing an array, string, or hash, and returns the data in the corresponding native data type.
For example:
$myhash = loadyaml('/etc/puppet/data/myhash.yaml')
The second parameter is returned if the file was not found or could not be parsed.
For example:
$myhash = loadyaml('no-file.yaml', {'default'=>'value'})
Type: rvalue.
Loads a JSON file containing an array, string, or hash, and returns the data in the corresponding native data type.
For example:
The first parameter can be an absolute file path, or a URL.
$myhash = loadjson('/etc/puppet/data/myhash.json')
The second parameter is returned if the file was not found or could not be parsed.
For example:
$myhash = loadjson('no-file.json', {'default'=>'value'})
Type: rvalue.
Loads the metadata.json of a target module. Can be used to determine module version and authorship for dynamic support of modules.
$metadata = load_module_metadata('archive')
notify { $metadata['author']: }
When a module's metadata file is absent, the catalog compilation fails. To avoid this failure:
$metadata = load_module_metadata('mysql', true)
if empty($metadata) {
notify { "This module does not have a metadata.json file.": }
}
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in lstrip
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Strips spaces to the left of a string.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in max
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Returns the highest value of all arguments. Requires at least one argument.
Arguments: A numeric or a string representing a number.
Type: rvalue.
This function determines if a variable is a member of an array. The variable can be a string, an array, or a fixnum.
For example, member(['a','b'], 'b')
and member(['a','b','c'], ['b','c'])
return true
, while member(['a','b'], 'c')
and member(['a','b','c'], ['c','d'])
return false
.
Note: This function does not support nested arrays. If the first argument contains nested arrays, it will not recurse through them.
Since Puppet 4.0.0, you can perform the same in the Puppet language. For single values,
use the operator in
:
'a' in ['a', 'b'] # true
And for arrays, use the operator -
to compute a diff:
['d', 'b'] - ['a', 'b', 'c'] == [] # false because 'd' is not subtracted
['a', 'b'] - ['a', 'b', 'c'] == [] # true because both 'a' and 'b' are subtracted
Also note that since Puppet 5.2.0, the general form to test the content of an array or hash is to use the built-in any
and all
functions.
Type: rvalue.
Merges two or more hashes together and returns the resulting hash.
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 takes precedence.
Since Puppet 4.0.0, you can use the + operator to achieve the same merge.
$merged_hash = $hash1 + $hash2
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in min
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Returns the lowest value of all arguments. Requires at least one argument.
Arguments: A numeric or a string representing a number.
Type: rvalue.
Converts a number, or a string representation of a number, into a true Boolean.
Zero or anything non-numeric becomes false
.
Numbers greater than zero become true
.
Since Puppet 5.0.0, the same can be achieved with the Puppet type system.
See the Boolean.new
function in Puppet for the many available type conversions.
Boolean(0) # false
Boolean(1) # true
Type: rvalue.
Converts a string of JSON into the correct Puppet structure (as a hash, array, string, integer, or a combination of such).
Arguments:
- The JSON string to convert, as a first argument.
- Optionally, the result to return if conversion fails, as a second error.
Type: rvalue.
Converts a string of YAML into the correct Puppet structure.
Arguments:
- The YAML string to convert, as a first argument.
- Optionally, the result to return if conversion fails, as a second error.
Type: rvalue.
From a list of values, returns the first value that is not undefined or an empty string. Takes any number of arguments, and raises an error if all values are undefined or empty.
$real_jenkins_version = pick($::jenkins_version, '1.449')
Type: rvalue.
Returns the first value in a list of values. Unlike the pick()
function, pick_default()
does not fail if all arguments are empty. This allows it to use an empty value as default.
Type: rvalue.
Applies a prefix to all elements in an array, or to the keys in a hash.
For example:
prefix(['a','b','c'], 'p')
returns ['pa','pb','pc'].prefix({'a'=>'b','b'=>'c','c'=>'d'}, 'p')
returns {'pa'=>'b','pb'=>'c','pc'=>'d'}.
Since Puppet 4.0.0, modify values in array by using the built-in map
function.
This example does the same as the first example above:
['a', 'b', 'c'].map |$x| { "p${x}" }
Type: rvalue.
Invokes a pry debugging session in the current scope object. Useful for debugging manifest code at specific points during a compilation. Should be used only when running puppet apply
or running a Puppet master in the foreground. Requires the pry
gem to be installed in Puppet's rubygems.
Examples:
pry()
In a pry session, useful commands include:
- Run
catalog
to see the contents currently compiling catalog. - Run
cd catalog
andls
to see catalog methods and instance variables. - Run
@resource_table
to see the current catalog resource table.
Hashes a password using the crypt function. Provides a hash usable on most POSIX systems.
The first argument to this function is the password to hash. If it is undef
or an empty string, this function returns undef
.
The second argument to this function is which type of hash to use. It will be converted into the appropriate crypt(3) hash specifier. Valid hash types are:
Hash type | Specifier |
---|---|
MD5 | 1 |
SHA-256 | 5 |
SHA-512 (recommended) | 6 |
The third argument to this function is the salt to use.
This function uses the Puppet master's implementation of crypt(3). If your environment contains several different operating systems, ensure that they are compatible before using this function.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Extrapolates a range as an array when given in the form of '(start, stop)'. For example, range("0", "9")
returns [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Zero-padded strings are converted to integers automatically, so range("00", "09")
returns [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9].
Non-integer strings are accepted:
range("a", "c")
returns ["a","b","c"].range("host01", "host10")
returns ["host01", "host02", ..., "host09", "host10"].
You must explicitly include trailing zeros, or the underlying Ruby function fails.
Passing a third argument causes the generated range to step by that interval. For example:
range("0", "9", "2")
returns ["0","2","4","6","8"].
Note: The Puppet language supports
Integer
andFloat
ranges by using the type system. They are suitable for iterating a given number of times.
See the built-in step
function in Puppet for skipping values.
Integer[0, 9].each |$x| { notice($x) } # notices 0, 1, 2, ... 9
Type: rvalue.
Regexp escape a string or array of strings. Requires either a single string or an array as an input.
Type: rvalue.
Searches through an array and rejects all elements that match the provided regular expression.
For example, reject(['aaa','bbb','ccc','aaaddd'], 'aaa')
returns ['bbb','ccc'].
Since Puppet 4.0.0, the same is true with the built-in filter
function in Puppet.
The equivalent of the stdlib reject
function:
['aaa','bbb','ccc','aaaddd'].filter |$x| { $x !~ /aaa/ }
Type: rvalue.
Reverses the order of a string or array.
Note: The same can be done with the built-in
reverse_each
function in Puppet.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in round
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Rounds a number to the nearest integer.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in rstrip
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Strips spaces to the right of the string.
Type: rvalue.
Takes an integer max value and a string seed value and returns a repeatable random integer smaller than max. Similar to fqdn_rand
, but does not add node specific data to the seed.
Type: rvalue.
Generates a consistent (based on seed value) random string. Useful for generating matching passwords for different hosts.
Escapes a string so that it can be safely used in a Bourne shell command line. Note that the resulting string should be used unquoted and is not intended for use in either double or single quotes. This function behaves the same as Ruby's Shellwords.shellescape()
function; see the Ruby documentation.
For example:
shell_escape('foo b"ar') => 'foo\ b\"ar'
Type: rvalue.
Builds a command line string from a given array of strings. Each array item is escaped for Bourne shell. All items are then joined together, with a single space in between. This function behaves the same as Ruby's Shellwords.shelljoin()
function; see the Ruby documentation.
For example:
shell_join(['foo bar', 'ba"z']) => 'foo\ bar ba\"z'
Type: rvalue.
Splits a string into an array of tokens. This function behaves the same as Ruby's Shellwords.shellsplit()
function; see the ruby documentation.
Example:
shell_split('foo\ bar ba\"z') => ['foo bar', 'ba"z']
Type: rvalue.
Randomizes the order of a string or array elements.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in size
function as of Puppet 6.0.0 (size
is now an alias for length
).
Returns the number of elements in a string, an array or a hash. This function will be deprecated in a future release. For Puppet 4, use the length
function.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: The same functionality can be achieved with the built-in sprintf
function as of Puppet 4.10.10 and 5.3.4. This function will be removed in a future release.
Performs printf-style formatting with named references of text.
The first parameter is a format string describing how to format the rest of the parameters in the hash. See Ruby documentation for Kernel::sprintf
for details about this function.
For example:
$output = sprintf_hash('String: %<foo>s / number converted to binary: %<number>b',
{ 'foo' => 'a string', 'number' => 5 })
# $output = 'String: a string / number converted to binary: 101'
Type: rvalue
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in sort
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Sorts strings and arrays lexically.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Replaces consecutive repeats (such as 'aaaa') in a string with a single character. Returns a new string.
Type: rvalue.
Converts certain strings to a Boolean. This attempts to convert strings that contain the values '1', 'true', 't', 'y', or 'yes' to true
. Strings that contain values '0', 'false', 'f', 'n', or 'no', or that are an empty string or undefined are converted to false
. Any other value causes an error. These checks are case insensitive.
Since Puppet 5.0.0, the same can be achieved with the Puppet type system.
See the Boolean.new
function in Puppet for the many available type conversions.
Boolean('false'), Boolean('n'), Boolean('no') # all false
Boolean('true'), Boolean('y'), Boolean('yes') # all true
Type: rvalue.
Converts a string to a salted-SHA512 password hash, used for OS X versions 10.7 or greater. Returns a hex version of a salted-SHA512 password hash, which can be inserted into Puppet manifests as a valid password attribute.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in strftime
function as of Puppet 4.8.0.
Returns formatted time.
For example, strftime("%s")
returns the time since Unix epoch, and strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
returns the date.
Arguments: A string specifying the time in strftime
format. See the Ruby strftime documentation for details.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Format:
%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 the Unix epoch, 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 (for example +0900)%Z
: Time zone name%%
: Literal '%' character
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in strip
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Removes leading and trailing whitespace from a string or from every string inside an array. For example, strip(" aaa ")
results in "aaa".
Type: rvalue.
Applies a suffix to all elements in an array or to all keys in a hash.
For example:
suffix(['a','b','c'], 'p')
returns ['ap','bp','cp'].suffix({'a'=>'b','b'=>'c','c'=>'d'}, 'p')
returns {'ap'=>'b','bp'=>'c','cp'=>'d'}.
Note that since Puppet 4.0.0, you can modify values in an array using the built-in map
function. This example does the same as the first example above:
['a', 'b', 'c'].map |$x| { "${x}p" }
Type: rvalue.
Swaps the existing case of a string. For example, swapcase("aBcD")
results in "AbCd".
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Returns the current Unix epoch time as an integer.
For example, time()
returns something like '1311972653'.
Since Puppet 4.8.0, the Puppet language has the data types Timestamp
(a point in time) and Timespan
(a duration). The following example is equivalent to calling time()
without any arguments:
Timestamp()
Type: rvalue.
Converts the argument into bytes.
For example, "4 kB" becomes "4096".
Arguments: A single string.
Type: rvalue.
Converts input into a JSON String.
For example, { "key" => "value" }
becomes {"key":"value"}
.
Type: rvalue.
Converts input into a pretty JSON String.
For example, { "key" => "value" }
becomes {\n \"key\": \"value\"\n}
.
Type: rvalue.
Converts input into a YAML String.
For example, { "key" => "value" }
becomes "---\nkey: value\n"
.
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: Replaced by dig()
.
Retrieves a value within multiple layers of hashes and arrays.
Arguments:
-
A string containing a path, as the first argument. Provide this argument as a string of hash keys or array indexes starting with zero and separated by the path separator character (default "/"). This function goes through the structure by each path component and tries to return the value at the end of the path.
-
A default argument as a second argument. This argument is returned if the path is not correct, if no value was found, or if any other error has occurred.
-
The path separator character as a last argument.
$data = {
'a' => {
'b' => [
'b1',
'b2',
'b3',
]
}
}
$value = try_get_value($data, 'a/b/2')
# $value = 'b3'
# with all possible options
$value = try_get_value($data, 'a/b/2', 'not_found', '/')
# $value = 'b3'
# using the default value
$value = try_get_value($data, 'a/b/c/d', 'not_found')
# $value = 'not_found'
# using custom separator
$value = try_get_value($data, 'a|b', [], '|')
# $value = ['b1','b2','b3']
- $data The data structure we are working with.
- 'a/b/2' The path string.
- 'not_found' The default value. It will be returned if nothing is found.
(optional, defaults to
undef
) - '/' The path separator character. (optional, defaults to '/')
Type: rvalue.
Deprecated: This function will be removed in a future release.
Returns a string description of the type of a given value. The type can be a string, array, hash, float, integer, or Boolean. For Puppet 4, use the new type system instead.
Arguments:
- string
- array
- hash
- float
- integer
- Boolean
Type: rvalue.
This function is provided for backwards compatibility, but the built-in type() function provided by Puppet is preferred.
Returns the literal type of a given value. Requires Puppet 4. Useful for comparison of types with <=
such as in if type_of($some_value) <= Array[String] { ... }
(which is equivalent to if $some_value =~ Array[String] { ... }
).
Type: rvalue.
Returns a union of two or more arrays, without duplicates.
For example, union(["a","b","c"],["b","c","d"])
returns ["a","b","c","d"].
Type: rvalue.
Removes duplicates from strings and arrays.
For example, unique("aabbcc")
returns 'abc', and unique(["a","a","b","b","c","c"])
returns ["a","b","c"].
Type: rvalue.
Returns the DOS version of a given string. Useful when using a File resource with a cross-platform template.
Type: rvalue.
file { $config_file:
ensure => file,
content => unix2dos(template('my_module/settings.conf.erb')),
}
See also dos2unix.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in upcase
function as of Puppet 6.0.0.
Converts an object, array, or hash of objects to uppercase. Objects to be converted must respond to upcase.
For example, upcase('abcd')
returns 'ABCD'.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
URLEncodes a string or array of strings.
Arguments: Either a single string or an array of strings.
Type: rvalue.
Note: This function is an implementation of a Ruby class and might not be UTF8 compatible. To ensure compatibility, use this function with Ruby 2.4.0 or greater.
Validates that a given string represents an absolute path in the filesystem. Works for Windows and Unix style paths.
The following values 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)
$my_path3 = ['C:/Program Files (x86)/Puppet Labs/Puppet','C:/Program Files/Puppet Labs/Puppet']
validate_absolute_path($my_path3)
$my_path4 = ['/var/lib/puppet','/usr/share/puppet']
validate_absolute_path($my_path4)
The following values fail, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_absolute_path(true)
validate_absolute_path('../var/lib/puppet')
validate_absolute_path('var/lib/puppet')
validate_absolute_path([ 'var/lib/puppet', '/var/foo' ])
validate_absolute_path([ '/var/lib/puppet', 'var/foo' ])
$undefined = `undef`
validate_absolute_path($undefined)
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that all passed values are array data structures. Terminates catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values pass:
$my_array = [ 'one', 'two' ]
validate_array($my_array)
The following values fail, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_array(true)
validate_array('some_string')
$undefined = `undef`
validate_array($undefined)
Type: statement.
Validates a string using an Augeas lens.
Arguments:
- The string to test, as the first argument.
- The name of the Augeas lens to use, as the second argument.
- Optionally, a list of paths which should not be found in the file, as a third argument.
- Optionally, an error message to raise and show to the user, as a fourth argument.
If Augeas fails to parse the string with the lens, the compilation terminates with a parse error.
The $file
variable points to the location of the temporary file being tested in the Augeas tree.
For example, to make sure your $passwdcontent never contains user foo
, include the third argument:
validate_augeas($passwdcontent, 'Passwd.lns', ['$file/foo'])
To raise and display an error message, include the fourth argument:
validate_augeas($sudoerscontent, 'Sudoers.lns', [], 'Failed to validate sudoers content with Augeas')
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that all passed values are either true
or false
.
Terminates catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values pass:
$iamtrue = true
validate_bool(true)
validate_bool(true, true, false, $iamtrue)
The following values fail, causing compilation to terminate:
$some_array = [ true ]
validate_bool("false")
validate_bool("true")
validate_bool($some_array)
Type: statement.
Validates a string with an external command.
Arguments:
- The string to test, as the first argument.
- The path to a test command, as the second argument. This argument takes a % as a placeholder for the file path (if no % placeholder is given, defaults to the end of the command). If the command is launched against a tempfile containing the passed string, or returns a non-null value, compilation will terminate with a parse error.
- Optionally, an error message to raise and show to the user, as a third argument.
# Defaults to end of path
validate_cmd($sudoerscontent, '/usr/sbin/visudo -c -f', 'Visudo failed to validate sudoers content')
# % as file location
validate_cmd($haproxycontent, '/usr/sbin/haproxy -f % -c', 'Haproxy failed to validate config content')
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validate that all values passed are syntactically correct domain names. Aborts catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values pass:
$my_domain_name = 'server.domain.tld'
validate_domain_name($my_domain_name)
validate_domain_name('domain.tld', 'puppet.com', $my_domain_name)
The following values fail, causing compilation to abort:
validate_domain_name(1)
validate_domain_name(true)
validate_domain_name('invalid domain')
validate_domain_name('-foo.example.com')
validate_domain_name('www.example.2com')
Type: statement.
Validate that all values passed are valid email addresses. Fail compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values will pass:
$my_email = "waldo@gmail.com"
validate_email_address($my_email)
validate_email_address("bob@gmail.com", "alice@gmail.com", $my_email)
The following values will fail, causing compilation to abort:
$some_array = [ 'bad_email@/d/efdf.com' ]
validate_email_address($some_array)
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that all passed values are hash data structures. Terminates 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 terminate:
validate_hash(true)
validate_hash('some_string')
$undefined = `undef`
validate_hash($undefined)
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates an integer or an array of integers. Terminates catalog compilation if any of the checks fail.
Arguments:
- An integer or an array of integers, as the first argument.
- Optionally, a maximum, as the second argument. (All elements of) the first argument must be equal to or less than this maximum.
- Optionally, a minimum, as the third argument. (All elements of) the first argument must be equal to or greater than than this maximum.
This function fails if the first argument is not an integer or array of integers, or if the second or third arguments are not convertable to an integer. However, if (and only if) a minimum is given, the second argument may be an empty string or undef
, which serves as a placeholder to ensure the minimum check.
The following values pass:
validate_integer(1)
validate_integer(1, 2)
validate_integer(1, 1)
validate_integer(1, 2, 0)
validate_integer(2, 2, 2)
validate_integer(2, '', 0)
validate_integer(2, `undef`, 0)
$foo = `undef`
validate_integer(2, $foo, 0)
validate_integer([1,2,3,4,5], 6)
validate_integer([1,2,3,4,5], 6, 0)
- Plus all of the above, but any combination of values passed as strings ('1' or "1").
- Plus all of the above, but with (correct) combinations of negative integer values.
The following values fail, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_integer(true)
validate_integer(false)
validate_integer(7.0)
validate_integer({ 1 => 2 })
$foo = `undef`
validate_integer($foo)
validate_integer($foobaridontexist)
validate_integer(1, 0)
validate_integer(1, true)
validate_integer(1, '')
validate_integer(1, `undef`)
validate_integer(1, , 0)
validate_integer(1, 2, 3)
validate_integer(1, 3, 2)
validate_integer(1, 3, true)
- Plus all of the above, but any combination of values passed as strings (
false
or "false"). - Plus all of the above, but with incorrect combinations of negative integer values.
- Plus all of the above, but with non-integer items in arrays or maximum / minimum argument.
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that the argument is an IP address, regardless of whether it is an IPv4 or an IPv6 address. It also validates IP address with netmask.
Arguments: A string specifying an IP address.
The following values will pass:
validate_ip_address('0.0.0.0')
validate_ip_address('8.8.8.8')
validate_ip_address('127.0.0.1')
validate_ip_address('194.232.104.150')
validate_ip_address('3ffe:0505:0002::')
validate_ip_address('::1/64')
validate_ip_address('fe80::a00:27ff:fe94:44d6/64')
validate_ip_address('8.8.8.8/32')
The following values will fail, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_ip_address(1)
validate_ip_address(true)
validate_ip_address(0.0.0.256)
validate_ip_address('::1', {})
validate_ip_address('0.0.0.0.0')
validate_ip_address('3.3.3')
validate_ip_address('23.43.9.22/64')
validate_ip_address('260.2.32.43')
Validates a value against both a specified type and a deprecated validation function. Silently passes if both pass, errors if only one validation passes, and fails if both validations return false.
Arguments:
- The type to check the value against,
- The full name of the previous validation function,
- The value to be checked,
- An unspecified number of arguments needed for the previous validation function.
Example:
validate_legacy('Optional[String]', 'validate_re', 'Value to be validated', ["."])
This function supports updating modules from Puppet 3-style argument validation (using the stdlib validate_*
functions) to Puppet 4 data types, without breaking functionality for those depending on Puppet 3-style validation.
Note: This function is compatible only with Puppet 4.4.0 (PE 2016.1) and later.
If you are running Puppet 4, the validate_legacy
function can help you find and resolve deprecated Puppet 3 validate_*
functions. These functions are deprecated as of stdlib version 4.13 and will be removed in a future version of stdlib.
Puppet 4 allows improved defined type checking using data types. Data types avoid some of the problems with Puppet 3's validate_*
functions, which were sometimes inconsistent. For example, validate_numeric unintentionally allowed not only numbers, but also arrays of numbers or strings that looked like numbers.
If you run Puppet 4 and use modules with deprecated validate_*
functions, you might encounter deprecation messages. The validate_legacy
function makes these differences visible and makes it easier to move to the clearer Puppet 4 syntax.
The deprecation messages you get can vary, depending on the modules and data that you use. These deprecation messages appear by default only in Puppet 4:
Notice: Accepting previously invalid value for target type '<type>'
: This message is informational only. You're using values that are allowed by the new type, but would have been invalid by the old validation function.Warning: This method is deprecated, please use the stdlib validate_legacy function
: The module has not yet upgraded tovalidate_legacy
. Use the deprecation options to silence warnings for now, or submit a fix with the module's developer. See the information for module developers below for how to fix the issue.Warning: validate_legacy(<function>) expected <type> value, got <actual type>_
: Your code passes a value that was accepted by the Puppet 3-style validation, but will not be accepted by the next version of the module. Most often, you can fix this by removing quotes from numbers or booleans.Error: Evaluation Error: Error while evaluating a Resource Statement, Evaluation Error: Error while evaluating a Function Call, validate_legacy(<function>) expected <type> value, got <actual type>
: Your code passes a value that is not acceptable to either the new or the old style validation.
The validate_legacy
function helps you move from Puppet 3 style validation to Puppet 4 validation without breaking functionality your module's users depend on.
Moving to Puppet 4 type validation allows much better defined type checking using data types. Many of Puppet 3's validate_*
functions have surprising holes in their validation. For example, validate_numeric allows not only numbers, but also arrays of numbers or strings that look like numbers, without giving you any control over the specifics.
For each parameter of your classes and defined types, choose a new Puppet 4 data type to use. In most cases, the new data type allows a different set of values than the original validate_*
function. The situation then looks like this:
validate_ pass |
validate_ fail |
|
---|---|---|
matches type | pass | pass, notice |
fails type | pass, deprecated | fail |
The code after the validation still has to handle all possible values for now, but users of your code can change their manifests to pass only values that match the new type.
For each validate_*
function in stdlib, there is a matching Stdlib::Compat::*
type that allows the appropriate set of values. See the documentation in the types/
directory in the stdlib source code for caveats.
For example, given a class that should accept only numbers, like this:
class example($value) {
validate_numeric($value)
the resulting validation code looks like this:
class example(
Variant[Stdlib::Compat::Numeric, Numeric] $value
) {
validate_legacy(Numeric, 'validate_numeric', $value)
Here, the type of $value
is defined as Variant[Stdlib::Compat::Numeric, Numeric]
, which allows any Numeric
(the new type), as well as all values previously accepted by validate_numeric
(through Stdlib::Compat::Numeric
).
The call to validate_legacy
takes care of triggering the correct log or fail message for you. It requires the new type, the previous validation function name, and all arguments to that function.
If your module still supported Puppet 3, this is a breaking change. Update your metadata.json
requirements section to indicate that your module no longer supports Puppet 3, and bump the major version of your module. With this change, all existing tests for your module should still pass. Create additional tests for the new possible values.
As a breaking change, this is also a good time to call deprecation
for any parameters you want to get rid of, or to add additional constraints on your parameters.
After releasing this version, you can release another breaking change release where you remove all compat types and all calls to validate_legacy
. At that time, you can also go through your code and remove any leftovers dealing with the previously possible values.
Always note such changes in your CHANGELOG and README.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates a numeric value, or an array or string of numeric values. Terminates catalog compilation if any of the checks fail.
Arguments:
- A numeric value, or an array or string of numeric values.
- Optionally, a maximum value. (All elements of) the first argument has to be less or equal to this max.
- Optionally, a minimum value. (All elements of) the first argument has to be greater or equal to this min.
This function fails if the first argument is not a numeric (Integer or Float) or an array or string of numerics, or if the second and third arguments are not convertable to a numeric. If, and only if, a minimum is given, the second argument can be an empty string or undef
, which serves as a placeholder to ensure the minimum check.
For passing and failing usage, see validate_integer
. The same values pass and fail, except that validate_numeric
also allows floating point values.
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Performs simple validation of a string against one or more regular expressions.
Arguments:
- The string to test, as the first argument. If this argument is not a string, compilation terminates. Use quotes to force stringification.
- A stringified regular expression (without the // delimiters) or an array of regular expressions, as the second argument.
- Optionally, the error message raised and shown to the user, as a third argument.
If none of the regular expressions in the second argument match the string passed in the first argument, compilation terminates with a parse error.
The following strings validate against the regular expressions:
validate_re('one', '^one$')
validate_re('one', [ '^one', '^two' ])
The following string fails to validate, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_re('one', [ '^two', '^three' ])
To set the error message:
validate_re($::puppetversion, '^2.7', 'The $puppetversion fact value does not match 2.7')
To force stringification, use quotes:
validate_re("${::operatingsystemmajrelease}", '^[57]$')
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that a string (or an array of strings) is less than or equal to a specified length
Arguments:
-
A string or an array of strings, as a first argument.
-
A numeric value for maximum length, as a second argument.
-
Optionally, a numeric value for minimum length, as a third argument.
The following values pass:
validate_slength("discombobulate",17)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","moo"],17)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","moo"],17,3)
The following values fail:
validate_slength("discombobulate",1)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","thermometer"],5)
validate_slength(["discombobulate","moo"],17,10)
Type: statement.
Deprecated: Will be removed in a future version of stdlib. See validate_legacy
.
Validates that all passed values are string data structures. Aborts catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
The following values pass:
$my_string = "one two"
validate_string($my_string, 'three')
The following values fail, causing compilation to terminate:
validate_string(true)
validate_string([ 'some', 'array' ])
Note: validate_string(
undef
) will not fail in this version of the functions API.
Instead, use:
if $var == `undef` {
fail('...')
}
Type: statement.
Validates a PEM-formatted X.509 certificate and private key using OpenSSL. Verifies that the certificate's signature was created from the supplied key.
Fails catalog compilation if any value fails this check.
Arguments:
- An X.509 certificate as the first argument.
- An RSA private key, as the second argument.
validate_x509_rsa_key_pair($cert, $key)
Type: statement.
Deprecated: This function has been replaced with a built-in values
function as of Puppet 5.5.0.
Returns the values of a given hash.
For example, given $hash = {'a'=1, 'b'=2, 'c'=3} values($hash)
returns [1,2,3].
Type: rvalue.
Finds values inside an array based on location.
Arguments:
- The array you want to analyze, as the first argument.
- Any combination of the following values, as the second argument:
- A single numeric index
- A range in the form of 'start-stop' (eg. 4-9)
- An array combining the above
For example:
values_at(['a','b','c'], 2)
returns ['c'].values_at(['a','b','c'], ["0-1"])
returns ['a','b'].values_at(['a','b','c','d','e'], [0, "2-3"])
returns ['a','c','d'].
Since Puppet 4.0.0, you can slice an array with index and count directly in the language. A negative value is taken to be "from the end" of the array, for example:
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'][1, 2] # results in ['b', 'c']
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'][2, -1] # results in ['c', 'd']
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'][1, -2] # results in ['b', 'c']
Type: rvalue.
Takes one element from first array given and merges corresponding elements from second array given. This generates a sequence of n-element arrays, where n is one more than the count of arguments. For example, zip(['1','2','3'],['4','5','6'])
results in ["1", "4"], ["2", "5"], ["3", "6"]. Type: rvalue.
As of Puppet Enterprise 3.7, the stdlib module is no longer included in PE. PE users should install the most recent release of stdlib for compatibility with Puppet modules.
For an extensive list of supported operating systems, see metadata.json
Versions | Puppet 2.6 | Puppet 2.7 | Puppet 3.x | Puppet 4.x |
---|---|---|---|---|
stdlib 2.x | yes | yes | no | no |
stdlib 3.x | no | yes | yes | no |
stdlib 4.x | no | yes | yes | no |
stdlib 4.6+ | no | yes | yes | yes |
stdlib 5.x | no | no | yes | yes |
stdlib 5.x: When released, stdlib 5.x will drop support for Puppet 2.7.x. Please see this discussion.
Puppet modules on the Puppet Forge are open projects, and community contributions are essential for keeping them great. We can’t access the huge number of platforms and myriad hardware, software, and deployment configurations that Puppet is intended to serve. We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes so that our modules work in your environment. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things. For more information, see our module contribution guide.
To report or research a bug with any part of this module, please go to http://tickets.puppetlabs.com/browse/MODULES.
The list of contributors can be found at: https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-stdlib/graphs/contributors.