Docs: Hiera 1: Creating Hierarchies


Hiera 1: Creating Hierarchies

Hiera uses an ordered hierarchy to look up data. This allows you to have a large amount of common data and override smaller amounts of it wherever necessary.

Location and Syntax

Hiera loads the hierarchy from the hiera.yaml config file. The hierarchy must be the value of the top-level :hierarchy key.

The hierarchy should be an array. (Alternately, it may be a string; this will be treated like a one-element array.)

Each element in the hierarchy must be a string, which may or may not include variable interpolation tokens. Hiera will treat each element in the hierarchy as the name of a data source.

# /etc/hiera.yaml
---
:hierarchy:
  - %{::clientcert}
  - %{::environment}
  - virtual_%{::is_virtual}
  - common

Terminology:

We use these two terms within the Hiera docs and in various other places:

  • Static data source — A hierarchy element without any interpolation tokens. A static data source will be the same for every node. In the example above, common is a static data source — a virtual machine named web01 and a physical machine named db01 would both use common.
  • Dynamic data source — A hierarchy element with at least one interpolation token. If two nodes have different values for the variables it references, a dynamic data source will use two different data sources for those nodes. In the example above: the special $::clientcert Puppet variable has a unique value for every node. A machine named web01 would have a data source named web01 at the top of its hierarchy, while a machine named db01 would have db01 at the top.

Behavior

Ordering

Each element in the hierarchy resolves to the name of a data source. Hiera will check these data sources in order, starting with the first.

  • If a data source in the hierarchy doesn’t exist, Hiera will move on to the next data source.
  • If a data source exists but does not have the piece of data Hiera is searching for, it will move on to the next data source. (Since the goal is to help you not repeat yourself, Hiera expects that most data sources will either not exist or not have the data.)
  • If a value is found:
    • In a normal (priority) lookup, Hiera will stop at the first data source with the requested data and return that value.
    • In an array lookup, Hiera will continue, then return all of the discovered values as a flattened array. Values from higher in the hierarchy will be the first elements in the array, and values from lower will be later.
    • In a hash lookup, Hiera will continue, expecting every value to be a hash and throwing an error if any non-hash values are discovered. It will then merge all of the discovered hashes and return the result, allowing values from higher in the hierarchy to replace values from lower.
  • If Hiera goes through the entire hierarchy without finding a value, it will use the default value if one was provided, or fail with an error if one wasn’t.

Multiple Backends

You can specify multiple backends as an array in hiera.yaml. If you do, they function as a second hierarchy.

Hiera will give priority to the first backend, and will check every level of the hierarchy in it before moving on to the second backend. This means that, with the following hiera.yaml:

---
:backends:
  - yaml
  - json
:hierarchy:
  - one
  - two
  - three

…hiera would check the following data sources, in order:

  • one.yaml
  • two.yaml
  • three.yaml
  • one.json
  • two.json
  • three.json

Example

Assume the following hierarchy:

# /etc/hiera.yaml
---
:hierarchy:
  - %{::clientcert}
  - %{::environment}
  - virtual_%{::is_virtual}
  - common

…and the following set of data sources:

  • web01.example.com
  • web02.example.com
  • db01.example.com
  • production.yaml
  • development.yaml
  • virtual_true.yaml
  • common.yaml

…and only the yaml backend.

Given two different nodes with different Puppet variables, here are two ways the hierarchy could be interpreted:

web01.example.com

Variables

  • ::clientcert = web01.example.com
  • ::environment = production
  • ::is_virtual = true

Data Source Resolution

A hierarchy interpreted for a node

Final Hierarchy

  • web01.example.com.yaml
  • production.yaml
  • virtual_true.yaml
  • common.yaml

db01.example.com

Variables

  • ::clientcert = db01.example.com
  • ::environment = development
  • ::is_virtual = false

Data Source Resolution

The same hierarchy, interpreted for another node

Final Hierarchy

  • db01.example.com.yaml
  • development.yaml
  • common.yaml

Note that, since virtual_false.yaml doesn’t exist, it gets skipped entirely.

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