Function Reference
Function Reference
This page is autogenerated; any changes will get overwritten (last generated on Thu Feb 24 17:22:44 -0800 2011)
There are two types of functions in Puppet: Statements and rvalues. Statements stand on their own and do not return arguments; they are used for performing stand-alone work like importing. Rvalues return values and can only be used in a statement requiring a value, such as an assignment or a case statement.
Here are the functions available in Puppet:
alert
Log a message on the server at level alert.
- Type: statement
crit
Log a message on the server at level crit.
- Type: statement
debug
Log a message on the server at level debug.
- Type: statement
defined
Determine whether a given
type is defined, either as a native type or a defined type, or whether a class is defined.
This is useful for checking whether a class is defined and only including it if it is.
This function can also test whether a resource has been defined, using resource references
(e.g., if defined(File['/tmp/myfile']) { ... }
). This function is unfortunately
dependent on the parse order of the configuration when testing whether a resource is defined.
- Type: rvalue
emerg
Log a message on the server at level emerg.
- Type: statement
err
Log a message on the server at level err.
- Type: statement
fail
Fail with a parse error.
- Type: statement
file
Return the contents of a file. Multiple files can be passed, and the first file that exists will be read in.
- Type: rvalue
fqdn_rand
Generates random numbers based on the node's fqdn. The first argument sets the range. The second argument specifies a number to add to the seed and is optional.
- Type: rvalue
generate
Calls an external command and returns the results of the command. Any arguments are passed to the external command as arguments. If the generator does not exit with return code of 0, the generator is considered to have failed and a parse error is thrown. Generators can only have file separators, alphanumerics, dashes, and periods in them. This function will attempt to protect you from malicious generator calls (e.g., those with '..' in them), but it can never be entirely safe. No subshell is used to execute generators, so all shell metacharacters are passed directly to the generator.
- Type: rvalue
include
Evaluate one or more classes.
- Type: statement
info
Log a message on the server at level info.
- Type: statement
inline_template
Evaluate a template string and return its value. See the templating docs for more information. Note that if multiple template strings are specified, their output is all concatenated and returned as the output of the function.
- Type: rvalue
notice
Log a message on the server at level notice.
- Type: statement
realize
Make a virtual object real. This is useful
when you want to know the name of the virtual object and don't want to
bother with a full collection. It is slightly faster than a collection,
and, of course, is a bit shorter. You must pass the object using a
reference; e.g.: realize User[luke]
.
- Type: statement
regsubst
Perform regexp replacement on a string.
- Parameters (in order):
str: | The string to operate on. |
---|---|
regexp: | The regular expression matching the string. If you want it anchored at the start and or end of the string, you must do that with ^ and $ yourself. |
replacement: | Replacement string. Can contain back references to what was matched using 0, 1, and so on. |
flags: | Optional. String of single letter flags for how the regexp is interpreted:
|
lang: | Optional. How to handle multibyte characters. A single-character string with the following values:
|
- Examples
Get the third octet from the node's IP address:
$i3 = regsubst($ipaddress,'^([0-9]+)[.]([0-9]+)[.]([0-9]+)[.]([0-9]+)$','\3')
Put angle brackets around each octet in the node's IP address:
$x = regsubst($ipaddress, '([0-9]+)', '<\1>', 'G')
- Type: rvalue
require
Evaluate one or more classes, adding the required class as a dependency.
The relationship metaparameters work well for specifying relationships between individual resources, but they can be clumsy for specifying relationships between classes. This function is a superset of the 'include' function, adding a class relationship so that the requiring class depends on the required class.
Warning
using require in place of include can lead to unwanted dependency cycles. For instance the following manifest, with 'require' instead of 'include' would produce a nasty dependence cycle, because notify imposes a before between File[/foo] and Service[foo]:
class myservice {
service { foo: ensure => running }
}
class otherstuff {
include myservice
file { '/foo': notify => Service[foo] }
}
- Type: statement
search
Add another namespace for this class to search. This allows you to create classes with sets of definitions and add those classes to another class's search path.
- Type: statement
sha1
Returns a SHA1 hash value from a provided string.
- Type: rvalue
shellquote
Quote and concatenate arguments for use in Bourne shell.
Each argument is quoted separately, and then all are concatenated with spaces. If an argument is an array, the elements of that array is interpolated within the rest of the arguments; this makes it possible to have an array of arguments and pass that array to shellquote() instead of having to specify specify each argument individually in the call.
- Type: rvalue
split
Split a string variable into an array using the specified split regexp.
Usage:
$string = 'v1.v2:v3.v4'
$array_var1 = split($string, ':')
$array_var2 = split($string, '[.]')
$array_var3 = split($string, '[.:]')
$array_var1 now holds the result ['v1.v2', 'v3.v4'], while $array_var2 holds ['v1', 'v2:v3', 'v4'], and $array_var3 holds ['v1', 'v2', 'v3', 'v4'].
Note that in the second example, we split on a string that contains a regexp meta-character (.), and that needs protection. A simple way to do that for a single character is to enclose it in square brackets.
- Type: rvalue
sprintf
Perform printf-style formatting of text.
The first parameter is format string describing how the rest of the parameters should be formatted. See the documentation for the Kernel::sprintf()
function in Ruby for all the details.
- Type: rvalue
tag
Add the specified tags to the containing class or definition. All contained objects will then acquire that tag, also.
- Type: statement
tagged
A boolean function that tells you whether the current container is tagged with the specified tags. The tags are ANDed, so that all of the specified tags must be included for the function to return true.
- Type: rvalue
template
Evaluate a template and return its value. See the templating docs for more information. Note that if multiple templates are specified, their output is all concatenated and returned as the output of the function.
- Type: rvalue
versioncmp
Compares two versions
Prototype:
$result = versioncmp(a, b)
where a and b are arbitrary version strings
This functions returns a number:
* > 0 if version a is greater than version b
* == 0 if both version are equals
* < 0 if version a is less than version b
Example:
if versioncmp('2.6-1', '2.4.5') > 0 {
notify('2.6-1 is > than 2.4.5')
}
- Type: rvalue
warning
Log a message on the server at level warning.
- Type: statement
This page autogenerated on Thu Feb 24 17:22:44 -0800 2011