maintainer: | Jack Kuan <kjkuan@gmail.com> |
---|---|
maturity: | new |
platform: | all |
This module provides a custom renderer that processes a salt file with a specified templating engine (e.g., Jinja) and a chosen data renderer (e.g., YAML), extracts arguments for any stateconf.set state, and provides the extracted arguments (including Salt-specific args, such as require, etc) as template context. The goal is to make writing reusable/configurable/parameterized salt files easier and cleaner.
To use this renderer, either set it as the default renderer via the renderer option in master/minion's config, or use the shebang line in each individual sls file, like so: #!stateconf. Note, due to the way this renderer works, it must be specified as the first renderer in a render pipeline. That is, you cannot specify #!mako|yaml|stateconf, for example. Instead, you specify them as renderer arguments: #!stateconf mako . yaml.
Here's a list of features enabled by this renderer.
Prefixes any state id (declaration or reference) that starts with a dot (.) to avoid duplicated state ids when the salt file is included by other salt files.
For example, in the salt://some/file.sls, a state id such as .sls_params will be turned into some.file::sls_params. Example:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
.vim:
package.installed
Above will be translated into:
some.file::vim:
package.installed:
- name: vim
Notice how that if a state under a dot-prefixed state id has no name argument then one will be added automatically by using the state id with the leading dot stripped off.
The leading dot trick can be used with extending state ids as well, so you can include relatively and extend relatively. For example, when extending a state in salt://some/other_file.sls, e.g.,:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
include:
- .file
extend:
.file::sls_params:
stateconf.set:
- name1: something
Above will be pre-processed into:
include:
- some.file
extend:
some.file::sls_params:
stateconf.set:
- name1: something
Adds a sls_dir context variable that expands to the directory containing the rendering salt file. So, you can write salt://{{sls_dir}}/... to reference templates files used by your salt file.
Recognizes the special state function, stateconf.set, that configures a default list of named arguments usable within the template context of the salt file. Example:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
.sls_params:
stateconf.set:
- name1: value1
- name2: value2
- name3:
- value1
- value2
- value3
- require_in:
- cmd: output
# --- end of state config ---
.output:
cmd.run:
- name: |
echo 'name1={{sls_params.name1}}
name2={{sls_params.name2}}
name3[1]={{sls_params.name3[1]}}
'
This even works with include + extend so that you can override the default configured arguments by including the salt file and then extend the stateconf.set states that come from the included salt file. (IMPORTANT: Both the included and the extending sls files must use the stateconf renderer for this ``extend`` to work!)
Notice that the end of configuration marker (# --- end of state config --) is needed to separate the use of 'stateconf.set' form the rest of your salt file. The regex that matches such marker can be configured via the stateconf_end_marker option in your master or minion config file.
Sometimes, you'd like to set a default argument value that's based on earlier arguments in the same stateconf.set. For example, you may be tempted to do something like this:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
.apache:
stateconf.set:
- host: localhost
- port: 1234
- url: 'http://{{host}}:{{port}}/'
# --- end of state config ---
.test:
cmd.run:
- name: echo '{{apache.url}}'
- cwd: /
However, this won't work, but can be worked around like so:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
.apache:
stateconf.set:
- host: localhost
- port: 1234
{# - url: 'http://{{host}}:{{port}}/' #}
# --- end of state config ---
# {{ apache.setdefault('url', "http://%(host)s:%(port)s/" % apache) }}
.test:
cmd.run:
- name: echo '{{apache.url}}'
- cwd: /
Adds support for relative include and exclude of .sls files. Example:
#!stateconf yaml . jinja
include:
- .apache
- .db.mysql
exclude:
- sls: .users
If the above is written in a salt file at salt://some/where.sls then it will include salt://some/apache.sls and salt://some/db/mysql.sls, and exclude salt://some/users.ssl. Actually, it does that by rewriting the above include and exclude into:
include:
- some.apache
- some.db.mysql
exclude:
- sls: some.users
Optionally (enabled by default, disable via the -G renderer option, e.g., in the shebang line: #!stateconf -G), generates a stateconf.set goal state (state id named as .goal by default, configurable via the master/minion config option, stateconf_goal_state) that requires all other states in the salt file. Note, the .goal state id is subject to dot-prefix rename rule mentioned earlier.
Such goal state is intended to be required by some state in an including salt file. For example, in your webapp salt file, if you include a sls file that is supposed to setup Tomcat, you might want to make sure that all states in the Tomcat sls file will be executed before some state in the webapp sls file.
Optionally (enable via the -o renderer option, e.g., in the shebang line: #!stateconf -o), orders the states in a sls file by adding a require requisite to each state such that every state requires the state defined just before it. The order of the states here is the order they are defined in the sls file. (Note: this feature is only available if your minions are using Python >= 2.7. For Python2.6, it should also work if you install the ordereddict module from PyPI)
By enabling this feature, you are basically agreeing to author your sls files in a way that gives up the explicit (or implicit?) ordering imposed by the use of require, watch, require_in or watch_in requisites, and instead, you rely on the order of states you define in the sls files. This may or may not be a better way for you. However, if there are many states defined in a sls file, then it tends to be easier to see the order they will be executed with this feature.
You are still allowed to use all the requisites, with a few restrictions. You cannot require or watch a state defined after the current state. Similarly, in a state, you cannot require_in or watch_in a state defined before it. Breaking any of the two restrictions above will result in a state loop. The renderer will check for such incorrect uses if this feature is enabled.
Additionally, names declarations cannot be used with this feature because the way they are compiled into low states make it impossible to guarantee the order in which they will be executed. This is also checked by the renderer. As a workaround for not being able to use names, you can achieve the same effect, by generate your states with the template engine available within your sls file.
Finally, with the use of this feature, it becomes possible to easily make an included sls file execute all its states after some state (say, with id X) in the including sls file. All you have to do is to make state, X, require_in the first state defined in the included sls file.
When writing sls files with this renderer, you should avoid using what can be defined in a name argument of a state as the state's id. That is, avoid writing your states like this:
/path/to/some/file:
file.managed:
- source: salt://some/file
cp /path/to/some/file file2:
cmd.run:
- cwd: /
- require:
- file: /path/to/some/file
Instead, you should define the state id and the name argument separately for each state, and the id should be something meaningful and easy to reference within a requisite (which I think is a good habit anyway, and such extra indirection would also makes your sls file easier to modify later). Thus, the above states should be written like this:
add-some-file:
file.managed:
- name: /path/to/some/file
- source: salt://some/file
copy-files:
cmd.run:
- name: cp /path/to/some/file file2
- cwd: /
- require:
- file: add-some-file
Moreover, when referencing a state from a requisite, you should reference the state's id plus the state name rather than the state name plus its name argument. (Yes, in the above example, you can actually require the file: /path/to/some/file, instead of the file: add-some-file). The reason is that this renderer will re-write or rename state id's and their references for state id's prefixed with .. So, if you reference name then there's no way to reliably rewrite such reference.