Previously the validate_db_connection defined type was trying to use inherits
like a class. This of course would fail.
After analyzing its usage, I've removed the need for the top-level params
inherit by just including the 'postgresql' module which pulls in the client
package and the params class as well. It also avoids resource duplication
for the client package as well.
To ensure we don't get regression on this I've added system tests that test
this defined type in a success and failure state.
Signed-off-by: Ken Barber <ken@bob.sh>
Debian Wheezy has a default version of 9.1, but doesn't currently have
an operatingsystemrelease value beyond 'wheezy'. This command searches
for wheezy in the operatingsystemrelease fact and sets the fact value
accordingly.
When the psql command runs from a directory it does not have permission to
access, it outputs an error. This error trips up the unless SQL command,
causing the other SQL commands to run even if not needed. Rather than ignore
stderr (which might hide something else), or use an arbitrary directory like
/tmp, this code sets the cwd to the data directory, which will exist and be
owned by the postgres user. If someone uses the postgres_psql type and
customises the psql_user parameter, they should also set an appropriate cwd.
Moved the ip mask for allowing remote access for other users to the end of the IPv4 section
so that it doesn't block access to the DB via local loopback for other forms of authentication (such as LDAP).
The GPG key for yum.postgresql.org was in the wrong directory,
and as written, would have only supported postgres 9.2 anyway.
I looked at the yum rpms for a few other versions besides 9.2,
and they appear to be using the same GPG key. So this commit
assumes that they all are doing so, and it sets things up
accordingly. Hopefully this will make the yumrepo support
compatible with other versions of postgres besides 9.2, but I
haven't added that to the actual test matrix yet.
This commit fixes up the `postgres_default_version` fact so that
it doesn't use apt/yum (slow), and instead just has a hard-coded
list of default postgres versions for various OS versions. We
will need to add new OS versions to this fact over time, but that
seems preferable to the previous implementation which was causing
slower puppet runs on all nodes (regardless of whether they were
actually using postgres or not).
Thanks to some tricks I learned from Nan Liu and Dan Bode, I was
able to figure out a way to move all of the new version-related stuff
back into the params class, and clean up some of the if/_real stuff.
Basic tests for centos6 + pg 9.2 are passing.
Nan showed me a trick that will let us keep all of that param stuff
inside of params.pp, make it a parameterized class, and still support
the ability for users to specify a custom (non-system-default) pg
version. This commit takes the first step towards that pattern by
consolidating platform.pp and params.pp. (Everything old is new again!)
This commit creates a new class called `package_source_info`,
which has some initial framework for managing the postgresql.org
yumrepo. It also serves as a container for the 'version'
variable that is needed by the 'platform' class in order to
use other versions of postgres besides the system default.
The service provider / status stuff got a little broken during
the refactors. This should mostly fix it but there is still
one spec failing, and I will probably also refactor the
paths.pp and packages.pp into a single file together eventually.
This commit does a fairly major refactor of how the spec tests
are laid out. The main goal was to make it easier to run
a subset of the tests--e.g., the ability to only run tests
on a single OS via a simple rspec command.
The test logic is now defined in some shared examples in the
`support` directory. There are now spec folders for each
distro, which contain some stubs to include the shared examples
as well as a Vagrantfile for the particular distro.
Also, the system-default postgres package tests now run
successfully against the CentOS6 VM that is defined by the
Vagrantfile.
This commit does the following:
* Adds a CentOS6 vm to the Vagrantfile
* Reorganizes the spec test file a bit so that it will be easy
to test various things on different VMs.
This is in preparation for adding some PG9 tests to run on
Cent6.