Split the `destroy` method of the file_type::ruby provider into two
private methods: `handle_destroy_line` which is the same as the previous
`destroy` method, and `handle_destroy_with_match` which will destroy any
line which matches the `match` parameter, raising an error if multiple
lines match and the `multiple` parameter is not `true`. This new
behavior is only used if the new boolean parameter `match_for_absence`
is `true` (it defaults to `false`).
Puppet's boolean parameter type is only available in Puppet 3.3 and
higher, so change file_type's new "replace" parameter to a regular
parameter with true and false as possible values. This matches the
existing "multiple" parameter.
This function loads the metadata.json into a puppet variable. This enables a number of neat things such as:
* Which version of the module am I using? 2.x? 3.x?
* Which author of the module am I using? puppetlabs? example42?
The time() function takes an argument of a timezone, and always returns
time in epoch format. The epoch format is the number of seconds that
have elapsed since January 1, 1970 (midnight UTC/GMT), not counting leap
seconds. This means that it is universally the same regardless of
timezones.
I don't know what the timezone argument is supposed to do, and it is not
documented. So lets just make 1.8.7 work like > 1.8.7
Previously, the random number generator was seeded with the array or
string to be rotated in addition to any values specifically provided for
seeding. This behavior is potentially insecure in that it allows an
attacker who can modify the source data to choose the post-shuffle
order.
Tests in the new style produces the following documentation output:
abs
should not eq nil
should run abs() and raise an Puppet::ParseError
should run abs(-34) and return 34
should run abs("-34") and return 34
should run abs(34) and return 34
should run abs("34") and return 34
Without this, file_line resource without the `match` parameter but with the `after` param will throw an error if there are multiple matches for the after expression. This patch creates the handling for the `multiple` parameter in handle_create_with_after. This allows you to add a line after the `after` expression if it appears at multiple points in a file.
Updated reference to `file_line` in the README to reflect that the multiple parameter can be set when using `after` and/or `match` as the matching regex.
The rspec-puppet matchers don't allow to check the return types, but
this is a pretty rare thing to need to do anyway, so probably not worth
patching rspec-puppet
This fixes the acceptance tests by:
- Ensuring the fqdn_rand_string spec is passed undef as the second
parameter so that the seed is not used as the charset
- Ensuring the pw_hash spec is passed the key specifying the type of
hash, rather than the value that will be used to generate the
password
- Expecting puppet to report nil instead of empty string for undef
passwords
- Removing the fqdn_rand_base64 test because there is no such function
Fix off-by-one error in validate_augeas_spec.rb that was causing rspec failure
Even without the gem installed always, this is helpful to avoid errors should augeas be enabled/installed due to something else.
unsupported_platforms is not a valid identifier, and trying to use it
causes acceptance tests to error out before running any tests. The
correct identifier for the unsupported platforms constants is
UNSUPPORTED_PLATFORMS.
As mentioned in #270, private is a reserved keyword in the future parser
which is to be released with Puppet 4. As it stands, this function is
not useable with the future parser so it needs to renamed.
This is a breaking change.
The previous commit to uriescape() changed the implementation to use the ruby default escape list for URI.escape(), but did not change the call triggered when uriescape() was called on an array, triggering ruby errors.
As per puppetlabs/puppet@292233c, this leaves the global seed in a
deterministic state, which is bad. Puppet::Util.deterministic_rand()
exists to avoid running into this issue, but is only present starting in
Puppet 3.2.0.
The `type()` function will cease to work on the new parser because 'type'
is a reserved keyword. The `type3x()` function may be used to continue
similar functionality, but will be deprecated in favor of the built-in
typing system.
The `type_of()` function has been included to introspect types in the
new parser.
The `match` attribute was validated to match `line`, except that in many
cases (even the example given in the docs) a user would want to match a
line entirely different from the new line.
See comments on the original commit
a06c0d8115
and ask
https://ask.puppetlabs.com/question/14366/file_line-resource-match-problems/
for further examples of confusion.
Currently, the member function allows one to only find if a variable
is part of an array. Sometimes it is useful to find if an array is part
of a bigger array for validation purpose.
This is needed for the future parser which actually treats numbers as
numbers and strings as strings. With this patch you can use range(1,5)
instead of having to quote them like range('1','5').