puppetlabs-stdlib/lib/puppet/parser/functions/range.rb
Jeff McCune 61891bbe61 (#13494) Specify the behavior of zero padded strings
Without this patch the specified behavior of strings that are numeric
only and zero padded is unclear and untested in the spec tests.  This is
a problem because it's not clear that range('00', '10') will actually
return [ "0", "1", ..., "10" ] instead of [ "00", "01", ..., "10" ]

This patch addresses the issue by providing explicit test coverage.  If
the string conversion behavior of puppet changes, this test will begin
to fail.
2012-03-29 15:17:30 -07:00

80 lines
1.9 KiB
Ruby

#
# range.rb
#
# TODO(Krzysztof Wilczynski): We probably need to approach numeric values differently ...
module Puppet::Parser::Functions
newfunction(:range, :type => :rvalue, :doc => <<-EOS
When given range in the form of (start, stop) it will extrapolate a range as
an array.
*Examples:*
range("0", "9")
Will return: [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
range("00", "09")
Will return: [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9] (Zero padded strings are converted to
integers automatically)
range("a", "c")
Will return: ["a","b","c"]
range("host01", "host10")
Will return: ["host01", "host02", ..., "host09", "host10"]
EOS
) do |arguments|
# We support more than one argument but at least one is mandatory ...
raise(Puppet::ParseError, "range(): Wrong number of " +
"arguments given (#{arguments.size} for 1)") if arguments.size < 1
if arguments.size > 1
start = arguments[0]
stop = arguments[1]
type = '..' # We select simplest type for Range available in Ruby ...
elsif arguments.size > 0
value = arguments[0]
if m = value.match(/^(\w+)(\.\.\.?|\-)(\w+)$/)
start = m[1]
stop = m[3]
type = m[2]
elsif value.match(/^.+$/)
raise(Puppet::ParseError, 'range(): Unable to compute range ' +
'from the value given')
else
raise(Puppet::ParseError, 'range(): Unknown format of range given')
end
end
# Check whether we have integer value if so then make it so ...
if start.match(/^\d+$/)
start = start.to_i
stop = stop.to_i
else
start = start.to_s
stop = stop.to_s
end
range = case type
when /^(\.\.|\-)$/ then (start .. stop)
when /^(\.\.\.)$/ then (start ... stop) # Exclusive of last element ...
end
result = range.collect { |i| i } # Get them all ... Pokemon ...
return result
end
end
# vim: set ts=2 sw=2 et :