e2d7f3bb89
We need to use unless value.is_a?(String) || value.is_a?(Array) rather than klass = value.class unless [String, Array].include?(klass) because the klass version enforces type checking which is too strict, and does not allow us to accept objects wich have extended String (or Array). For example, generate() function now returns Puppet::Util::Execution::ProcessOutput which is just a very simple extension of String. While this in it's self was not intentional (PUP-2306) it is not unreasonable to cope with objects which extend Strings
34 lines
904 B
Ruby
34 lines
904 B
Ruby
#
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# chomp.rb
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#
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module Puppet::Parser::Functions
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newfunction(:chomp, :type => :rvalue, :doc => <<-'EOS'
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Removes the record separator from the end of a string or an array of
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strings, for example `hello\n` becomes `hello`.
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Requires a single string or array as an input.
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EOS
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) do |arguments|
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raise(Puppet::ParseError, "chomp(): Wrong number of arguments " +
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"given (#{arguments.size} for 1)") if arguments.size < 1
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value = arguments[0]
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unless value.is_a?(Array) || value.is_a?(String)
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raise(Puppet::ParseError, 'chomp(): Requires either ' +
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'array or string to work with')
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end
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if value.is_a?(Array)
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# Numbers in Puppet are often string-encoded which is troublesome ...
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result = value.collect { |i| i.is_a?(String) ? i.chomp : i }
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else
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result = value.chomp
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end
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return result
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end
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end
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# vim: set ts=2 sw=2 et :
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