Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This commit adds a new parameter called "match"
to the file_line resource type, and support for
this new parameter to the corresponding ruby
provider.
This parameter is optional; file_line should work
just as before if you do not specify this parameter...
so this change should be backwards-compatible.
If you do specify the parameter, it is treated
as a regular expression that should be used when
looking through the file for a line. This allows
you to do things like find a line that begins with
a certain prefix (e.g., "foo=.*"), and *replace*
the existing line with the line you specify in your
"line" parameter. Without this capability, if you
already had a line "foo=bar" in your file and your
"line" parameter was set to "foo=baz", you'd end up
with *both* lines in the final file. In many cases
this is undesirable.
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The examples in the file_line resource documentation state the following
resource should work:
file_line { 'sudo_rule':
path => '/etc/sudoers',
line => '%sudo ALL=(ALL) ALL',
}
Without this patch the example does not work because ensure is not set
to present.
This patch fixes the problem by setting the default value of ensure to
present.
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This just changes the instance variables to a memoized let block and
gets ride of the before :each block.
The patch has no change in behavior.
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Without this patch the resource whole_line would be included in the
stable stdlib module shipping in PE 1.2. Ideally the name will be
stable and unchanging in the future.
There was quite a bit of concern over whole_line being an unwise name.
file_line appears to be the most suitable name and least likely to need
another rename in the future.
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Changed the type name from append_line to
whole_line.
After feedback that having a type with a verb in
the name was confusing.
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This commit adds a native type that can check if
a line exists and append it to a file.
This use case seems common enough to warrant its
inclusion into stdlib.
Reviewed-by: Jeff McCune
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Unlike the whit type the anchor type derives from, we are not hacking
the stringify method. We expect the resource to be named simply
Anchor[foo::bar] where the name is "foo::bar".
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