Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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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.
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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
https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-stdlib/commit/a06c0d8115892a74666676b50d4282df9850a119
and ask
https://ask.puppetlabs.com/question/14366/file_line-resource-match-problems/
for further examples of confusion.
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This conversion is done by Transpec 2.2.1 with the following command:
transpec spec/unit
* 53 conversions
from: obj.should
to: expect(obj).to
* 19 conversions
from: == expected
to: eq(expected)
* 5 conversions
from: lambda { }.should
to: expect { }.to
* 2 conversions
from: be_true
to: be_truthy
For more details: https://github.com/yujinakayama/transpec#supported-conversions
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This reverts commit 8499ebdb7f892f2623295058649c67a5553d4732, reversing
changes made to 08b00d9229961d7b3c3cba997bfb35c8d47e4c4b.
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file_line supports adding lines after a match, but there are use cases when
having "before" would be useful. For example, in Debian-based OS's, the last
line of /etc/rc.local is "exit 0" it's an incredible pain to deal with
that scenario today.
This commit adds a 'before' parameter to the file_line type, and implements
it for the ruby provider.
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complaining loudly
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This work updates a number of Gems to the latest versions (rspec,
rspec-puppet), and updates and tweaks a bunch of tests to work
with the updated gems.
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Without this patch applied the file_line autorequire examples are
failing. This is a problem because the failures are false positives and
should be passing given the implementation.
This patch fixes the problem by changing the examples to directly test
the existence of the relationship by finding it in the list of
autorequire relationships.
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If we manage a file we edit with file_line, it should be autorequired by
file_line. Without this patch applied the relationship is not
automatically setup and the user is forced to manually manage the
relationship.
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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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