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view modules/concat/README.md @ 275:d9352a684e62
Mass update of modules to remove deprecation warnings
author | IBBoard <dev@ibboard.co.uk> |
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date | Sun, 26 Jan 2020 11:36:07 +0000 |
parents | 37675581a273 |
children | adf6fe9bbc17 |
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# concat #### Table of Contents 1. [Overview](#overview) 2. [Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful](#module-description) * [Beginning with concat](#beginning-with-concat) 4. [Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality](#usage) 5. [Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how](#reference) * [Removed functionality](#removed-functionality) 6. [Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.](#limitations) 7. [Development - Guide for contributing to the module](#development) <a id="overview"></a> ## Overview The concat module lets you construct files from multiple ordered fragments of text. <a id="module-description"></a> ## Module Description The concat module lets you gather `concat::fragment` resources from your other modules and order them into a coherent file through a single `concat` resource. <a id="beginning-with-concat"></a> ### Beginning with concat To start using concat you need to create: * A concat{} resource for the final file. * One or more concat::fragment{}s. A minimal example might be: ~~~ concat { '/tmp/file': ensure => present, } concat::fragment { 'tmpfile': target => '/tmp/file', content => 'test contents', order => '01' } ~~~ <a id="usage"></a> ## Usage ### Maintain a list of the major modules on a node To maintain an motd file that lists the modules on one of your nodes, first create a class to frame up the file: ~~~ class motd { $motd = '/etc/motd' concat { $motd: owner => 'root', group => 'root', mode => '0644' } concat::fragment { 'motd_header': target => $motd, content => "\nPuppet modules on this server:\n\n", order => '01' } # let local users add to the motd by creating a file called # /etc/motd.local concat::fragment { 'motd_local': target => $motd, source => '/etc/motd.local', order => '15' } } # let other modules register themselves in the motd define motd::register ( $content = "", $order = '10', ) { if $content == "" { $body = $name } else { $body = $content } concat::fragment { "motd_fragment_$name": target => '/etc/motd', order => $order, content => " -- $body\n" } } ~~~ Then, in the declarations for each module on the node, add `motd::register{ 'Apache': }` to register the module in the motd. ~~~ class apache { include apache::install, apache::config, apache::service motd::register { 'Apache': } } ~~~ These two steps populate the /etc/motd file with a list of the installed and registered modules, which stays updated even if you just remove the registered modules' `include` lines. System administrators can append text to the list by writing to /etc/motd.local. When you're finished, the motd file will look something like this: ~~~ Puppet modules on this server: -- Apache -- MySQL <contents of /etc/motd.local> ~~~ <a id="reference"></a> ## Reference See [REFERENCE.md](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-concat/blob/master/REFERENCE.md) <a id="removed-functionality"></a> ### Removed functionality The following functionality existed in previous versions of the concat module, but was removed in version 2.0.0: Parameters removed from `concat::fragment`: * `gnu` * `backup` * `group` * `mode` * `owner` The `concat::setup` class has also been removed. Prior to concat version 2.0.0, if you set the `warn` parameter to a string value of `true`, `false`, 'yes', 'no', 'on', or 'off', the module translated the string to the corresponding boolean value. In concat version 2.0.0 and newer, the `warn_header` parameter treats those values the same as other strings and uses them as the content of your header message. To avoid that, pass the `true` and `false` values as booleans instead of strings. <a id="limitations"></a> ## Limitations This module has been tested on [all PE-supported platforms](https://forge.puppetlabs.com/supported#compat-matrix), and no issues have been identified. For an extensive list of supported operating systems, see [metadata.json](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-concat/blob/master/metadata.json) ## Development Acceptance tests for this module leverage [puppet_litmus](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet_litmus). To run the acceptance tests follow the instructions [here](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet_litmus/wiki/Tutorial:-use-Litmus-to-execute-acceptance-tests-with-a-sample-module-(MoTD)#install-the-necessary-gems-for-the-module). You can also find a tutorial and walkthrough of using Litmus and the PDK on [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYfR7ZEGHoE). If you run into an issue with this module, or if you would like to request a feature, please [file a ticket](https://tickets.puppetlabs.com/browse/MODULES/). Every Monday the Puppet IA Content Team has [office hours](https://puppet.com/community/office-hours) in the [Puppet Community Slack](http://slack.puppet.com/), alternating between an EMEA friendly time (1300 UTC) and an Americas friendly time (0900 Pacific, 1700 UTC). If you have problems getting this module up and running, please [contact Support](http://puppetlabs.com/services/customer-support). If you submit a change to this module, be sure to regenerate the reference documentation as follows: ```bash puppet strings generate --format markdown --out REFERENCE.md ``` ### Contributors Richard Pijnenburg ([@Richardp82](http://twitter.com/richardp82)) Joshua Hoblitt ([@jhoblitt](http://twitter.com/jhoblitt)) [More contributors](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-concat/graphs/contributors).