# A module to collect utility functions. require 'English' require 'puppet/error' require 'puppet/util/execution_stub' require 'uri' require 'tempfile' require 'pathname' require 'ostruct' require 'puppet/util/platform' require 'puppet/util/symbolic_file_mode' require 'securerandom' module Puppet module Util require 'puppet/util/monkey_patches' require 'benchmark' # These are all for backward compatibility -- these are methods that used # to be in Puppet::Util but have been moved into external modules. require 'puppet/util/posix' extend Puppet::Util::POSIX extend Puppet::Util::SymbolicFileMode def self.activerecord_version if (defined?(::ActiveRecord) and defined?(::ActiveRecord::VERSION) and defined?(::ActiveRecord::VERSION::MAJOR) and defined?(::ActiveRecord::VERSION::MINOR)) ([::ActiveRecord::VERSION::MAJOR, ::ActiveRecord::VERSION::MINOR].join('.').to_f) else 0 end end # Run some code with a specific environment. Resets the environment back to # what it was at the end of the code. def self.withenv(hash) saved = ENV.to_hash hash.each do |name, val| ENV[name.to_s] = val end yield ensure ENV.clear saved.each do |name, val| ENV[name] = val end end # Execute a given chunk of code with a new umask. def self.withumask(mask) cur = File.umask(mask) begin yield ensure File.umask(cur) end end # Change the process to a different user def self.chuser if group = Puppet[:group] begin Puppet::Util::SUIDManager.change_group(group, true) rescue => detail Puppet.warning "could not change to group #{group.inspect}: #{detail}" $stderr.puts "could not change to group #{group.inspect}" # Don't exit on failed group changes, since it's # not fatal #exit(74) end end if user = Puppet[:user] begin Puppet::Util::SUIDManager.change_user(user, true) rescue => detail $stderr.puts "Could not change to user #{user}: #{detail}" exit(74) end end end # Create instance methods for each of the log levels. This allows # the messages to be a little richer. Most classes will be calling this # method. def self.logmethods(klass, useself = true) Puppet::Util::Log.eachlevel { |level| klass.send(:define_method, level, proc { |args| args = args.join(" ") if args.is_a?(Array) if useself Puppet::Util::Log.create( :level => level, :source => self, :message => args ) else Puppet::Util::Log.create( :level => level, :message => args ) end }) } end # Proxy a bunch of methods to another object. def self.classproxy(klass, objmethod, *methods) classobj = class << klass; self; end methods.each do |method| classobj.send(:define_method, method) do |*args| obj = self.send(objmethod) obj.send(method, *args) end end end # Proxy a bunch of methods to another object. def self.proxy(klass, objmethod, *methods) methods.each do |method| klass.send(:define_method, method) do |*args| obj = self.send(objmethod) obj.send(method, *args) end end end def benchmark(*args) msg = args.pop level = args.pop object = nil if args.empty? if respond_to?(level) object = self else object = Puppet end else object = args.pop end raise Puppet::DevError, "Failed to provide level to :benchmark" unless level unless level == :none or object.respond_to? level raise Puppet::DevError, "Benchmarked object does not respond to #{level}" end # Only benchmark if our log level is high enough if level != :none and Puppet::Util::Log.sendlevel?(level) seconds = Benchmark.realtime { yield } object.send(level, msg + (" in %0.2f seconds" % seconds)) return seconds else yield end end module_function :benchmark # Resolve a path for an executable to the absolute path. This tries to behave # in the same manner as the unix `which` command and uses the `PATH` # environment variable. # # @api public # @param bin [String] the name of the executable to find. # @return [String] the absolute path to the found executable. def which(bin) if absolute_path?(bin) return bin if FileTest.file? bin and FileTest.executable? bin else ENV['PATH'].split(File::PATH_SEPARATOR).each do |dir| begin dest = File.expand_path(File.join(dir, bin)) rescue ArgumentError => e # if the user's PATH contains a literal tilde (~) character and HOME is not set, we may get # an ArgumentError here. Let's check to see if that is the case; if not, re-raise whatever error # was thrown. if e.to_s =~ /HOME/ and (ENV['HOME'].nil? || ENV['HOME'] == "") # if we get here they have a tilde in their PATH. We'll issue a single warning about this and then # ignore this path element and carry on with our lives. Puppet::Util::Warnings.warnonce("PATH contains a ~ character, and HOME is not set; ignoring PATH element '#{dir}'.") elsif e.to_s =~ /doesn't exist|can't find user/ # ...otherwise, we just skip the non-existent entry, and do nothing. Puppet::Util::Warnings.warnonce("Couldn't expand PATH containing a ~ character; ignoring PATH element '#{dir}'.") else raise end else if Puppet.features.microsoft_windows? && File.extname(dest).empty? exts = ENV['PATHEXT'] exts = exts ? exts.split(File::PATH_SEPARATOR) : %w[.COM .EXE .BAT .CMD] exts.each do |ext| destext = File.expand_path(dest + ext) return destext if FileTest.file? destext and FileTest.executable? destext end end return dest if FileTest.file? dest and FileTest.executable? dest end end end nil end module_function :which # Determine in a platform-specific way whether a path is absolute. This # defaults to the local platform if none is specified. # # Escape once for the string literal, and once for the regex. slash = '[\\\\/]' label = '[^\\\\/]+' AbsolutePathWindows = %r!^(?:(?:[A-Z]:#{slash})|(?:#{slash}#{slash}#{label}#{slash}#{label})|(?:#{slash}#{slash}\?#{slash}#{label}))!io AbsolutePathPosix = %r!^/! def absolute_path?(path, platform=nil) # Ruby only sets File::ALT_SEPARATOR on Windows and the Ruby standard # library uses that to test what platform it's on. Normally in Puppet we # would use Puppet.features.microsoft_windows?, but this method needs to # be called during the initialization of features so it can't depend on # that. platform ||= Puppet::Util::Platform.windows? ? :windows : :posix regex = case platform when :windows AbsolutePathWindows when :posix AbsolutePathPosix else raise Puppet::DevError, "unknown platform #{platform} in absolute_path" end !! (path =~ regex) end module_function :absolute_path? # Convert a path to a file URI def path_to_uri(path) return unless path params = { :scheme => 'file' } if Puppet.features.microsoft_windows? path = path.gsub(/\\/, '/') if unc = /^\/\/([^\/]+)(\/.+)/.match(path) params[:host] = unc[1] path = unc[2] elsif path =~ /^[a-z]:\//i path = '/' + path end end params[:path] = URI.escape(path) begin URI::Generic.build(params) rescue => detail raise Puppet::Error, "Failed to convert '#{path}' to URI: #{detail}" end end module_function :path_to_uri # Get the path component of a URI def uri_to_path(uri) return unless uri.is_a?(URI) path = URI.unescape(uri.path) if Puppet.features.microsoft_windows? and uri.scheme == 'file' if uri.host path = "//#{uri.host}" + path # UNC else path.sub!(/^\//, '') end end path end module_function :uri_to_path def safe_posix_fork(stdin=$stdin, stdout=$stdout, stderr=$stderr, &block) child_pid = Kernel.fork do $stdin.reopen(stdin) $stdout.reopen(stdout) $stderr.reopen(stderr) 3.upto(256){|fd| IO::new(fd).close rescue nil} block.call if block end child_pid end module_function :safe_posix_fork def memory unless defined?(@pmap) @pmap = which('pmap') end if @pmap %x{#{@pmap} #{Process.pid}| grep total}.chomp.sub(/^\s*total\s+/, '').sub(/K$/, '').to_i else 0 end end def symbolizehash(hash) newhash = {} hash.each do |name, val| name = name.intern if name.respond_to? :intern newhash[name] = val end newhash end module_function :symbolizehash # Just benchmark, with no logging. def thinmark seconds = Benchmark.realtime { yield } seconds end module_function :memory, :thinmark # Because IO#binread is only available in 1.9 def binread(file) Puppet.deprecation_warning("Puppet::Util.binread is deprecated. Read the file without this method as it will be removed in a future version.") File.open(file, 'rb') { |f| f.read } end module_function :binread # utility method to get the current call stack and format it to a human-readable string (which some IDEs/editors # will recognize as links to the line numbers in the trace) def self.pretty_backtrace(backtrace = caller(1)) backtrace.collect do |line| _, path, rest = /^(.*):(\d+.*)$/.match(line).to_a # If the path doesn't exist - like in one test, and like could happen in # the world - we should just tolerate it and carry on. --daniel 2012-09-05 # Also, if we don't match, just include the whole line. if path path = Pathname(path).realpath rescue path "#{path}:#{rest}" else line end end.join("\n") end # Replace a file, securely. This takes a block, and passes it the file # handle of a file open for writing. Write the replacement content inside # the block and it will safely replace the target file. # # This method will make no changes to the target file until the content is # successfully written and the block returns without raising an error. # # As far as possible the state of the existing file, such as mode, is # preserved. This works hard to avoid loss of any metadata, but will result # in an inode change for the file. # # Arguments: `filename`, `default_mode` # # The filename is the file we are going to replace. # # The default_mode is the mode to use when the target file doesn't already # exist; if the file is present we copy the existing mode/owner/group values # across. The default_mode can be expressed as an octal integer, a numeric string (ie '0664') # or a symbolic file mode. def replace_file(file, default_mode, &block) raise Puppet::DevError, "replace_file requires a block" unless block_given? unless valid_symbolic_mode?(default_mode) raise Puppet::DevError, "replace_file default_mode: #{default_mode} is invalid" end mode = symbolic_mode_to_int(normalize_symbolic_mode(default_mode)) file = Pathname(file) tempfile = Tempfile.new(file.basename.to_s, file.dirname.to_s) # Set properties of the temporary file before we write the content, because # Tempfile doesn't promise to be safe from reading by other people, just # that it avoids races around creating the file. # # Our Windows emulation is pretty limited, and so we have to carefully # and specifically handle the platform, which has all sorts of magic. # So, unlike Unix, we don't pre-prep security; we use the default "quite # secure" tempfile permissions instead. Magic happens later. unless Puppet.features.microsoft_windows? # Grab the current file mode, and fall back to the defaults. stat = file.lstat rescue OpenStruct.new(:mode => mode, :uid => Process.euid, :gid => Process.egid) # We only care about the bottom four slots, which make the real mode, # and not the rest of the platform stat call fluff and stuff. tempfile.chmod(stat.mode & 07777) tempfile.chown(stat.uid, stat.gid) end # OK, now allow the caller to write the content of the file. yield tempfile # Now, make sure the data (which includes the mode) is safe on disk. tempfile.flush begin tempfile.fsync rescue NotImplementedError # fsync may not be implemented by Ruby on all platforms, but # there is absolutely no recovery path if we detect that. So, we just # ignore the return code. # # However, don't be fooled: that is accepting that we are running in # an unsafe fashion. If you are porting to a new platform don't stub # that out. end tempfile.close if Puppet.features.microsoft_windows? # This will appropriately clone the file, but only if the file we are # replacing exists. Which is kind of annoying; thanks Microsoft. # # So, to avoid getting into an infinite loop we will retry once if the # file doesn't exist, but only the once... have_retried = false begin # Yes, the arguments are reversed compared to the rename in the rest # of the world. Puppet::Util::Windows::File.replace_file(file, tempfile.path) rescue Puppet::Util::Windows::Error # This might race, but there are enough possible cases that there # isn't a good, solid "better" way to do this, and the next call # should fail in the same way anyhow. raise if have_retried or Puppet::FileSystem::File.exist?(file) have_retried = true # OK, so, we can't replace a file that doesn't exist, so let us put # one in place and set the permissions. Then we can retry and the # magic makes this all work. # # This is the least-worst option for handling Windows, as far as we # can determine. File.open(file, 'a') do |fh| # this space deliberately left empty for auto-close behaviour, # append mode, and not actually changing any of the content. end # Set the permissions to what we want. Puppet::Util::Windows::Security.set_mode(mode, file.to_s) # ...and finally retry the operation. retry end else File.rename(tempfile.path, file.to_s) end # Ideally, we would now fsync the directory as well, but Ruby doesn't # have support for that, and it doesn't matter /that/ much... # Return something true, and possibly useful. file end module_function :replace_file # Executes a block of code, wrapped with some special exception handling. Causes the ruby interpreter to # exit if the block throws an exception. # # @api public # @param [String] message a message to log if the block fails # @param [Integer] code the exit code that the ruby interpreter should return if the block fails # @yield def exit_on_fail(message, code = 1) yield # First, we need to check and see if we are catching a SystemExit error. These will be raised # when we daemonize/fork, and they do not necessarily indicate a failure case. rescue SystemExit => err raise err # Now we need to catch *any* other kind of exception, because we may be calling third-party # code (e.g. webrick), and we have no idea what they might throw. rescue Exception => err ## NOTE: when debugging spec failures, these two lines can be very useful #puts err.inspect #puts Puppet::Util.pretty_backtrace(err.backtrace) Puppet.log_exception(err, "Could not #{message}: #{err}") Puppet::Util::Log.force_flushqueue() exit(code) end module_function :exit_on_fail def deterministic_rand(seed,max) if defined?(Random) == 'constant' && Random.class == Class Random.new(seed).rand(max).to_s else srand(seed) result = rand(max).to_s srand() result end end module_function :deterministic_rand ####################################################################################################### # Deprecated methods relating to process execution; these have been moved to Puppet::Util::Execution ####################################################################################################### def execpipe(command, failonfail = true, &block) Puppet.deprecation_warning("Puppet::Util.execpipe is deprecated; please use Puppet::Util::Execution.execpipe") Puppet::Util::Execution.execpipe(command, failonfail, &block) end module_function :execpipe def execfail(command, exception) Puppet.deprecation_warning("Puppet::Util.execfail is deprecated; please use Puppet::Util::Execution.execfail") Puppet::Util::Execution.execfail(command, exception) end module_function :execfail def execute(*args) Puppet.deprecation_warning("Puppet::Util.execute is deprecated; please use Puppet::Util::Execution.execute") Puppet::Util::Execution.execute(*args) end module_function :execute end end require 'puppet/util/errors' require 'puppet/util/methodhelper' require 'puppet/util/metaid' require 'puppet/util/classgen' require 'puppet/util/docs' require 'puppet/util/execution' require 'puppet/util/logging' require 'puppet/util/package' require 'puppet/util/warnings'