require 'optparse' require 'puppet/util/command_line' require 'puppet/util/constant_inflector' require 'puppet/error' require 'puppet/application_support' module Puppet # This class handles all the aspects of a Puppet application/executable # * setting up options # * setting up logs # * choosing what to run # * representing execution status # # === Usage # An application is a subclass of Puppet::Application. # # For legacy compatibility, # Puppet::Application[:example].run # is equivalent to # Puppet::Application::Example.new.run # # # class Puppet::Application::Example < Puppet::Application # # def preinit # # perform some pre initialization # @all = false # end # # # run_command is called to actually run the specified command # def run_command # send Puppet::Util::CommandLine.new.args.shift # end # # # option uses metaprogramming to create a method # # and also tells the option parser how to invoke that method # option("--arg ARGUMENT") do |v| # @args << v # end # # option("--debug", "-d") do |v| # @debug = v # end # # option("--all", "-a:) do |v| # @all = v # end # # def handle_unknown(opt,arg) # # last chance to manage an option # ... # # let's say to the framework we finally handle this option # true # end # # def read # # read action # end # # def write # # writeaction # end # # end # # === Preinit # The preinit block is the first code to be called in your application, before option parsing, # setup or command execution. # # === Options # Puppet::Application uses +OptionParser+ to manage the application options. # Options are defined with the +option+ method to which are passed various # arguments, including the long option, the short option, a description... # Refer to +OptionParser+ documentation for the exact format. # * If the option method is given a block, this one will be called whenever # the option is encountered in the command-line argument. # * If the option method has no block, a default functionality will be used, that # stores the argument (or true/false if the option doesn't require an argument) in # the global (to the application) options array. # * If a given option was not defined by a the +option+ method, but it exists as a Puppet settings: # * if +unknown+ was used with a block, it will be called with the option name and argument # * if +unknown+ wasn't used, then the option/argument is handed to Puppet.settings.handlearg for # a default behavior # # --help is managed directly by the Puppet::Application class, but can be overridden. # # === Setup # Applications can use the setup block to perform any initialization. # The default +setup+ behaviour is to: read Puppet configuration and manage log level and destination # # === What and how to run # If the +dispatch+ block is defined it is called. This block should return the name of the registered command # to be run. # If it doesn't exist, it defaults to execute the +main+ command if defined. # # === Execution state # The class attributes/methods of Puppet::Application serve as a global place to set and query the execution # status of the application: stopping, restarting, etc. The setting of the application status does not directly # affect its running status; it's assumed that the various components within the application will consult these # settings appropriately and affect their own processing accordingly. Control operations (signal handlers and # the like) should set the status appropriately to indicate to the overall system that it's the process of # stopping or restarting (or just running as usual). # # So, if something in your application needs to stop the process, for some reason, you might consider: # # def stop_me! # # indicate that we're stopping # Puppet::Application.stop! # # ...do stuff... # end # # And, if you have some component that involves a long-running process, you might want to consider: # # def my_long_process(giant_list_to_munge) # giant_list_to_munge.collect do |member| # # bail if we're stopping # return if Puppet::Application.stop_requested? # process_member(member) # end # end class Application require 'puppet/util' include Puppet::Util DOCPATTERN = ::File.expand_path(::File.dirname(__FILE__) + "/util/command_line/*" ) CommandLineArgs = Struct.new(:subcommand_name, :args) @loader = Puppet::Util::Autoload.new(self, 'puppet/application') class << self include Puppet::Util attr_accessor :run_status def clear! self.run_status = nil end def stop! self.run_status = :stop_requested end def restart! self.run_status = :restart_requested end # Indicates that Puppet::Application.restart! has been invoked and components should # do what is necessary to facilitate a restart. def restart_requested? :restart_requested == run_status end # Indicates that Puppet::Application.stop! has been invoked and components should do what is necessary # for a clean stop. def stop_requested? :stop_requested == run_status end # Indicates that one of stop! or start! was invoked on Puppet::Application, and some kind of process # shutdown/short-circuit may be necessary. def interrupted? [:restart_requested, :stop_requested].include? run_status end # Indicates that Puppet::Application believes that it's in usual running run_mode (no stop/restart request # currently active). def clear? run_status.nil? end # Only executes the given block if the run status of Puppet::Application is clear (no restarts, stops, # etc. requested). # Upon block execution, checks the run status again; if a restart has been requested during the block's # execution, then controlled_run will send a new HUP signal to the current process. # Thus, long-running background processes can potentially finish their work before a restart. def controlled_run(&block) return unless clear? result = block.call Process.kill(:HUP, $PID) if restart_requested? result end # used to declare code that handle an option def option(*options, &block) long = options.find { |opt| opt =~ /^--/ }.gsub(/^--(?:\[no-\])?([^ =]+).*$/, '\1' ).tr('-','_') fname = "handle_#{long}".intern if (block_given?) define_method(fname, &block) else define_method(fname) do |value| self.options["#{long}".to_sym] = value end end self.option_parser_commands << [options, fname] end def banner(banner = nil) @banner ||= banner end def option_parser_commands @option_parser_commands ||= ( superclass.respond_to?(:option_parser_commands) ? superclass.option_parser_commands.dup : [] ) @option_parser_commands end # @return [Array] the names of available applications # @api public def available_application_names # Use our configured environment to load the application, as it may # be in a module we installed locally, otherwise fallback to our # current environment (*root*). Once we load the application the # current environment will change from *root* to the application # specific environment. environment = Puppet.lookup(:environments).get(Puppet[:environment]) || Puppet.lookup(:current_environment) @loader.files_to_load(environment).map do |fn| ::File.basename(fn, '.rb') end.uniq end # Finds the class for a given application and loads the class. This does # not create an instance of the application, it only gets a handle to the # class. The code for the application is expected to live in a ruby file # `puppet/application/#{name}.rb` that is available on the `$LOAD_PATH`. # # @param application_name [String] the name of the application to find (eg. "apply"). # @return [Class] the Class instance of the application that was found. # @raise [Puppet::Error] if the application class was not found. # @raise [LoadError] if there was a problem loading the application file. # @api public def find(application_name) begin require @loader.expand(application_name.to_s.downcase) rescue LoadError => e Puppet.log_and_raise(e, _("Unable to find application '%{application_name}'. %{error}") % { application_name: application_name, error: e }) end class_name = Puppet::Util::ConstantInflector.file2constant(application_name.to_s) clazz = try_load_class(class_name) ################################################################ #### Begin 2.7.x backward compatibility hack; #### eventually we need to issue a deprecation warning here, #### and then get rid of this stanza in a subsequent release. ################################################################ if (clazz.nil?) class_name = application_name.capitalize clazz = try_load_class(class_name) end ################################################################ #### End 2.7.x backward compatibility hack ################################################################ if clazz.nil? raise Puppet::Error.new(_("Unable to load application class '%{class_name}' from file 'puppet/application/%{application_name}.rb'") % { class_name: class_name, application_name: application_name }) end return clazz end # Given the fully qualified name of a class, attempt to get the class instance. # @param [String] class_name the fully qualified name of the class to try to load # @return [Class] the Class instance, or nil? if it could not be loaded. def try_load_class(class_name) return self.const_defined?(class_name) ? const_get(class_name) : nil end private :try_load_class def [](name) find(name).new end # Sets or gets the run_mode name. Sets the run_mode name if a mode_name is # passed. Otherwise, gets the run_mode or a default run_mode # def run_mode( mode_name = nil) if mode_name Puppet.settings.preferred_run_mode = mode_name end return @run_mode if @run_mode and not mode_name require 'puppet/util/run_mode' @run_mode = Puppet::Util::RunMode[ mode_name || Puppet.settings.preferred_run_mode ] end # Sets environment_mode name # @param mode_name [Symbol] The name of the environment mode to run in. May # be one of :local, :remote, or :not_required. This impacts where the # application looks for its specified environment. If :not_required or # :remote are set, the application will not fail if the environment does # not exist on the local filesystem. def environment_mode(mode_name) raise Puppet::Error, _("Invalid environment mode '%{mode_name}'") % { mode_name: mode_name } unless [:local, :remote, :not_required].include?(mode_name) @environment_mode = mode_name end # Gets environment_mode name. If none is set with `environment_mode=`, # default to :local. def get_environment_mode @environment_mode || :local end # This is for testing only def clear_everything_for_tests @run_mode = @banner = @run_status = @option_parser_commands = nil end end attr_reader :options, :command_line # Every app responds to --version # See also `lib/puppet/util/command_line.rb` for some special case early # handling of this. option("--version", "-V") do |arg| puts "#{Puppet.version}" exit(0) end # Every app responds to --help option("--help", "-h") do |v| puts help exit(0) end def app_defaults() Puppet::Settings.app_defaults_for_run_mode(self.class.run_mode).merge( :name => name ) end def initialize_app_defaults() Puppet.settings.initialize_app_defaults(app_defaults) end # override to execute code before running anything else def preinit end def initialize(command_line = Puppet::Util::CommandLine.new) @command_line = CommandLineArgs.new(command_line.subcommand_name, command_line.args.dup) @options = {} end # call in setup of subclass to deprecate an application def deprecate @deprecated = true end def deprecated? @deprecated end # Execute the application. # @api public # @return [void] def run # I don't really like the names of these lifecycle phases. It would be nice to change them to some more meaningful # names, and make deprecated aliases. --cprice 2012-03-16 exit_on_fail(_("Could not get application-specific default settings")) do initialize_app_defaults end Puppet::ApplicationSupport.push_application_context(self.class.run_mode, self.class.get_environment_mode) exit_on_fail(_("Could not initialize")) { preinit } exit_on_fail(_("Could not parse application options")) { parse_options } exit_on_fail(_("Could not prepare for execution")) { setup } if deprecated? Puppet.deprecation_warning(_("`puppet %{name}` is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.") % { name: name }) end exit_on_fail(_("Could not configure routes from %{route_file}") % { route_file: Puppet[:route_file] }) { configure_indirector_routes } exit_on_fail(_("Could not log runtime debug info")) { log_runtime_environment } exit_on_fail(_("Could not run")) { run_command } end def main raise NotImplementedError, _("No valid command or main") end def run_command main end def setup setup_logs end def setup_logs handle_logdest_arg(Puppet[:logdest]) if !options[:setdest] unless options[:setdest] if options[:debug] || options[:verbose] Puppet::Util::Log.newdestination(:console) end end set_log_level Puppet::Util::Log.setup_default unless options[:setdest] end def set_log_level(opts = nil) opts ||= options if opts[:debug] Puppet::Util::Log.level = :debug elsif opts[:verbose] && !Puppet::Util::Log.sendlevel?(:info) Puppet::Util::Log.level = :info end end def handle_logdest_arg(arg) return if arg.nil? logdest = arg.split(',').map!(&:strip) Puppet[:logdest] = arg logdest.each do |dest| begin Puppet::Util::Log.newdestination(dest) options[:setdest] = true rescue => detail Puppet.log_and_raise(detail, _("Could not set logdest to %{dest}.") % { dest: arg }) end end end def configure_indirector_routes Puppet::ApplicationSupport.configure_indirector_routes(name.to_s) end # Output basic information about the runtime environment for debugging # purposes. # # @api public # # @param extra_info [Hash{String => #to_s}] a flat hash of extra information # to log. Intended to be passed to super by subclasses. # @return [void] def log_runtime_environment(extra_info=nil) runtime_info = { 'puppet_version' => Puppet.version, 'ruby_version' => RUBY_VERSION, 'run_mode' => self.class.run_mode.name, } runtime_info['default_encoding'] = Encoding.default_external runtime_info.merge!(extra_info) unless extra_info.nil? Puppet.debug 'Runtime environment: ' + runtime_info.map{|k,v| k + '=' + v.to_s}.join(', ') end def parse_options # Create an option parser option_parser = OptionParser.new(self.class.banner) # Here we're building up all of the options that the application may need to handle. The main # puppet settings defined in "defaults.rb" have already been parsed once (in command_line.rb) by # the time we get here; however, our app may wish to handle some of them specially, so we need to # make the parser aware of them again. We might be able to make this a bit more efficient by # re-using the parser object that gets built up in command_line.rb. --cprice 2012-03-16 # Add all global options to it. Puppet.settings.optparse_addargs([]).each do |option| option_parser.on(*option) do |arg| handlearg(option[0], arg) end end # Add options that are local to this application, which were # created using the "option()" metaprogramming method. If there # are any conflicts, this application's options will be favored. self.class.option_parser_commands.each do |options, fname| option_parser.on(*options) do |value| # Call the method that "option()" created. self.send(fname, value) end end # Scan command line. We just hand any exceptions to our upper levels, # rather than printing help and exiting, so that we can meaningfully # respond with context-sensitive help if we want to. --daniel 2011-04-12 option_parser.parse!(self.command_line.args) end def handlearg(opt, val) opt, val = Puppet::Settings.clean_opt(opt, val) send(:handle_unknown, opt, val) if respond_to?(:handle_unknown) end # this is used for testing def self.exit(code) exit(code) end def name self.class.to_s.sub(/.*::/,"").downcase.to_sym end def help _("No help available for puppet %{app_name}") % { app_name: name } end # The description used in top level `puppet help` output # If left empty in implementations, we will attempt to extract # the summary from the help text itself. def summary "" end end end