require 'puppet/version' # see the bottom of the file for further inclusions # Also see the new Vendor support - towards the end # require 'facter' require 'puppet/error' require 'puppet/util' require 'puppet/util/autoload' require 'puppet/settings' require 'puppet/util/feature' require 'puppet/util/suidmanager' require 'puppet/util/run_mode' require 'puppet/external/pson/common' require 'puppet/external/pson/version' require 'puppet/external/pson/pure' #------------------------------------------------------------ # the top-level module # # all this really does is dictate how the whole system behaves, through # preferences for things like debugging # # it's also a place to find top-level commands like 'debug' # The main Puppet class. Everything is contained here. # # @api public module Puppet require 'puppet/file_system' class << self include Puppet::Util attr_reader :features attr_writer :name end # the hash that determines how our system behaves @@settings = Puppet::Settings.new # The services running in this process. @services ||= [] require 'puppet/util/logging' extend Puppet::Util::Logging # The feature collection @features = Puppet::Util::Feature.new('puppet/feature') # Load the base features. require 'puppet/feature/base' # Store a new default value. def self.define_settings(section, hash) @@settings.define_settings(section, hash) end # Get the value for a setting # # @param [Symbol] param the setting to retrieve # # @api public def self.[](param) if param == :debug return Puppet::Util::Log.level == :debug else return @@settings[param] end end # configuration parameter access and stuff def self.[]=(param,value) @@settings[param] = value end def self.clear @@settings.clear end def self.debug=(value) if value Puppet::Util::Log.level=(:debug) else Puppet::Util::Log.level=(:notice) end end def self.settings @@settings end def self.run_mode # This sucks (the existence of this method); there are a lot of places in our code that branch based the value of # "run mode", but there used to be some really confusing code paths that made it almost impossible to determine # when during the lifecycle of a puppet application run the value would be set properly. A lot of the lifecycle # stuff has been cleaned up now, but it still seems frightening that we rely so heavily on this value. # # I'd like to see about getting rid of the concept of "run_mode" entirely, but there are just too many places in # the code that call this method at the moment... so I've settled for isolating it inside of the Settings class # (rather than using a global variable, as we did previously...). Would be good to revisit this at some point. # # --cprice 2012-03-16 Puppet::Util::RunMode[@@settings.preferred_run_mode] end # Load all of the configuration parameters. require 'puppet/defaults' def self.genmanifest if Puppet[:genmanifest] puts Puppet.settings.to_manifest exit(0) end end # Parse the config file for this process. # @deprecated Use {#initialize_settings} def self.parse_config() Puppet.deprecation_warning("Puppet.parse_config is deprecated; please use Faces API (which will handle settings and state management for you), or (less desirable) call Puppet.initialize_settings") Puppet.initialize_settings end # Initialize puppet's settings. This is intended only for use by external tools that are not # built off of the Faces API or the Puppet::Util::Application class. It may also be used # to initialize state so that a Face may be used programatically, rather than as a stand-alone # command-line tool. # # @api public # @param args [Array] the command line arguments to use for initialization # @return [void] def self.initialize_settings(args = []) do_initialize_settings_for_run_mode(:user, args) end # Initialize puppet's settings for a specified run_mode. # # @deprecated Use {#initialize_settings} def self.initialize_settings_for_run_mode(run_mode) Puppet.deprecation_warning("initialize_settings_for_run_mode may be removed in a future release, as may run_mode itself") do_initialize_settings_for_run_mode(run_mode, []) end # private helper method to provide the implementation details of initializing for a run mode, # but allowing us to control where the deprecation warning is issued def self.do_initialize_settings_for_run_mode(run_mode, args) Puppet.settings.initialize_global_settings(args) run_mode = Puppet::Util::RunMode[run_mode] Puppet.settings.initialize_app_defaults(Puppet::Settings.app_defaults_for_run_mode(run_mode)) end private_class_method :do_initialize_settings_for_run_mode # Create a new type. Just proxy to the Type class. The mirroring query # code was deprecated in 2008, but this is still in heavy use. I suppose # this can count as a soft deprecation for the next dev. --daniel 2011-04-12 def self.newtype(name, options = {}, &block) Puppet::Type.newtype(name, options, &block) end # Load vendored (setup paths, and load what is needed upfront). # See the Vendor class for how to add additional vendored gems/code require "puppet/vendor" Puppet::Vendor.load_vendored # Set default for YAML.load to unsafe so we don't affect programs # requiring puppet -- in puppet we will call safe explicitly SafeYAML::OPTIONS[:default_mode] = :unsafe end # This feels weird to me; I would really like for us to get to a state where there is never a "require" statement # anywhere besides the very top of a file. That would not be possible at the moment without a great deal of # effort, but I think we should strive for it and revisit this at some point. --cprice 2012-03-16 require 'puppet/type' require 'puppet/parser' require 'puppet/resource' require 'puppet/network' require 'puppet/ssl' require 'puppet/module' require 'puppet/data_binding' require 'puppet/util/storage' require 'puppet/status' require 'puppet/file_bucket/file'