require 'hiera/puppet_function' # Finds all matches of a key throughout the hierarchy and returns them in a merged hash. # # This function is deprecated in favor of the `lookup` function. While this function # continues to work, it does **not** support: # * `lookup_options` stored in the data # * lookup across global, environment, and module layers # # If any of the matched hashes share keys, the final hash uses the value from the # highest priority match. This is called a # [hash merge lookup](https://puppet.com/docs/hiera/latest/lookup_types.html#hash-merge). # # The merge strategy is determined by Hiera's # [`:merge_behavior`](https://puppet.com/docs/hiera/latest/configuring.html#mergebehavior) # setting. # # The `hiera_hash` function takes up to three arguments, in this order: # # 1. A string key that Hiera searches for in the hierarchy. **Required**. # 2. An optional default value to return if Hiera doesn't find anything matching the key. # * If this argument isn't provided and this function results in a lookup failure, Puppet # fails with a compilation error. # 3. The optional name of an arbitrary # [hierarchy level](https://puppet.com/docs/hiera/latest/hierarchy.html) to insert at the # top of the hierarchy. This lets you temporarily modify the hierarchy for a single lookup. # * If Hiera doesn't find a matching key in the overriding hierarchy level, it continues # searching the rest of the hierarchy. # # @example Using `hiera_hash` # # ```yaml # # Assuming hiera.yaml # # :hierarchy: # # - web01.example.com # # - common # # # Assuming common.yaml: # # users: # # regular: # # 'cdouglas': 'Carrie Douglas' # # # Assuming web01.example.com.yaml: # # users: # # administrators: # # 'aberry': 'Amy Berry' # ``` # # ```puppet # # Assuming we are not web01.example.com: # # $allusers = hiera_hash('users', undef) # # # $allusers contains {regular => {"cdouglas" => "Carrie Douglas"}, # # administrators => {"aberry" => "Amy Berry"}} # ``` # # You can optionally generate the default value with a # [lambda](https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/lang_lambdas.html) that # takes one parameter. # # @example Using `hiera_hash` with a lambda # # ```puppet # # Assuming the same Hiera data as the previous example: # # $allusers = hiera_hash('users') | $key | { "Key \'${key}\' not found" } # # # $allusers contains {regular => {"cdouglas" => "Carrie Douglas"}, # # administrators => {"aberry" => "Amy Berry"}} # # If hiera_hash couldn't match its key, it would return the lambda result, # # "Key 'users' not found". # ``` # # `hiera_hash` expects that all values returned will be hashes. If any of the values # found in the data sources are strings or arrays, Puppet raises a type mismatch error. # # See # [the 'Using the lookup function' documentation](https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/hiera_automatic.html) for how to perform lookup of data. # Also see # [the 'Using the deprecated hiera functions' documentation](https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/hiera_automatic.html) # for more information about the Hiera 3 functions. # # @since 4.0.0 # Puppet::Functions.create_function(:hiera_hash, Hiera::PuppetFunction) do init_dispatch def merge_type :hash end end