| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Replaced 583 occurances of
(DEF)
(LINES)
return (.*)
end
with
3 Examples:
The code:
def consolidate_failures(failed)
filters = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = [] }
failed.each do |spec, failed_trace|
if f = test_files_for(failed).find { |f| failed_trace =~ Regexp.new(f) }
filters[f] << spec
break
end
end
return filters
end
becomes:
def consolidate_failures(failed)
filters = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = [] }
failed.each do |spec, failed_trace|
if f = test_files_for(failed).find { |f| failed_trace =~ Regexp.new(f) }
filters[f] << spec
break
end
end
filters
end
The code:
def retrieve
return_value = super
return_value = return_value[0] if return_value && return_value.is_a?(Array)
return return_value
end
becomes:
def retrieve
return_value = super
return_value = return_value[0] if return_value && return_value.is_a?(Array)
return_value
end
The code:
def fake_fstab
os = Facter['operatingsystem']
if os == "Solaris"
name = "solaris.fstab"
elsif os == "FreeBSD"
name = "freebsd.fstab"
else
# Catchall for other fstabs
name = "linux.fstab"
end
oldpath = @provider_class.default_target
return fakefile(File::join("data/types/mount", name))
end
becomes:
def fake_fstab
os = Facter['operatingsystem']
if os == "Solaris"
name = "solaris.fstab"
elsif os == "FreeBSD"
name = "freebsd.fstab"
else
# Catchall for other fstabs
name = "linux.fstab"
end
oldpath = @provider_class.default_target
fakefile(File::join("data/types/mount", name))
end
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* Replaced 2 occurances of
def (.*)
begin
(.*) = Integer\((.*)\)
return \2
rescue ArgumentError
\2 = nil
end
if \2 = (.*)
return \2
else
return false
end
end
with
2 Examples:
The code:
def validuser?(value)
begin
number = Integer(value)
return number
rescue ArgumentError
number = nil
end
if number = uid(value)
return number
else
return false
end
end
becomes:
def validuser?(value)
Integer(value) rescue uid(value) || false
end
The code:
def validgroup?(value)
begin
number = Integer(value)
return number
rescue ArgumentError
number = nil
end
if number = gid(value)
return number
else
return false
end
end
becomes:
def validgroup?(value)
Integer(value) rescue gid(value) || false
end
* Replaced 28 occurances of
return (.*?) if (.*)
return (.*)
with
3 Examples:
The code:
return send(options[:mode]) if [:rdoc, :trac, :markdown].include?(options[:mode])
return other
becomes:
return[:rdoc, :trac, :markdown].include?(options[:mode]) ? send(options[:mode]) : other
The code:
return true if known_resource_types.definition(name)
return false
becomes:
return(known_resource_types.definition(name) ? true : false)
The code:
return :rest if request.protocol == 'https'
return Puppet::FileBucket::File.indirection.terminus_class
becomes:
return(request.protocol == 'https' ? :rest : Puppet::FileBucket::File.indirection.terminus_class)
* Replaced no occurances of
return (.*?) unless (.*)
return (.*)
with
* Replaced 7 occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])false
else
\2true
end
with
3 Examples:
The code:
if RUBY_PLATFORM == "i386-mswin32"
InstallOptions.ri = false
else
InstallOptions.ri = true
end
becomes:
InstallOptions.ri = RUBY_PLATFORM != "i386-mswin32"
The code:
if options[:references].length > 1
with_contents = false
else
with_contents = true
end
becomes:
with_contents = options[:references].length <= 1
The code:
if value == false or value == "" or value == :undef
return false
else
return true
end
becomes:
return (value != false and value != "" and value != :undef)
* Replaced 19 occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])true
else
\2false
end
with
3 Examples:
The code:
if Puppet::Util::Log.level == :debug
return true
else
return false
end
becomes:
return Puppet::Util::Log.level == :debug
The code:
if satisfies?(*features)
return true
else
return false
end
becomes:
return !!satisfies?(*features)
The code:
if self.class.parsed_auth_db.has_key?(resource[:name])
return true
else
return false
end
becomes:
return !!self.class.parsed_auth_db.has_key?(resource[:name])
* Replaced 1 occurance of
if ([a-z_]) = (.*)
(.*[^:])\1
else
\3(.*)
end
with
1 Example:
The code:
if c = self.send(@subclassname, method)
return c
else
return nil
end
becomes:
return self.send(@subclassname, method) || nil
* Replaced 2 occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])\1
else
\2false
end
with
2 Examples:
The code:
if hash[:Local]
@local = hash[:Local]
else
@local = false
end
becomes:
@local = hash[:Local]
The code:
if hash[:Local]
@local = hash[:Local]
else
@local = false
end
becomes:
@local = hash[:Local]
* Replaced 10 occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])(.*)
else
\2false
end
with
3 Examples:
The code:
if defined?(@isnamevar)
return @isnamevar
else
return false
end
becomes:
return defined?(@isnamevar) && @isnamevar
The code:
if defined?(@required)
return @required
else
return false
end
becomes:
return defined?(@required) && @required
The code:
if number = uid(value)
return number
else
return false
end
becomes:
return (number = uid(value)) && number
* Replaced no occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])nil
else
\2(true)
end
with
* Replaced no occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])true
else
\2nil
end
with
* Replaced no occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])\1
else
\2nil
end
with
* Replaced 23 occurances of
if (.*)
(.*[^:])(.*)
else
\2nil
end
with
3 Examples:
The code:
if node = Puppet::Node.find(hostname)
env = node.environment
else
env = nil
end
becomes:
env = (node = Puppet::Node.find(hostname)) ? node.environment : nil
The code:
if mod = Puppet::Node::Environment.new(env).module(module_name) and mod.files?
return @mounts[MODULES].copy(mod.name, mod.file_directory)
else
return nil
end
becomes:
return (mod = Puppet::Node::Environment.new(env).module(module_name) and mod.files?) ? @mounts[MODULES].copy(mod.name, mod.file_directory) : nil
The code:
if hash.include?(:CA) and hash[:CA]
@ca = Puppet::SSLCertificates::CA.new()
else
@ca = nil
end
becomes:
@ca = (hash.include?(:CA) and hash[:CA]) ? Puppet::SSLCertificates::CA.new() : nil
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* Replaced 6 occurances of (while .*?) *do$ with
The do is unneeded in the block header form and causes problems
with the block-to-one-line transformation.
3 Examples:
The code:
while line = f.gets do
becomes:
while line = f.gets
The code:
while line = shadow.gets do
becomes:
while line = shadow.gets
The code:
while wrapper = zeros.pop do
becomes:
while wrapper = zeros.pop
* Replaced 19 occurances of ((if|unless) .*?) *then$ with
The then is unneeded in the block header form and causes problems
with the block-to-one-line transformation.
3 Examples:
The code:
if f = test_files_for(failed).find { |f| failed_trace =~ Regexp.new(f) } then
becomes:
if f = test_files_for(failed).find { |f| failed_trace =~ Regexp.new(f) }
The code:
unless defined?(@spec_command) then
becomes:
unless defined?(@spec_command)
The code:
if c == ?\n then
becomes:
if c == ?\n
* Replaced 758 occurances of
((?:if|unless|while|until) .*)
(.*)
end
with
The one-line form is preferable provided:
* The condition is not used to assign a variable
* The body line is not already modified
* The resulting line is not too long
3 Examples:
The code:
if Puppet.features.libshadow?
has_feature :manages_passwords
end
becomes:
has_feature :manages_passwords if Puppet.features.libshadow?
The code:
unless (defined?(@current_pool) and @current_pool)
@current_pool = process_zpool_data(get_pool_data)
end
becomes:
@current_pool = process_zpool_data(get_pool_data) unless (defined?(@current_pool) and @current_pool)
The code:
if Puppet[:trace]
puts detail.backtrace
end
becomes:
puts detail.backtrace if Puppet[:trace]
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* Replaced 83 occurances of
(.*)" *[+] *([$@]?[\w_0-9.:]+?)(.to_s\b)?(?! *[*(%\w_0-9.:{\[])
with
\1#{\2}"
3 Examples:
The code:
puts "PUPPET " + status + ": " + process + ", " + state
becomes:
puts "PUPPET " + status + ": " + process + ", #{state}"
The code:
puts "PUPPET " + status + ": #{process}" + ", #{state}"
becomes:
puts "PUPPET #{status}" + ": #{process}" + ", #{state}"
The code:
}.compact.join( "\n" ) + "\n" + t + "]\n"
becomes:
}.compact.join( "\n" ) + "\n#{t}" + "]\n"
* Replaced 21 occurances of (.*)" *[+] *" with \1
3 Examples:
The code:
puts "PUPPET #{status}" + ": #{process}" + ", #{state}"
becomes:
puts "PUPPET #{status}" + ": #{process}, #{state}"
The code:
puts "PUPPET #{status}" + ": #{process}, #{state}"
becomes:
puts "PUPPET #{status}: #{process}, #{state}"
The code:
res = self.class.name + ": #{@name}" + "\n"
becomes:
res = self.class.name + ": #{@name}\n"
* Don't use string concatenation to split lines unless they would be very long.
Replaced 11 occurances of
(.*)(['"]) *[+]
*(['"])(.*)
with
3 Examples:
The code:
o.define_head "The check_puppet Nagios plug-in checks that specified " +
"Puppet process is running and the state file is no " +
becomes:
o.define_head "The check_puppet Nagios plug-in checks that specified Puppet process is running and the state file is no " +
The code:
o.separator "Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for " +
"short options too."
becomes:
o.separator "Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too."
The code:
o.define_head "The check_puppet Nagios plug-in checks that specified Puppet process is running and the state file is no " +
"older than specified interval."
becomes:
o.define_head "The check_puppet Nagios plug-in checks that specified Puppet process is running and the state file is no older than specified interval."
* Replaced no occurances of do (.*?) end with {\1}
* Replaced 1488 occurances of
"([^"\n]*%s[^"\n]*)" *% *(.+?)(?=$| *\b(do|if|while|until|unless|#)\b)
with
20 Examples:
The code:
args[0].split(/\./).map do |s| "dc=%s"%[s] end.join(",")
becomes:
args[0].split(/\./).map do |s| "dc=#{s}" end.join(",")
The code:
puts "%s" % Puppet.version
becomes:
puts "#{Puppet.version}"
The code:
raise "Could not find information for %s" % node
becomes:
raise "Could not find information for #{node}"
The code:
raise Puppet::Error, "Cannot create %s: basedir %s is a file" % [dir, File.join(path)]
becomes:
raise Puppet::Error, "Cannot create #{dir}: basedir #{File.join(path)} is a file"
The code:
Puppet.err "Could not run %s: %s" % [client_class, detail]
becomes:
Puppet.err "Could not run #{client_class}: #{detail}"
The code:
raise "Could not find handler for %s" % arg
becomes:
raise "Could not find handler for #{arg}"
The code:
Puppet.err "Will not start without authorization file %s" % Puppet[:authconfig]
becomes:
Puppet.err "Will not start without authorization file #{Puppet[:authconfig]}"
The code:
raise Puppet::Error, "Could not deserialize catalog from pson: %s" % detail
becomes:
raise Puppet::Error, "Could not deserialize catalog from pson: #{detail}"
The code:
raise "Could not find facts for %s" % Puppet[:certname]
becomes:
raise "Could not find facts for #{Puppet[:certname]}"
The code:
raise ArgumentError, "%s is not readable" % path
becomes:
raise ArgumentError, "#{path} is not readable"
The code:
raise ArgumentError, "Invalid handler %s" % name
becomes:
raise ArgumentError, "Invalid handler #{name}"
The code:
debug "Executing '%s' in zone %s with '%s'" % [command, @resource[:name], str]
becomes:
debug "Executing '#{command}' in zone #{@resource[:name]} with '#{str}'"
The code:
raise Puppet::Error, "unknown cert type '%s'" % hash[:type]
becomes:
raise Puppet::Error, "unknown cert type '#{hash[:type]}'"
The code:
Puppet.info "Creating a new certificate request for %s" % Puppet[:certname]
becomes:
Puppet.info "Creating a new certificate request for #{Puppet[:certname]}"
The code:
"Cannot create alias %s: object already exists" % [name]
becomes:
"Cannot create alias #{name}: object already exists"
The code:
return "replacing from source %s with contents %s" % [metadata.source, metadata.checksum]
becomes:
return "replacing from source #{metadata.source} with contents #{metadata.checksum}"
The code:
it "should have a %s parameter" % param do
becomes:
it "should have a #{param} parameter" do
The code:
describe "when registring '%s' messages" % log do
becomes:
describe "when registring '#{log}' messages" do
The code:
paths = %w{a b c d e f g h}.collect { |l| "/tmp/iteration%stest" % l }
becomes:
paths = %w{a b c d e f g h}.collect { |l| "/tmp/iteration#{l}test" }
The code:
assert_raise(Puppet::Error, "Check '%s' did not fail on false" % check) do
becomes:
assert_raise(Puppet::Error, "Check '#{check}' did not fail on false") do
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* Replaced 163 occurances of
defined\? +([@a-zA-Z_.0-9?=]+)
with
defined?(\1)
This makes detecting subsequent patterns easier.
3 Examples:
The code:
if ! defined? @parse_config
becomes:
if ! defined?(@parse_config)
The code:
return @option_parser if defined? @option_parser
becomes:
return @option_parser if defined?(@option_parser)
The code:
if defined? @local and @local
becomes:
if defined?(@local) and @local
* Eliminate trailing spaces.
Replaced 428 occurances of ^(.*?) +$ with \1
1 file was skipped.
test/ral/providers/host/parsed.rb because 0
* Replace leading tabs with an appropriate number of spaces.
Replaced 306 occurances of ^(\t+)(.*) with
Tabs are not consistently expanded in all environments.
* Don't arbitrarily wrap on sprintf (%) operator.
Replaced 143 occurances of
(.*['"] *%)
+(.*)
with
Splitting the line does nothing to aid clarity and hinders further refactorings.
3 Examples:
The code:
raise Puppet::Error, "Cannot create %s: basedir %s is a file" %
[dir, File.join(path)]
becomes:
raise Puppet::Error, "Cannot create %s: basedir %s is a file" % [dir, File.join(path)]
The code:
Puppet.err "Will not start without authorization file %s" %
Puppet[:authconfig]
becomes:
Puppet.err "Will not start without authorization file %s" % Puppet[:authconfig]
The code:
$stderr.puts "Could not find host for PID %s with status %s" %
[pid, $?.exitstatus]
becomes:
$stderr.puts "Could not find host for PID %s with status %s" % [pid, $?.exitstatus]
* Don't break short arrays/parameter list in two.
Replaced 228 occurances of
(.*)
+(.*)
with
3 Examples:
The code:
puts @format.wrap(type.provider(prov).doc,
:indent => 4, :scrub => true)
becomes:
puts @format.wrap(type.provider(prov).doc, :indent => 4, :scrub => true)
The code:
assert(FileTest.exists?(daily),
"Did not make daily graph for %s" % type)
becomes:
assert(FileTest.exists?(daily), "Did not make daily graph for %s" % type)
The code:
assert(prov.target_object(:first).read !~ /^notdisk/,
"Did not remove thing from disk")
becomes:
assert(prov.target_object(:first).read !~ /^notdisk/, "Did not remove thing from disk")
* If arguments must wrap, treat them all equally
Replaced 510 occurances of
lines ending in things like ...(foo, or ...(bar(1,3),
with
\1
\2
3 Examples:
The code:
midscope.to_hash(false),
becomes:
assert_equal(
The code:
botscope.to_hash(true),
becomes:
# bottomscope, then checking that we see the right stuff.
The code:
:path => link,
becomes:
* Replaced 4516 occurances of ^( *)(.*) with
The present code base is supposed to use four-space indentation. In some places we failed
to maintain that standard. These should be fixed regardless of the 2 vs. 4 space question.
15 Examples:
The code:
def run_comp(cmd)
puts cmd
results = []
old_sync = $stdout.sync
$stdout.sync = true
line = []
begin
open("| #{cmd}", "r") do |f|
until f.eof? do
c = f.getc
becomes:
def run_comp(cmd)
puts cmd
results = []
old_sync = $stdout.sync
$stdout.sync = true
line = []
begin
open("| #{cmd}", "r") do |f|
until f.eof? do
c = f.getc
The code:
s.gsub!(/.{4}/n, '\\\\u\&')
}
string.force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_8)
string
rescue Iconv::Failure => e
raise GeneratorError, "Caught #{e.class}: #{e}"
end
else
def utf8_to_pson(string) # :nodoc:
string = string.gsub(/["\\\x0-\x1f]/) { MAP[$&] }
string.gsub!(/(
becomes:
s.gsub!(/.{4}/n, '\\\\u\&')
}
string.force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_8)
string
rescue Iconv::Failure => e
raise GeneratorError, "Caught #{e.class}: #{e}"
end
else
def utf8_to_pson(string) # :nodoc:
string = string.gsub(/["\\\x0-\x1f]/) { MAP[$&] }
string.gsub!(/(
The code:
end
}
rvalues: rvalue
| rvalues comma rvalue {
if val[0].instance_of?(AST::ASTArray)
result = val[0].push(val[2])
else
result = ast AST::ASTArray, :children => [val[0],val[2]]
end
}
becomes:
end
}
rvalues: rvalue
| rvalues comma rvalue {
if val[0].instance_of?(AST::ASTArray)
result = val[0].push(val[2])
else
result = ast AST::ASTArray, :children => [val[0],val[2]]
end
}
The code:
#passwdproc = proc { @password }
keytext = @key.export(
OpenSSL::Cipher::DES.new(:EDE3, :CBC),
@password
)
File.open(@keyfile, "w", 0400) { |f|
f << keytext
}
becomes:
# passwdproc = proc { @password }
keytext = @key.export(
OpenSSL::Cipher::DES.new(:EDE3, :CBC),
@password
)
File.open(@keyfile, "w", 0400) { |f|
f << keytext
}
The code:
end
def to_manifest
"%s { '%s':\n%s\n}" % [self.type.to_s, self.name,
@params.collect { |p, v|
if v.is_a? Array
" #{p} => [\'#{v.join("','")}\']"
else
" #{p} => \'#{v}\'"
end
}.join(",\n")
becomes:
end
def to_manifest
"%s { '%s':\n%s\n}" % [self.type.to_s, self.name,
@params.collect { |p, v|
if v.is_a? Array
" #{p} => [\'#{v.join("','")}\']"
else
" #{p} => \'#{v}\'"
end
}.join(",\n")
The code:
via the augeas tool.
Requires:
- augeas to be installed (http://www.augeas.net)
- ruby-augeas bindings
Sample usage with a string::
augeas{\"test1\" :
context => \"/files/etc/sysconfig/firstboot\",
changes => \"set RUN_FIRSTBOOT YES\",
becomes:
via the augeas tool.
Requires:
- augeas to be installed (http://www.augeas.net)
- ruby-augeas bindings
Sample usage with a string::
augeas{\"test1\" :
context => \"/files/etc/sysconfig/firstboot\",
changes => \"set RUN_FIRSTBOOT YES\",
The code:
names.should_not be_include("root")
end
describe "when generating a purgeable resource" do
it "should be included in the generated resources" do
Puppet::Type.type(:host).stubs(:instances).returns [@purgeable_resource]
@resources.generate.collect { |r| r.ref }.should include(@purgeable_resource.ref)
end
end
describe "when the instance's do not have an ensure property" do
becomes:
names.should_not be_include("root")
end
describe "when generating a purgeable resource" do
it "should be included in the generated resources" do
Puppet::Type.type(:host).stubs(:instances).returns [@purgeable_resource]
@resources.generate.collect { |r| r.ref }.should include(@purgeable_resource.ref)
end
end
describe "when the instance's do not have an ensure property" do
The code:
describe "when the instance's do not have an ensure property" do
it "should not be included in the generated resources" do
@no_ensure_resource = Puppet::Type.type(:exec).new(:name => '/usr/bin/env echo')
Puppet::Type.type(:host).stubs(:instances).returns [@no_ensure_resource]
@resources.generate.collect { |r| r.ref }.should_not include(@no_ensure_resource.ref)
end
end
describe "when the instance's ensure property does not accept absent" do
it "should not be included in the generated resources" do
@no_absent_resource = Puppet::Type.type(:service).new(:name => 'foobar')
becomes:
describe "when the instance's do not have an ensure property" do
it "should not be included in the generated resources" do
@no_ensure_resource = Puppet::Type.type(:exec).new(:name => '/usr/bin/env echo')
Puppet::Type.type(:host).stubs(:instances).returns [@no_ensure_resource]
@resources.generate.collect { |r| r.ref }.should_not include(@no_ensure_resource.ref)
end
end
describe "when the instance's ensure property does not accept absent" do
it "should not be included in the generated resources" do
@no_absent_resource = Puppet::Type.type(:service).new(:name => 'foobar')
The code:
func = nil
assert_nothing_raised do
func = Puppet::Parser::AST::Function.new(
:name => "template",
:ftype => :rvalue,
:arguments => AST::ASTArray.new(
:children => [stringobj(template)]
)
becomes:
func = nil
assert_nothing_raised do
func = Puppet::Parser::AST::Function.new(
:name => "template",
:ftype => :rvalue,
:arguments => AST::ASTArray.new(
:children => [stringobj(template)]
)
The code:
assert(
@store.allowed?("hostname.madstop.com", "192.168.1.50"),
"hostname not allowed")
assert(
! @store.allowed?("name.sub.madstop.com", "192.168.0.50"),
"subname name allowed")
becomes:
assert(
@store.allowed?("hostname.madstop.com", "192.168.1.50"),
"hostname not allowed")
assert(
! @store.allowed?("name.sub.madstop.com", "192.168.0.50"),
"subname name allowed")
The code:
assert_nothing_raised {
server = Puppet::Network::Handler.fileserver.new(
:Local => true,
:Config => false
)
}
becomes:
assert_nothing_raised {
server = Puppet::Network::Handler.fileserver.new(
:Local => true,
:Config => false
)
}
The code:
'yay',
{ :failonfail => false,
:uid => @user.uid,
:gid => @user.gid }
).returns('output')
output = Puppet::Util::SUIDManager.run_and_capture 'yay',
@user.uid,
@user.gid
becomes:
'yay',
{ :failonfail => false,
:uid => @user.uid,
:gid => @user.gid }
).returns('output')
output = Puppet::Util::SUIDManager.run_and_capture 'yay',
@user.uid,
@user.gid
The code:
).times(1)
pkg.provider.expects(
:aptget
).with(
'-y',
'-q',
'remove',
'faff'
becomes:
).times(1)
pkg.provider.expects(
:aptget
).with(
'-y',
'-q',
'remove',
'faff'
The code:
johnny one two
billy three four\n"
# Just parse and generate, to make sure it's isomorphic.
assert_nothing_raised do
assert_equal(text, @parser.to_file(@parser.parse(text)),
"parsing was not isomorphic")
end
end
def test_valid_attrs
becomes:
johnny one two
billy three four\n"
# Just parse and generate, to make sure it's isomorphic.
assert_nothing_raised do
assert_equal(text, @parser.to_file(@parser.parse(text)),
"parsing was not isomorphic")
end
end
def test_valid_attrs
The code:
"testing",
:onboolean => [true, "An on bool"],
:string => ["a string", "A string arg"]
)
result = []
should = []
assert_nothing_raised("Add args failed") do
@config.addargs(result)
end
@config.each do |name, element|
becomes:
"testing",
:onboolean => [true, "An on bool"],
:string => ["a string", "A string arg"]
)
result = []
should = []
assert_nothing_raised("Add args failed") do
@config.addargs(result)
end
@config.each do |name, element|
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This mostly modifies autoloading to look for files ending in either 'pp' or
'rb' using Dir globing with {,.pp,.rb} or .{pp,rb} as appropriate. It could
easily be extended to add support for other formats (e.g. xml) by adding them
to the globs (though, if this were to be done often, having a centralized list
of supported extensions would be a good (and easy) refactor).
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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This is Luke's patch plus a change to fix a test that it broke. It creates
a new sub-scope off the top scope, called "settings" and adds each of the
environment's settings to it as variables, thus satisfying the ticket while
taking us one step further from being able to implement futures. *sigh*
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RDoc's parser produces errors on this sort of statement:
def (variable).method
This patch wraps our occurances of those definitions with comments that
suspend RDoc parsing.
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We had a hardcoded assumption that the version number would always start with
a zero, and thus were failing to recognise 2.6.0 as greater than 0.25.x
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Tests that weren't managing the environment but were still expecting to have
functions defined in it were appalled when the functions/environments binding
actually started working. This patch fixes those tests.
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The following manifest was failing:
$data = {}
This patch makes sure we initalize our ast hash with an empty ruby
hash when it is created without any values.
Signed-off-by: Brice Figureau <brice-puppet@daysofwonder.com>
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This operator allows to find if the left operand is in the right one.
The left operand must be resort to a string, but the right operand can be:
* a string
* an array
* a hash (the search is done on the keys)
This syntax can be used in any place where an expression is supported.
Syntax:
$eatme = 'eat'
if $eatme in ['ate', 'eat'] {
...
}
$value = 'beat generation'
if 'eat' in $value {
notice("on the road")
}
Signed-off-by: Brice Figureau <brice-puppet@daysofwonder.com>
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Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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Puppetdoc got confused because it wasn't popping the comment context for
collections and resource defaults. This commit adds the popping.
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This will produce the name of the module that a given
resource is defined in, rather than the module that
the resource type itself is defined in. For instance:
# in one/manifests/onedef.pp
define one::onedef {
notice "Called $name from $caller_module_name"
}
# in two/manifests/init.pp
class two {
one::onedef { yay: }
}
produces:
Called yay from two
This could obviously be extended to actually build a caller
stack, as frightening as that seems.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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This is only true for resource types (e.g., classes and defines)
of course.
The actual variable is 'module_name':
class mymod {
notify { "in mymod '$module_name'": }
}
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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Thanks to Alan Barrett for the patch
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The previous code maintained thread safety up to work-duplication (so that a
collision would, at worse, result in effective cache flushing and cause some
additional work to be done). The preceding patch addressed the single thread
issue of environment specific functions; this patch brings the thread safety
up to the previous standard.
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Jesse and I are shooting for the minimal viable fix here, with the idea that
a great deal of refactoring is needed but isn't appropriate at this time. The
changes in this commit are:
* Index the function-holding modules by environment
* We need to know the "current environment" when we're defining a function so
we can attach it to the proper module, and this information isn't dynamically
available when user-defined functions are being created (we're being called by
user written code that doesn't "know" about environments) so we cheat and
stash the value in Puppet::Node::Environment
* since we must do this anyway, it turns out to be cleaner & safer to do the
same when we are evaluating a functon. This is the main change from the prior
version of this patch.
* Add a special *root* environment for the built in functions, and extend all
scopes with it.
* Index the function characteristics (name, type, docstring, etc.) by environment
* Make the autoloader environment aware, so that it uses the modulepath for the
specified environment rather than the default
* Turn off caching of the modulepath since it potentially changes for each node
* Tweak tests that weren't environment aware
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This patch implements the fundamental pieces of the move to composite
keys:
* Instead of having a single namevar, we have a non-empty collection
of them, and two resources are the same if and only if all of them
match. Note that the present situation is a special case of this,
where the collection always has exactly one member.
* As currently, namevar is determined by the type.
* Instead just of inferring the single namevar from the title we let
types decompose the title into values for several (perhaps all) of
the namevar components; note that the present situation is again a
special case of this.
Signed-off-by: Jesse Wolfe <jes5199@gmail.com>
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lib/:
* Fix Puppet::Parser::Files
* Fix Puppet::Util::Settings
spec/:
* unit/application/kick.rb: only run on posix
* unit/application.rb
* unit/parser/compiler.rb
* unit/parser/files.rb
* unit/resource.rb
* unit/resource/catalog.rb
* unit/resource/type_collection.rb
* unit/transaction.rb
* unit/type/tidy.rb
* unit/util/settings.rb
* unit/util/settings/file_setting.rb
* unit/application.rb
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Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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We were previously adding them directly to Scope, but
now they're in a module that Scope includes.
This is the first half of #1175 - we can now maintain
environment-specific collections of functions. We need
some way of tracking which environment a given function
is loaded from.
Well, maybe it's the first third - the core functions
probably need to be added to all of these modules,
or there needs to be a 'common' module that is included by
all of them.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@reductivelabs.com>
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Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@reductivelabs.com>
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* Remove require statements
* explicity define namespace modules/classes for
Puppet::Resource::Status to avoid require dependency cycle.
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"${myclass::var}" was lexed as a CLASSNAME instead of a VARIABLE token,
giving an error while parsing because a rvalue can't be a bare CLASSNAME
token.
This commit (based of Brice's) fixes it by restricting the contexts in which
the CLASSNAME and CLASSREF tokens are acceptable, analagous with the handling
for NAME tokens.
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"${myclass::var}" was lexed as a CLASSNAME instead of a VARIABLE token,
giving an error while parsing because a rvalue can't be a bare CLASSNAME
token.
This patch fixes the issue by making VARIABLE lexing higher priority than
CLASSNAME.
Signed-off-by: Brice Figureau <brice-puppet@daysofwonder.com>
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The way stages were implemented caused backward compatibility
to be completely broken for 0.24.x.
This commit fixes that, mostly by assuming Stage[main] will be the
top node in the graph rather than Class[main].
Other stages are not supported in 0.24.x, and explicitly throw a warning
(although not an error).
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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This allows you to specify a run stage for either
a class or a resource.
By default, all classes get directly added to the
'main' stage. You can create new stages as resources:
stage { [pre, post]: }
To order stages, use standard relationships:
stage { pre: before => Stage[main] }
Or use the new relationship syntax:
stage { pre: } -> Stage[main] -> stage { post: }
Then use the new class parameters to specify a stage:
class { foo: stage => pre }
If you set a stage on an individual resource, it will
fail; stages can only be set on class resources.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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This doesn't actually fix the specific request in #1903,
which said there should be no inheritance at all, but
I've changed my mind on that. Static inheritance is good,
it should just be faster.
This change could result in up to 70% speed improvements
in compiling.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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It was previously not allowing false values.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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You can now specify relationships directly in the language:
File[/foo] -> Service[bar]
Specifies a normal dependency while:
File[/foo] ~> Service[bar]
Specifies a subscription.
You can also do relationship chaining, specifying multiple
relationships on a single line:
File[/foo] -> Package[baz] -> Service[bar]
Note that while it's confusing, you don't have to have all
of the arrows be the same direction:
File[/foo] -> Service[bar] <~ Package[baz]
This can provide some succinctness at the cost of readability.
You can also specify full resources, rather than just
resource refs:
file { "/foo": ensure => present } -> package { bar: ensure => installed }
But wait! There's more! You can also specify a subscription on either side
of the relationship marker:
yumrepo { foo: .... }
package { bar: provider => yum, ... }
Yumrepo <| |> -> Package <| provider == yum |>
This, finally, provides easy many to many relationships in Puppet, but it also opens
the door to massive dependency cycles. This last feature is a very powerful stick,
and you can considerably hurt yourself with it.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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This involved essentially moving all of the importing and loading
code out of the Parser and into a new 'TypeLoader' class.
The parser and the ResourceTypeCollection classes now delegate
to that class for all file handling. Most of the code paths are
also now much cleaner, and a bit of redundancy was removed.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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The output variable in the inner block wasn't visible in the outer block,
and wasn't needed in any case, since the results are returned naturally
if you just leave everything alone.
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It's about 10x faster to read the whole file than to read each line and
concatenate them (actually, it's O(n) vs. O(n^2), so the exact speedup
depends on the file size).
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The plussignment operator was constructing the new parameter value by
modifying the param object's value in place (so as to preserve the file
and line information for debugging). However, when multiple resources
are overridden by the same plussignment this would result in all of the
resources sharing the same value (the union of all the prior values and
the new value), which is wrong.
Instead, we need to give each resource its own copy of the value (e.g.,
a copy of the param object), which this patch implements.
Signed-off-by: Markus Roberts <Markus@reality.com>
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containing the specified command.
Also adds rspec tests for generate().
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The following manifest:
case $var {
/match/: {
if $var =~ /matchagain/ {
}
}
}
is failing because the "=~" operators when matching sets an ephemeral
variable in the scope. But the case regex also did it, and since they
both belong to the same scope, and Puppet variables are immutables, the
scope raises an error.
This patch fixes this issue by adding to the current scope a stack
of ephemeral symbol tables. Each new match operator or case/selector
with regex adds a new scope. When we get out of the case/if/selector
structure the scope is reset to the ephemeral level we were when
entering it.
This way the following manifest produces the correct output:
case $var {
/match(rematch)/: {
notice("1. \$0 = $0, \$1 = $1")
if $var =~ /matchagain/ {
notice("2. \$0 = $0, \$1 = $1")
}
notice("3. \$0 = $0, \$1 = $1")
}
}
notice("4. \$0 = $0")
And the output is:
1. $0 = match, $1 = rematch
2. $0 = matchagain, $1 = rematch
3. $0 = match, $1 = rematch
4. $0 =
Signed-off-by: Brice Figureau <brice-puppet@daysofwonder.com>
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It was only apparently working with constant keys,
not, say, AST strings.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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From email:
Some of the errors I needed to track down were actually coming from my
string interpolation branch:
* I wasn't handling "Foo ${1} bar" as a regexp back reference (and I don't like it, but hey)
* I wasn't warning about & passing on the "unneeded" backslash in strings like 'foo\"bar'
* I fumbled part of the conflict resolution with Brice's hash patch.
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It is a setting that was added years ago as a backward
compatibility option and even if it still works, which
is questionable, it has no purpose any longer.
It just complicated the code and didn't do much, so it's gone
now.
Also simplified the interface of Leaf#evaluate_match, since it
was now using none of the passed-in options.
Finally, removed/migrated the last of the Selector/CaseStatement
test/unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@puppetlabs.com>
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We just use the scope's environment.
Signed-off-by: Luke Kanies <luke@reductivelabs.com>
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Brice's hash implementation introduces new occurances of SQTEXT/DQTEXT which, with
string interpolation, should simply be STRING.
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This patch moves the syntactic aspects of string interpolation up
into the lexer/parser phase, preparatory to moving the semantic
portions down to the as yet unnamed futures resolution phase.
This is an enabling move, designed to allow:
* Futures resolution in and between interpolated strings
* Interpolation of hash elements into strings
* Removal of certain order-dependent paths
* Further modularization of the lexer/parser
The key change is switching from viewing strings with interpolation
as single lexical entities (which await later special case processing)
to viewing them as formulas for constructing strings, with the internal
structure of the string exposed by the parser.
Thus a string like:
"Hello $name, are you enjoying ${language_feature}?"
internally becomes something like:
concat("Hello ",$name,", are you enjoying ",$language_feature,"?")
where "concat" is an internal string concatenation function.
A few test cases to show the user observable effects of this change:
notice("string with ${'a nested single quoted string'} inside it.")
$v2 = 3+4
notice("string with ${['an array ',3,'+',4,'=',$v2]} in it.")
notice("string with ${(3+5)/4} nested math ops in it.")
...and so forth.
The key changes in the internals are:
* Unification of SQTEXT and DQTEXT into a new token type STRING (since
nothing past the lexer cares about the distinction.
* Creation of several new token types to represent the components of
an interpolated string:
DQPRE The initial portion of an interpolated string
DQMID The portion of a string betwixt two interpolations
DQPOST The final portion of an interpolated string
DQCONT The as-yet-unlexed portion after an interpolation
Thus, in the example above (phantom curly braces added for clarity),
DQPRE "Hello ${
DQMID }, are you enjoying ${
DQPOST }?"
DQCONT is a bookkeeping token and is never generated.
* Creation of a DOLLAR_VAR token to strip the "$" off of variables
with explicit dollar signs, so that the VARIABLEs produced from
things like "Test ${x}" (where the "$" has already been consumed)
do not fail for want of a "$"
* Reworking the grammar rules in the obvious way
* Introduction of a "concatenation" AST node type (which will be going
away in a subsequent refactor).
Note finally that this is a component of a set of interrelated refactors,
and some of the changes around the edges of the above will only makes
sense in context of the other parts.
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