require 'puppet/external/nagios' require 'puppet/external/nagios/base' require 'puppet/provider/naginator' module Puppet::Util::NagiosMaker # Create a new nagios type, using all of the parameters # from the parser. def self.create_nagios_type(name) name = name.to_sym full_name = ("nagios_" + name.to_s).to_sym raise(Puppet::DevError, "No nagios type for %s" % name) unless nagtype = Nagios::Base.type(name) type = Puppet::Type.newtype(full_name) {} type.ensurable type.newparam(nagtype.namevar, :namevar => true) do desc "The name parameter for Nagios type %s" % nagtype.name end # We deduplicate the parameters because it makes sense to allow Naginator to have dupes. nagtype.parameters.uniq.each do |param| next if param == nagtype.namevar # We can't turn these parameter names into constants, so at least for now they aren't # supported. next if param.to_s =~ /^[0-9]/ type.newproperty(param) do desc "Nagios configuration file parameter." end end type.newproperty(:target) do desc 'target' defaultto do resource.class.defaultprovider.default_target end end target = "/etc/nagios/#{full_name.to_s}.cfg" provider = type.provide(:naginator, :parent => Puppet::Provider::Naginator, :default_target => target) {} provider.nagios_type type.desc "The Nagios type #{name.to_s}. This resource type is autogenerated using the model developed in Naginator_, and all of the Nagios types are generated using the same code and the same library. This type generates Nagios configuration statements in Nagios-parseable configuration files. By default, the statements will be added to ``#{target}``, but you can send them to a different file by setting their ``target`` attribute. You can purge Nagios resources using the ``resources`` type, but *only* in the default file locations. This is an architectural limitation. .. _naginator: http://projects.reductivelabs.com/projects/naginator " end end