puppet-epp
- Interact directly with the EPP template parser/renderer.
puppet epp action
Note that any setting that's valid in the configuration
file is also a valid long argument, although it may or may not be
relevant to the present action. For example, server
and run_mode
are valid
settings, so you can specify --server <servername>
, or
--run_mode <runmode>
as an argument.
See the configuration file documentation at
https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/configuration.html for the
full list of acceptable parameters. A commented list of all
configuration options can also be generated by running puppet with
--genconfig
.
json
,
s
(string), yaml
, and console
, but other options such as dot
are
sometimes available.dump
- Outputs a dump of the internal template parse tree for debugging:
SYNOPSIS
puppet epp dump [--e source] [--[no-]validate] [--format old, pn, or json] [--pretty] [--[no-]header] [--format old|pn|json] [--pretty] { -e source | [templates ...] }
DESCRIPTION
The dump action parses and validates the EPP syntax and dumps the resulting AST model in a human readable (but not necessarily an easy to understand) format.
The output format can be controlled using the --format old|pn|json where:
The output will be "pretty printed" when the option --pretty is given together with --format 'pn' or 'json'. This option has no effect on the 'old' format.
The command accepts one or more templates (.epp) files, or an -e followed by the template source text. The given templates can be paths to template files, or references to templates in modules when given on the form modulename/template-name.epp. If no arguments are given, the stdin is read (unless it is attached to a terminal)
If multiple templates are given, they are separated with a header indicating the name of the template. This can be suppressed with the option --no-header. The option --[no-]header has no effect when a single template is dumped.
When debugging the epp parser itself, it may be useful to suppress the validation
step with the --no-validate
option to observe what the parser produced from the
given source.
This command ignores the --render-as setting/option.
OPTIONS
--e <source> -
Dump one epp source expression given on the command line.
--format <old, pn, or json> - Get result in 'old' (deprecated format), 'pn' (new format), or 'json' (new format in JSON).
--[no-]header - Whether or not to show a file name header between files.
--pretty - Pretty print output. Only applicable together with --format pn or json
--[no-]validate - Whether or not to validate the parsed result, if no-validate only syntax errors are reported.
RETURNS
A dump of the resulting AST model unless there are syntax or validation errors.
render
- Renders an epp template as text:
SYNOPSIS
puppet epp render [--node node_name] [--e source] [--values values_hash] [--values_file pp_or_yaml_file] [--facts facts_file] [--[no-]header] -e source | [templates ...]
DESCRIPTION
This action renders one or more EPP templates.
The command accepts one or more templates (.epp files), given the same way as templates
are given to the puppet epp
function (a full path, or a relative reference
on the form 'modulename/template-name.epp'), or as a relative path.args In case
the given path matches both a modulename/template and a file, the template from
the module is used.
An inline_epp equivalent can also be performed by giving the template after an -e, or by piping the EPP source text to the command.
Values to the template can be defined using the Puppet Language on the command
line with --values
or in a .pp or .yaml file referenced with --values_file
. If
specifying both the result is merged with --values having higher precedence.
The --values option allows a Puppet Language sequence of expressions to be defined on the
command line the same way as it may be given in a .pp file referenced with --values_file
.
It may set variable values (that become available in the template), and must produce
either undef
or a Hash
of values (the hash may be empty). Producing undef
simulates
that the template is called without an arguments hash and thus only references
variables in its outer scope. When a hash is given, a template is limited to seeing
only the global scope. It is thus possible to simulate the different types of
calls to the epp
and inline_epp
functions, with or without a given hash. Note that if
variables are given, they are always available in this simulation - to test that the
template only references variables given as arguments, produce a hash in --values or
the --values_file, do not specify any variables that are not global, and
turn on --strict_variables setting.
If multiple templates are given, the same set of values are given to each template. If both --values and --value_file are used, the --values are merged on top of those given in the file.
When multiple templates are rendered, a separating header is output between the templates
showing the name of the template before the output. The header output can be turned off with
--no-header
. This also concatenates the template results without any added newline separators.
Facts from the node where the command is being run are used by default.args Facts can be obtained
for other nodes if they have called in, and reported their facts by using the --node <nodename>
flag.
Overriding node facts as well as additional facts can be given in a .yaml or .json file and referencing
it with the --facts option. (Values can be obtained in yaml format directly from
facter
, or from puppet for a given node). Note that it is not possible to simulate the
reserved variable name $facts
in any other way.
Note that it is not possible to set variables using the Puppet Language that have the same names as facts as this result in an error; "attempt to redefine a variable" since facts are set first.
Exits with 0 if there were no validation errors. On errors, no rendered output is produced for that template file.
When designing EPP templates, it is strongly recommended to define all template arguments
in the template, and to give them in a hash when calling epp
or inline_epp
and to use
as few global variables as possible, preferably only the $facts hash. This makes templates
more free standing and are easier to reuse, and to test.
OPTIONS
--e <source> -
Render one inline epp template given on the command line.
--facts <facts_file> - A .yaml or .json file containing a hash of facts made available in $facts and $trusted
--[no-]header - Whether or not to show a file name header between rendered results.
--node <node_name> - The name of the node for which facts are obtained. Defaults to facts for the local node.
--values <values_hash> - A Hash in Puppet DSL form given as arguments to the template being rendered.
--values_file <pp_or_yaml_file> - A .pp or .yaml file that is processed to produce a hash of values for the template.
RETURNS
A rendered result of one or more given templates.
validate
- Validate the syntax of one or more EPP templates.:
SYNOPSIS
puppet epp validate [--[no-]continue_on_error] [template] [template ...]
DESCRIPTION
This action validates EPP syntax without producing any output.
When validating, multiple issues per file are reported up to the settings of max_error, and max_warnings. The processing stops after having reported issues for the first encountered file with errors unless the option --continue_on_error is given.
Files can be given using the modulename/template.epp
style to lookup the
template from a module, or be given as a reference to a file. If the reference
to a file can be resolved against a template in a module, the module version
wins - in this case use an absolute path to reference the template file
if the module version is not wanted.
Exits with 0 if there were no validation errors.
OPTIONS
--[no-]continue_on_error -
Whether or not to continue after errors are reported for a template.
RETURNS
Nothing, or encountered syntax errors.
render
Render the template in module 'mymodule' called 'mytemplate.epp', and give it two arguments
a
and b
:
$ puppet epp render mymodule/mytemplate.epp --values '{a => 10, b => 20}'
Render a template using an absolute path:
$ puppet epp render /tmp/testing/mytemplate.epp --values '{a => 10, b => 20}'
Render a template with data from a .pp file:
$ puppet epp render /tmp/testing/mytemplate.epp --values_file mydata.pp
Render a template with data from a .pp file and override one value on the command line:
$ puppet epp render /tmp/testing/mytemplate.epp --values_file mydata.pp --values '{a=>10}'
Render from STDIN:
$ cat template.epp | puppet epp render --values '{a => 10, b => 20}'
Set variables in a .pp file and render a template that uses variable references:
# data.pp file
$greeted = 'a global var'
undef
$ puppet epp render -e 'hello <%= $greeted %>' --values_file data.pp
Render a template that outputs a fact:
$ facter --yaml > data.yaml
$ puppet epp render -e '<% $facts[osfamily] %>' --facts data.yaml
validate
Validate the template 'template.epp' in module 'mymodule':
$ puppet epp validate mymodule/template.epp
Validate two arbitrary template files:
$ puppet epp validate mymodule/template1.epp yourmodule/something.epp
Validate a template somewhere in the file system:
$ puppet epp validate /tmp/testing/template1.epp
Validate a template against a file relative to the current directory:
$ puppet epp validate template1.epp
$ puppet epp validate ./template1.epp
Validate from STDIN:
$ cat template.epp | puppet epp validate
Continue on error to see errors for all templates:
$ puppet epp validate mymodule/template1.epp mymodule/template2.epp --continue_on_error
Copyright 2014 by Puppet Inc. Apache 2 license; see COPYING