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You're reading from  Puppet 5 Essentials - Third Edition

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781787284715
Edition3rd Edition
Tools
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Author (1)
Felix Frank
Felix Frank
author image
Felix Frank

Felix Frank has used and programmed computers for most of his life. During and after working on his computer science diploma, he gained experience on the job as a systems administrator, server operator, and open source software developer. He spent 6 years of his 11-year career as a Puppet power user. In parallel, he spent about two years intensifying his studies through ongoing source code contributions and active participation in several conferences.
Read more about Felix Frank

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Adding control structures in manifests

So far, you have written three simple manifests while following the instructions in this chapter. Each comprised only one resource, and one of them was given on the command line using the -e option. Of course, you would not want to write distinct manifests for each possible circumstance. Instead, just as how Ruby or Perl scripts branch out into different code paths, there are structures that make your Puppet code flexible and reusable for different circumstances.

The most common control element is the if/else block. It is quite similar to its equivalents in many programming languages:

if 'mail_lda' in $needed_services {
service { 'dovecot': enable => true }
} else {
service { 'dovecot': enable => false }
}

The Puppet DSL also has a case statement, which is reminiscent of its counterparts in other languages as well:

case $role {
‘imap_server’: {
package { ‘dovecot’: ensure => installed, }
service { ‘dovecot’: ensure => running, }
}
/_webservers$/: {
service { [‘apache’, ‘ssh’]: ensure => running, }
}
default: {
service { ‘ssh’: ensure => running, }
}
}

At the second matcher, you can see how it is possible to use regular expressions.

The case statement can also be used to switch to specific code based on variable data types:

case $role {
Array: {
include $role[0]
}
String: {
include $role
}
default: {
notify { 'This nodes $role variable is neither an
Array nor a String':}
}
}

A variation of the case statement is the selector. It's an expression, not a statement, and can be used in a fashion similar to the ternary if/else operator found in C-like languages:

package { 'dovecot':
ensure => $role ? {
'imap_server' => 'installed',
/desktop$/ => 'purged',
default => 'removed',
},
}

Similar to the case statement, the selector can also be used to return results, depending on the data types:

package { 'dovecot':
ensure => $role ? {
Boolean => 'installed',
String => 'purged',
default => 'removed',
},
}

The selector should be used with caution, because in more complex manifests, this syntax will impede readability.

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Author (1)

author image
Felix Frank

Felix Frank has used and programmed computers for most of his life. During and after working on his computer science diploma, he gained experience on the job as a systems administrator, server operator, and open source software developer. He spent 6 years of his 11-year career as a Puppet power user. In parallel, he spent about two years intensifying his studies through ongoing source code contributions and active participation in several conferences.
Read more about Felix Frank