Make sure all the lookup plugins are documented.

pull/1948/merge
Michael DeHaan 12 years ago
parent 318e3302fb
commit 0ae7f996f5

@ -276,17 +276,17 @@ In Ansible 0.8, a few shortcuts are available for testing whether a variable is
There is a matching 'is_unset' that works the same way. Quoting the variable inside the function is mandatory. There is a matching 'is_unset' that works the same way. Quoting the variable inside the function is mandatory.
When combining `only_if` with `with_items`, be aware that the `only_if` statement is processed for each item. When combining `only_if` with `with_items`, be aware that the `only_if` statement is processed seperately for each item.
This is a deliberate design:: This is by design::
tasks: tasks:
- action: command echo $item - action: command echo $item
with_item: [ 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 ] with_item: [ 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 ]
only_if: "$item > 5" only_if: "$item > 5"
While `only_if` is a pretty good option for advanced users, it exposes more guts of the engine than we'd like, and While `only_if` is a pretty good option for advanced users, it exposes more guts than we'd like, and
we can do better. In 0.9, we will be adding `when`, which will be like a syntactic sugar for `only_if` and hide we can do better. In 1.0, we added 'when', which is like syntactic sugar for `only_if` and hides
this level of complexity -- it will numerous built in operators. this level of complexity. See more on this below.
Conditional Execution (Simplified) Conditional Execution (Simplified)
`````````````````````````````````` ``````````````````````````````````
@ -435,8 +435,8 @@ More Loops
.. versionadded: 0.8 .. versionadded: 0.8
Various 'lookup plugins' allow additional ways to iterate over data. Ansible will have more of these Various 'lookup plugins' allow additional ways to iterate over data. Ansible will have more of these
over time. In 0.8, the only lookup plugins that comes stock are 'with_fileglob' and 'with_sequence', but over time. You can write your own, as is covered in the API section. Each typically takes a list and
you can also write your own. can accept more than one parameter.
'with_fileglob' matches all files in a single directory, non-recursively, that match a pattern. It can 'with_fileglob' matches all files in a single directory, non-recursively, that match a pattern. It can
be used like this:: be used like this::
@ -451,26 +451,61 @@ be used like this::
# copy each file over that matches the given pattern # copy each file over that matches the given pattern
- action: copy src=$item dest=/etc/fooapp/ owner=root mode=600 - action: copy src=$item dest=/etc/fooapp/ owner=root mode=600
with_fileglob: /playbooks/files/fooapp/* with_fileglob:
- /playbooks/files/fooapp/*
.. versionadded: 0.9
Many new lookup abilities were added in 0.9. Remeber lookup plugins are run on the "controlling" machine::
---
- hosts: all
tasks:
- action: debug msg="$item is an environment variable"
with_env:
- HOME
- LANG
- action: debug msg="$item is a line from the result of this command"
with_lines:
- cat /etc/motd
- action: debug msg="$item is the raw result of running this command"
with_pipe:
- date
- action: debug msg="$item is value in Redis for somekey"
with_redis_kv:
- redis://localhost:6379,somekey
- action: debug msg="$item is a DNS TXT record for example.com"
with_dnstxt:
- example.com
- action: debug msg="$item is a value from evaluation of this template"
with_template:
- ./some_template.j2
.. versionadded: 1.0 .. versionadded: 1.0
'with_sequence' generates a sequence of items in ascending numerical order. You 'with_sequence' generates a sequence of items in ascending numerical order. You
can specify a 'start', an 'end' value (inclusive), and a 'stride' value (to skip can specify a start, end, and an optional step value.
some numbers of values), and a printf-style 'format' string. It accepts
arguments both as key-value pairs and in a shortcut of the form
"[start-]end[/stride][:format]". All numerical values can be specified in
hexadecimal (i.e. 0x3f8) or octal (i.e. 0644). Negative numbers are not
supported. Here is an example that leverages most of its features::
---- Arguments can be either key-value pairs or as a shortcut in the format
"[start-]end[/stride][:format]". The format is a printf style string.
Numerical values can be specified in decimal, hexadecimal (0x3f8) or octal (0600).
Negative numbers are not supported. This works as follows::
---
- hosts: all - hosts: all
tasks: tasks:
# create groups # create groups
- group: name=evens state=present - group: name=evens state=present
- group: name=odds state=present - group: name=odds state=present
# create 32 test users # create 32 test users
@ -484,17 +519,7 @@ supported. Here is an example that leverages most of its features::
- file: dest=/var/stuff/$item state=directory - file: dest=/var/stuff/$item state=directory
with_sequence: start=4 end=16 with_sequence: start=4 end=16
The key-value form also supports a 'count' option, which always generates # a simpler way to use the sequence plugin
'count' entries regardless of the stride. The count option is mostly useful for
avoiding off-by-one errors and errors calculating the number of entries in a
sequence when a stride is specified. The shortcut form cannot be used to
specify a count. As an example::
----
- hosts: all
tasks:
# create 4 groups # create 4 groups
- group: name=group${item} state=present - group: name=group${item} state=present
with_sequence: count=4 with_sequence: count=4

@ -30,8 +30,7 @@ import time
import datetime import datetime
import subprocess import subprocess
import ansible.utils import ansible.utils
from ansible.utils import module_docs import ansible.utils.module_docs as module_docs
# Get parent directory of the directory this script lives in # Get parent directory of the directory this script lives in
MODULEDIR=os.path.abspath(os.path.join( MODULEDIR=os.path.abspath(os.path.join(

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