@ -19,6 +19,10 @@
from __future__ import ( absolute_import , division , print_function )
__metaclass__ = type
from abc import ABCMeta , abstractmethod
from six import with_metaclass
try :
from __main__ import display
except ImportError :
@ -27,7 +31,7 @@ except ImportError:
__all__ = [ ' LookupBase ' ]
class LookupBase :
class LookupBase (with_metaclass ( ABCMeta , object ) ) :
def __init__ ( self , loader = None , templar = None , * * kwargs ) :
self . _loader = loader
self . _templar = templar
@ -39,6 +43,7 @@ class LookupBase:
else :
return self . _loader . get_basedir ( )
@staticmethod
def _flatten ( self , terms ) :
ret = [ ]
for term in terms :
@ -48,16 +53,49 @@ class LookupBase:
ret . append ( term )
return ret
def _combine ( self , a , b ) :
@staticmethod
def _combine ( a , b ) :
results = [ ]
for x in a :
for y in b :
results . append ( self . _flatten ( [ x , y ] ) )
return results
def _flatten_hash_to_list ( self , terms ) :
@staticmethod
def _flatten_hash_to_list ( terms ) :
ret = [ ]
for key in terms :
ret . append ( { ' key ' : key , ' value ' : terms [ key ] } )
return ret
@abstractmethod
def run ( self , terms , variables = None , * * kwargs ) :
"""
When the playbook specifies a lookup , this method is run . The
arguments to the lookup become the arguments to this method . One
additional keyword argument named ` ` variables ` ` is added to the method
call . It contains the variables available to ansible at the time the
lookup is templated . For instance : :
" {{ lookup( ' url ' , ' https://toshio.fedorapeople.org/one.txt ' , validate_certs=True) }} "
would end up calling the lookup plugin named url ' s run method like this::
run ( [ ' https://toshio.fedorapeople.org/one.txt ' ] , variables = available_variables , validate_certs = True )
Lookup plugins can be used within playbooks for looping . When this
happens , the first argument is a list containing the terms . Lookup
plugins can also be called from within playbooks to return their
values into a variable or parameter . If the user passes a string in
this case , it is converted into a list .
Errors encountered during execution should be returned by raising
AnsibleError ( ) with a message describing the error .
Any strings returned by this method that could ever contain non - ascii
must be converted into python ' s unicode type as the strings will be run
through jinja2 which has this requirement . You can use : :
from ansible . module_utils . unicode import to_unicode
result_string = to_unicode ( result_string )
"""
pass