ansible: Merge module runner into helpers.py.

wip-fakessh-exit-status
David Wilson 7 years ago
parent 67d4c13ffa
commit f001eba23e

@ -1,102 +0,0 @@
"""
Minimal demo of running an Ansible module via mitogen.
"""
import json
import time
import mitogen
# Prevent accident import of an Ansible module from hanging on stdin read.
import ansible.module_utils.basic
ansible.module_utils.basic._ANSIBLE_ARGS = '{}'
class Exit(Exception):
"""
Raised when a module exits with success.
"""
def __init__(self, dct):
self.dct = dct
class ModuleError(Exception):
"""
Raised when a module voluntarily indicates failure via .fail_json().
"""
def __init__(self, msg, dct):
Exception.__init__(self, msg)
self.dct = dct
def wtf_exit_json(self, **kwargs):
"""
Replace AnsibleModule.exit_json() with something that doesn't try to
suicide the process or JSON-encode the dictionary. Instead, cause Exit to
be raised, with a `dct` attribute containing the successful result
dictionary.
"""
self.add_path_info(kwargs)
kwargs.setdefault('changed', False)
kwargs.setdefault('invocation', {
'module_args': self.params
})
kwargs = ansible.module_utils.basic.remove_values(kwargs, self.no_log_values)
self.do_cleanup_files()
raise Exit(kwargs)
def wtf_fail_json(self, **kwargs):
"""
Replace AnsibleModule.fail_json() with something that raises ModuleError,
which includes a `dct` attribute.
"""
self.add_path_info(kwargs)
kwargs.setdefault('failed', True)
kwargs.setdefault('invocation', {
'module_args': self.params
})
kwargs = ansible.module_utils.basic.remove_values(kwargs, self.no_log_values)
self.do_cleanup_files()
raise ModuleError(kwargs.get('msg'), kwargs)
def run_module(module, raw_params=None, args=None):
"""
Set up the process environment in preparation for running an Ansible
module. The monkey-patches the Ansible libraries in various places to
prevent it from trying to kill the process on completion, and to prevent it
from reading sys.stdin.
"""
if args is None:
args = {}
if raw_params is not None:
args['_raw_params'] = raw_params
ansible.module_utils.basic.AnsibleModule.exit_json = wtf_exit_json
ansible.module_utils.basic.AnsibleModule.fail_json = wtf_fail_json
ansible.module_utils.basic._ANSIBLE_ARGS = json.dumps({
'ANSIBLE_MODULE_ARGS': args
})
try:
mod = __import__(module, {}, {}, [''])
# Ansible modules begin execution on import, because they're crap from
# hell. Thus the above __import__ will cause either Exit or
# ModuleError to be raised. If we reach the line below, the module did
# not execute and must already have been imported for a previous
# invocation, so we need to invoke main explicitly.
mod.main()
except Exit, e:
return e.dct
def main(router):
context = router.local()
print context.call(run_module, 'ansible.modules.system.setup')
for x in xrange(10):
print context.call(run_module, 'ansible.modules.commands.command', 'hostname')
if __name__ == '__main__' and mitogen.is_master:
import mitogen.utils
mitogen.utils.run_with_router(main)

@ -34,7 +34,94 @@ So here we define helpers in some sanely layered package where the entirety of
Ansible won't be imported.
"""
import json
import subprocess
import time
import mitogen
# Prevent accidental import of an Ansible module from hanging on stdin read.
import ansible.module_utils.basic
ansible.module_utils.basic._ANSIBLE_ARGS = '{}'
class Exit(Exception):
"""
Raised when a module exits with success.
"""
def __init__(self, dct):
self.dct = dct
class ModuleError(Exception):
"""
Raised when a module voluntarily indicates failure via .fail_json().
"""
def __init__(self, msg, dct):
Exception.__init__(self, msg)
self.dct = dct
def wtf_exit_json(self, **kwargs):
"""
Replace AnsibleModule.exit_json() with something that doesn't try to
suicide the process or JSON-encode the dictionary. Instead, cause Exit to
be raised, with a `dct` attribute containing the successful result
dictionary.
"""
self.add_path_info(kwargs)
kwargs.setdefault('changed', False)
kwargs.setdefault('invocation', {
'module_args': self.params
})
kwargs = ansible.module_utils.basic.remove_values(kwargs, self.no_log_values)
self.do_cleanup_files()
raise Exit(kwargs)
def wtf_fail_json(self, **kwargs):
"""
Replace AnsibleModule.fail_json() with something that raises ModuleError,
which includes a `dct` attribute.
"""
self.add_path_info(kwargs)
kwargs.setdefault('failed', True)
kwargs.setdefault('invocation', {
'module_args': self.params
})
kwargs = ansible.module_utils.basic.remove_values(kwargs, self.no_log_values)
self.do_cleanup_files()
raise ModuleError(kwargs.get('msg'), kwargs)
def run_module(module, raw_params=None, args=None):
"""
Set up the process environment in preparation for running an Ansible
module. The monkey-patches the Ansible libraries in various places to
prevent it from trying to kill the process on completion, and to prevent it
from reading sys.stdin.
"""
if args is None:
args = {}
if raw_params is not None:
args['_raw_params'] = raw_params
ansible.module_utils.basic.AnsibleModule.exit_json = wtf_exit_json
ansible.module_utils.basic.AnsibleModule.fail_json = wtf_fail_json
ansible.module_utils.basic._ANSIBLE_ARGS = json.dumps({
'ANSIBLE_MODULE_ARGS': args
})
try:
mod = __import__(module, {}, {}, [''])
# Ansible modules begin execution on import, because they're crap from
# hell. Thus the above __import__ will cause either Exit or
# ModuleError to be raised. If we reach the line below, the module did
# not execute and must already have been imported for a previous
# invocation, so we need to invoke main explicitly.
mod.main()
except Exit, e:
return e.dct
def exec_command(cmd, in_data=None):

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