community.general/lib/ansible/plugins/inventory/yaml.py
Brian Coca e4c61ea9a1 fix 'return false' from parse
this was abandoned early on the manger side  but seems like we left behind on plugin side.
more flexible extensions with yaml plugin
validate data correctly for yaml/constructed
fixed issue with only adding one child to keyed, the group only got the host that forced it's creation

fixes #31382
fixes #31365
2017-10-06 13:25:06 -04:00

166 lines
6.2 KiB
Python

# Copyright (c) 2017 Ansible Project
# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
DOCUMENTATION = '''
inventory: yaml
version_added: "2.4"
short_description: Uses a specifically YAML file as inventory source.
description:
- "YAML based inventory, starts with the 'all' group and has hosts/vars/children entries."
- Host entries can have sub-entries defined, which will be treated as variables.
- Vars entries are normal group vars.
- "Children are 'child groups', which can also have their own vars/hosts/children and so on."
- File MUST have a valid extension, defined in configuration
notes:
- It takes the place of the previously hardcoded YAML inventory.
- To function it requires being whitelisted in configuration.
options:
yaml_extensions:
description: list of 'valid' extensions for files containing YAML
type: list
default: ['.yaml', '.yml', '.json']
'''
EXAMPLES = '''
all: # keys must be unique, i.e. only one 'hosts' per group
hosts:
test1:
test2:
var1: value1
vars:
group_var1: value2
children: # key order does not matter, indentation does
other_group:
children:
group_x:
hosts:
test5
vars:
g2_var2: value3
hosts:
test4:
ansible_host: 127.0.0.1
last_group:
hosts:
test1 # same host as above, additional group membership
vars:
last_var: MYVALUE
'''
import os
from collections import MutableMapping
from ansible import constants as C
from ansible.errors import AnsibleParserError
from ansible.module_utils.six import string_types
from ansible.module_utils._text import to_native
from ansible.parsing.utils.addresses import parse_address
from ansible.plugins.inventory import BaseFileInventoryPlugin, detect_range, expand_hostname_range
class InventoryModule(BaseFileInventoryPlugin):
NAME = 'yaml'
def __init__(self):
super(InventoryModule, self).__init__()
def verify_file(self, path):
valid = False
if super(InventoryModule, self).verify_file(path):
file_name, ext = os.path.splitext(path)
if not ext or ext in C.YAML_FILENAME_EXTENSIONS:
valid = True
return valid
def parse(self, inventory, loader, path, cache=True):
''' parses the inventory file '''
super(InventoryModule, self).parse(inventory, loader, path)
try:
data = self.loader.load_from_file(path)
except Exception as e:
raise AnsibleParserError(e)
if not data:
raise AnsibleParserError('Parsed empty YAML file')
elif not isinstance(data, MutableMapping):
raise AnsibleParserError('YAML inventory has invalid structure, it should be a dictionary, got: %s' % type(data))
elif data.get('plugin'):
raise AnsibleParserError('Plugin configuration YAML file, not YAML inventory')
# We expect top level keys to correspond to groups, iterate over them
# to get host, vars and subgroups (which we iterate over recursivelly)
if isinstance(data, MutableMapping):
for group_name in data:
self._parse_group(group_name, data[group_name])
else:
raise AnsibleParserError("Invalid data from file, expected dictionary and got:\n\n%s" % to_native(data))
def _parse_group(self, group, group_data):
self.inventory.add_group(group)
if isinstance(group_data, MutableMapping):
# make sure they are dicts
for section in ['vars', 'children', 'hosts']:
if section in group_data:
# convert strings to dicts as these are allowed
if isinstance(group_data[section], string_types):
group_data[section] = {group_data[section]: None}
if not isinstance(group_data[section], MutableMapping):
raise AnsibleParserError('Invalid %s entry for %s group, requires a dictionary, found %s instead.' %
(section, group, type(group_data[section])))
if group_data.get('vars', False):
for var in group_data['vars']:
self.inventory.set_variable(group, var, group_data['vars'][var])
if group_data.get('children', False):
for subgroup in group_data['children']:
self._parse_group(subgroup, group_data['children'][subgroup])
self.inventory.add_child(group, subgroup)
if group_data.get('hosts', False):
for host_pattern in group_data['hosts']:
hosts, port = self._parse_host(host_pattern)
self.populate_host_vars(hosts, group_data['hosts'][host_pattern] or {}, group, port)
def _parse_host(self, host_pattern):
'''
Each host key can be a pattern, try to process it and add variables as needed
'''
(hostnames, port) = self._expand_hostpattern(host_pattern)
return hostnames, port
def _expand_hostpattern(self, hostpattern):
'''
Takes a single host pattern and returns a list of hostnames and an
optional port number that applies to all of them.
'''
# Can the given hostpattern be parsed as a host with an optional port
# specification?
try:
(pattern, port) = parse_address(hostpattern, allow_ranges=True)
except:
# not a recognizable host pattern
pattern = hostpattern
port = None
# Once we have separated the pattern, we expand it into list of one or
# more hostnames, depending on whether it contains any [x:y] ranges.
if detect_range(pattern):
hostnames = expand_hostname_range(pattern)
else:
hostnames = [pattern]
return (hostnames, port)