This module has been converted to a puppet face and merged into the core puppet repository. Any further development should take place in puppetlabs/puppet.
You can find the code for the new tool here puppet/lib/puppet/face/module
.
The Puppet Module Tool, puppet-module
, creates, installs and searches for
modules on the Puppet Forge at http://forge.puppetlabs.com
To run puppet-module
, you must have the following installed:
- Ruby 1.8.x: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/
- RubyGems 1.3.x: http://rubygems.org/pages/download/
- Puppet 0.25.x: http://www.puppetlabs.com/
The source code for this tool is available online at http://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet-module-tool
You can checkout the source code by installing the git
distributed version
control system and running:
git clone git://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet-module-tool.git
There are a number of ways to run the puppet-module
program:
-
From an official gem: Install it by running:
sudo gem install puppet-module
-
From a locally-built gem: Checkout the source code and from the checkout directory, run:
# Build the gem rake gem # Install the file produced by the above command, e.g.: sudo gem install pkg/puppet-module-0.3.0.gem
-
From a source code checkout: Checkout the source code and from the checkout directory, run:
alias puppet-module=$PWD/bin/puppet-module
N.B. you must have Puppet installed locally for puppet-module
to work.
If Puppet is not installed by your system's package manager, install the RubyGem with:
sudo gem install puppet
Display the program's built-in help by running:
puppet-module help
Display information on a specific command by running a command like:
puppet-module help install
Many commands will use a specific repository if you pass it to the -r
option at the end, like:
puppet-module search mymodule -r http://forge.puppetlabs.com/
Searching displays modules on the repository that match your query.
For example, search the default repository for modules whose names
include the substring mymodule
:
puppet-module search mymodule
Installing a module release from a repository downloads a special archive file. This archive is then automatically unpacked into a new directory under your current directory. You can then add this module directory to your Puppet configuration files to use it.
For example, install the latest release of the module named mymodule
written by myuser
from the default repository:
puppet-module install myuser-mymodule
Or install a specific version:
puppet-module install myuser-mymodule --version=0.0.1
Generating a new module produces a new directory prepopulated with a directory structure and files recommended for Puppet best practices.
For example, generate a new module:
puppet-module generate myuser-mymodule
The above command will create a new module directory called
myuser-mymodule
under your current directory with the generated files.
Please read the files in this generated directory for further details.
Building a module release processes the files in your module directory and produces a special archive file that you can share or install.
For example, build a module release from within the module directory:
puppet-module build
The above command will report where it created the module release archive file.
For example, if this was version 0.0.1
of myuser-mymodule
, then this
would have created a pkg/myuser-mymodule-0.0.1.tar.gz
release file.
The build process reads a Modulefile
in your module directory and uses
its contents to build a metadata.json
file. This generated JSON file
is included in the module release archive so that repositories and
installers can extract details from your release. Do not edit this
metadata.json
file yourself, because it's clobbered each time during
the build process -- you should make all your changes to the
Modulefile
instead.
All the files in the pkg
directory of your module directory are
artifacts of the build process. You can delete them when you're done.
The Modulefile resembles a configuration or data file, but is actually a Ruby domain-specific language (DSL), which means it's evaluated as code by the puppet-module tool. A Modulefile consists of a series of method calls which write or append to the available fields in the metadata object.
Normal rules of Ruby syntax apply:
name 'myuser-mymodule'
version '0.0.1'
dependency( 'otheruser-othermodule', '1.2.3' )
description "This is a full description
of the module, and is being written as a multi-line string."
The following metadata fields/methods are available:
name
-- The full name of the module (e.g. "username-module").version
-- The current version of the module.dependency
-- A module that this module depends on. Unlike the other fields, thedependency
method accepts up to three arguments: a module name, a version requirement, and a repository. A Modulefile may include multipledependency
lines.source
-- The module's source. The use of this field is not specified.author
-- The module's author. If not specified, this field will default to the username portion of the module'sname
field.license
-- The license under which the module is made available.summary
-- One-line description of the module.description
-- Complete description of the module.project_page
-- The module's website.
Sharing a module release with others helps others avoid reinventing the wheel, and encourages them to help with your work by improving it. For every module you share, we hope you'll find many modules by others that will be useful to you.
You can share your modules at http://forge.puppetlabs.com/
To build and share a new module version:
- Edit the
Modulefile
and increase theversion
number. - Run the
puppet-module build
as explained in the Build a module release section. - Upload the new release file as explained in the Share a module section.
Modules that you install are saved to a cache within your ~/.puppet
directory. This cache can be cleaned out by running:
puppet-module clean
The tool does not keep track of what modules you have installed. TO delete a module just delete the directory the module was extracted into.
This tool downloads untrusted code from the Internet. Please read the source code before executing it to avoid surprises. If it breaks, it's not our fault -- although we encourage you to contact the authors, file a bug report and send patches.
THE PROGRAM AND MODULES ARE DISTRIBUTED IN THE HOPE THAT THEY WILL BE USEFUL, BUT WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. THEY ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM OR MODULES PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
IN NO EVENT WILL Puppet Labs Inc. BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS PROGRAM OR MODULES (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM OR MODULES TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS OR MODULES), EVEN IF Puppet Labs Inc. HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. See the LICENSE file for details.
Copyright (C) 2010 Puppet Labs Inc.