mirror of
https://github.com/ansible-collections/community.general.git
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02de81c39e
fix version vardict was introduced (#8509)
(cherry picked from commit d95f4d68a3
)
Co-authored-by: Alexei Znamensky <103110+russoz@users.noreply.github.com>
176 lines
5.2 KiB
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176 lines
5.2 KiB
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Copyright (c) Ansible Project
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GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see LICENSES/GPL-3.0-or-later.txt or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
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SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later
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.. _ansible_collections.community.general.docsite.guide_vardict:
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VarDict Guide
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=============
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Introduction
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``ansible_collections.community.general.plugins.module_utils.vardict`` module util provides the
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``VarDict`` class to help manage the module variables. That class is a container for module variables,
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especially the ones for which the module must keep track of state changes, and the ones that should
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be published as return values.
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Each variable has extra behaviors controlled by associated metadata, simplifying the generation of
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output values from the module.
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Quickstart
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""""""""""
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The simplest way of using ``VarDict`` is:
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.. code-block:: python
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from ansible_collections.community.general.plugins.module_utils.vardict import VarDict
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Then in ``main()``, or any other function called from there:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars = VarDict()
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# Next 3 statements are equivalent
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vars.abc = 123
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vars["abc"] = 123
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vars.set("abc", 123)
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vars.xyz = "bananas"
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vars.ghi = False
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And by the time the module is about to exit:
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.. code-block:: python
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results = vars.output()
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module.exit_json(**results)
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That makes the return value of the module:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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{
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"abc": 123,
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"xyz": "bananas",
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"ghi": false
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}
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Metadata
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""""""""
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The metadata values associated with each variable are:
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- ``output: bool`` - marks the variable for module output as a module return value.
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- ``fact: bool`` - marks the variable for module output as an Ansible fact.
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- ``verbosity: int`` - sets the minimum level of verbosity for which the variable will be included in the output.
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- ``change: bool`` - controls the detection of changes in the variable value.
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- ``initial_value: any`` - when using ``change`` and need to forcefully set an intial value to the variable.
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- ``diff: bool`` - used along with ``change``, this generates an Ansible-style diff ``dict``.
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See the sections below for more details on how to use the metadata.
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Using VarDict
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Basic Usage
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"""""""""""
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As shown above, variables can be accessed using the ``[]`` operator, as in a ``dict`` object,
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and also as an object attribute, such as ``vars.abc``. The form using the ``set()``
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method is special in the sense that you can use it to set metadata values:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("abc", 123, output=False)
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vars.set("abc", 123, output=True, change=True)
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Another way to set metadata after the variables have been created is:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set_meta("abc", output=False)
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vars.set_meta("abc", output=True, change=True, diff=True)
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You can use either operator and attribute forms to access the value of the variable. Other ways to
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access its value and its metadata are:
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.. code-block:: python
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print("abc value = {0}".format(vars.var("abc")["value"])) # get the value
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print("abc output? {0}".format(vars.get_meta("abc")["output"])) # get the metadata like this
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The names of methods, such as ``set``, ``get_meta``, ``output`` amongst others, are reserved and
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cannot be used as variable names. If you try to use a reserved name a ``ValueError`` exception
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is raised with the message "Name <var> is reserved".
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Generating output
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"""""""""""""""""
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By default, every variable create will be enable for output with minimum verbosity set to zero, in
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other words, they will always be in the output by default.
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You can control that when creating the variable for the first time or later in the code:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("internal", x + 4, output=False)
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vars.set_meta("internal", output=False)
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You can also set the verbosity of some variable, like:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("abc", x + 4)
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vars.set("debug_x", x, verbosity=3)
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results = vars.output(module._verbosity)
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module.exit_json(**results)
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If the module was invoked with verbosity lower than 3, then the output will only contain
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the variable ``abc``. If running at higher verbosity, as in ``ansible-playbook -vvv``,
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then the output will also contain ``debug_x``.
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Generating facts is very similar to regular output, but variables are not marked as facts by default.
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("modulefact", x + 4, fact=True)
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vars.set("debugfact", x, fact=True, verbosity=3)
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results = vars.output(module._verbosity)
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results["ansible_facts"] = {"module_name": vars.facts(module._verbosity)}
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module.exit_json(**results)
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Handling change
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"""""""""""""""
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You can use ``VarDict`` to determine whether variables have had their values changed.
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("abc", 42, change=True)
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vars.abc = 90
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results = vars.output()
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results["changed"] = vars.has_changed
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module.exit_json(**results)
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If tracking changes in variables, you may want to present the difference between the initial and the final
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values of it. For that, you want to use:
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.. code-block:: python
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vars.set("abc", 42, change=True, diff=True)
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vars.abc = 90
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results = vars.output()
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results["changed"] = vars.has_changed
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results["diff"] = vars.diff()
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module.exit_json(**results)
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.. versionadded:: 7.1.0
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