vars
Variables in CFEngine are defined
as promises that an identifier of a certain type represents a particular
value. Variables can be scalars or lists of types string
, int
, real
or data
.
The allowed characters in variable names are alphanumeric (both upper and lower case)
and undercore. Associative
arrays using the string type and square brackets []
to
enclose an arbitrary key are being deprecated in favor of the data
variable type.
Scalar Variables
string
Description: A scalar string
Type: string
Allowed input range: (arbitrary string)
Example:
vars:
"xxx" string => "Some literal string...";
"yyy" string => readfile( "/home/mark/tmp/testfile" , "33" );
int
Description: A scalar integer
Type: int
Allowed input range: -99999999999,99999999999
Example:
vars:
"scalar" int => "16k";
"ran" int => randomint(4,88);
"dim_array" int => readstringarray(
"array_name",
"/etc/passwd",
"#[^\n]*",
":",
10,
4000);
Notes:
Int variables are strings that are expected to be used as integer numbers. The
typing in CFEngine is dynamic, so the variable types are interchangeable.
However, when you declare a variable to be type int
, CFEngine verifies that
the value you assign to it looks like an integer (e.g., 3, -17, 16K).
real
Description: A scalar real number
Type: real
Allowed input range: -9.99999E100,9.99999E100
Example:
vars:
"scalar" real => "0.5";
Notes:
Real variables are strings that are expected to be used as real numbers. The
typing in CFEngine is dynamic, so the variable types are interchangeable, but
when you declare a variable to be type real
, CFEngine verifies that the
value you assign to it looks like a real number (e.g., 3, 3.1415, .17,
6.02e23, -9.21e-17).
Real numbers are not used in many places in CFEngine, but they are useful for representing probabilities and performance data.
List variables
Lists are specified using curly brackets {}
that enclose a comma-separated
list of values. The order of the list is preserved by CFEngine.
slist
Description: A list of scalar strings
Type: slist
Allowed input range: (arbitrary string)
Example:
vars:
"xxx" slist => { "literal1", "literal2" };
"xxx1" slist => { "1", @(xxx) }; # interpolated in order
"yyy" slist => {
readstringlist(
"/home/mark/tmp/testlist",
"#[a-zA-Z0-9 ]*",
"[^a-zA-Z0-9]",
15,
4000
)
};
"zzz" slist => { readstringlist(
"/home/mark/tmp/testlist2",
"#[^\n]*",
",",
5,
4000)
};
Notes:
Some functions return slist
s, and an slist
may contain the values copied from another slist
, rlist
, or ilist
. See
policy
.
ilist
Description: A list of integers
Type: ilist
Allowed input range: -99999999999,9999999999
Example:
vars:
"variable_id"
ilist => { "10", "11", "12" };
"xxx1" ilist => { "1", @(variable_id) }; # interpolated in order
Notes:
Integer lists are lists of strings that are expected to be treated as
integers. The typing in CFEngine is dynamic, so the variable types are
interchangeable, but when you declare a variable to be type ilist
,
CFEngine verifies that each value you assign to it looks like an integer
(e.g., 3, -17, 16K).
Some functions return ilist
s, and an ilist
may
contain the values copied from another slist
, rlist
, or ilist
. See
policy
rlist
Description: A list of real numbers
Type: rlist
Allowed input range: -9.99999E100,9.99999E100
Example:
vars:
"varid" rlist => { "0.1", "0.2", "0.3" };
"xxx1" rlist => { "1.3", @(varid) }; # interpolated in order
Notes:
Real lists are lists of strings that are expected to be used as real
numbers. The typing in CFEngine is dynamic, so the variable types are
interchangeable, but when you declare a variable to be type rlist
,
CFEngine verifies that each value you assign to it looks like a real
number (e.g., 3, 3.1415, .17, 6.02e23, -9.21e-17).
Some functions return rlist
s, and an rlist
may
contain the values copied from another slist
, rlist
, or ilist
. See policy
Data container variables
The data
variables are obtained from functions that return data
containers, such as readjson()
, readyaml()
, parsejson()
, or
parseyaml()
, the various data_*
functions, or from merging
existing data containers with mergedata()
. They can NOT be
modified, once created.
Inline YAML and JSON data
Data containers can be specified inline, without calling functions. For example:
vars:
# JSON or YAML can be inlined since CFEngine 3.7
"inline1" data => '{"key":"value"}'; # JSON
"inline2" data => '---\n- key2: value2'; # YAML requires "---\n" header
Inline YAML data has to begin with the ---\n
preamble. This preamble
is normally optional but here (for inline YAML) it's required by
CFEngine.
Inline JSON or YAML data may contain CFEngine variable references.
They will be expanded at runtime as if they were simply calls to
readjson()
or readyaml()
, which also means that syntax error in
the JSON or YAML data will only be caught when your policy is actually
being evaluated.
If the inline JSON or YAML data does not contain CFEngine variable
references, it will be parsed at compile time, which means that
cf-promises
will be able to find syntax errors in your JSON or YAML
data early. Thus it is highly recommended that you try to avoid
variable references in your inline JSON or YAML data.
Passing data containers to bundles
Data containers can be passed to another bundle with the
@(varname)
notation, similarly to the list passing notation.
Some useful tips for using data containers
- to extract just
container[x]
, usemergedata("container[x]")
- to wrap a container in an array, use
mergedata("[ container ]")
- to wrap a container in a map, use
mergedata('{ "mykey": container }')
- they act like "classic" CFEngine arrays in many ways
getindices()
andgetvalues()
work on any level, e.g.getvalues("container[x][y]")
- in reports, you have to reference a part of the container that can be expressed as a string. So for instance if you have the container
c
with data{ "x": { "y": 50 }, "z": [ 1,2,3] }
we have two top-level keys,x
andz
. If you report on$(c[x])
you will not get data, since there is no string there. But if you ask for$(c[x][y])
you'll get50
, and if you ask for$(c[z])
you'll get implicit iteration on1,2,3
(just like a slist in a "classic" CFEngine array). - read the examples below carefully to see some useful ways to access data container contents
Iterating through a data container is only guaranteed to respect list
order (e.g. [1,3,20]
will be iterated in that order). Key order for
maps, as per the JSON standard, is not guaranteed. Similarly, calling
getindices()
on a data container will give the list order of indices
0, 1, 2, ... but will not give the keys of a map in any particular
order. Here's an example of iterating in list order:
body common control
{
bundlesequence => { run };
}
bundle agent run
{
vars:
"x" data => parsejson('[
{ "one": "a" },
{ "two": "b" },
{ "three": "c" }
]');
# get the numeric indices of x: 0, 1, 2
"xi" slist => getindices(x);
# for each xi, make a variable xpiece_$(xi) so we'll have
# xpiece_0, xpiece_1, xpiece_2. Each xpiece will have that
# particular element of the list x.
"xpiece_$(xi)" string => format("%S", "x[$(xi)]");
reports:
"$(xi): $(xpiece_$(xi))";
}
Output:
R: 0: {"one":"a"}
R: 1: {"two":"b"}
R: 2: {"three":"c"}
Often you need to iterate through the keys of a container, and the value is a key-value property map for that key. The example here shows how you can pass the "animals" container and an "animal" key inside it to a bundle, which can then report and use the data from the key-value property map.
body common control
{
bundlesequence => { run };
}
bundle agent run
{
vars:
"animals" data => parsejson('
{
"dog": { "legs": 4, "tail": true, "names": [ "Fido", "Cooper", "Sandy" ] },
"cat": { "legs": 4, "tail": true, "names": [ "Fluffy", "Snowball", "Tabby" ] },
"dolphin": { "legs": 0, "tail": true, "names": [ "Flipper", "Duffy" ] },
"hamster": { "legs": 4, "tail": true, "names": [ "Skullcrusher", "Kimmy", "Fluffadoo" ] },
}');
"keys_unsorted" slist => getindices("animals");
"keys" slist => sort(keys_unsorted, "lex");
"animals_$(keys)" data => mergedata("animals[$(keys)]");
methods:
# pass the container and a key inside it
"any" usebundle => analyze(@(animals), $(keys));
}
bundle agent analyze(animals, a)
{
vars:
"names" slist => getvalues("animals[$(a)][names]");
"names_str" string => format("%S", names);
reports:
"$(this.bundle): possible names for animal '$(a)': $(names_str)";
"$(this.bundle): describe animal '$(a)' => name = $(a), legs = $(animals[$(a)][legs]), tail = $(animals[$(a)][tail])";
}
Output:
R: analyze: possible names for animal 'cat': { "Fluffy", "Snowball", "Tabby" }
R: analyze: describe animal 'cat' => name = cat, legs = 4, tail = true
R: analyze: possible names for animal 'dog': { "Fido", "Cooper", "Sandy" }
R: analyze: describe animal 'dog' => name = dog, legs = 4, tail = true
R: analyze: possible names for animal 'dolphin': { "Flipper", "Duffy" }
R: analyze: describe animal 'dolphin' => name = dolphin, legs = 0, tail = true
R: analyze: possible names for animal 'hamster': { "Skullcrusher", "Kimmy", "Fluffadoo" }
R: analyze: describe animal 'hamster' => name = hamster, legs = 4, tail = true
data
Description: A data container structure
Type: data
Allowed input range: (arbitrary string)
Example:
vars:
"loaded1" data => readjson("/tmp/myfile.json", 40000);
"loaded2" data => parsejson('{"key":"value"}');
"loaded3" data => readyaml("/tmp/myfile.yaml", 40000);
"loaded4" data => parseyaml('- key2: value2');
"merged1" data => mergedata(loaded1, loaded2, loaded3, loaded4);
# JSON or YAML can be inlined since CFEngine 3.7
"inline1" data => '{"key":"value"}'; # JSON
"inline2" data => '---\n- key2: value2'; # YAML requires "---\n" header
Attributes
policy
Description: The policy for (dis)allowing (re)definition of variables
Variables can either be allowed to change their value dynamically (be redefined) or they can be constant.
Type: (menu option)
Allowed input range:
free
overridable
constant
ifdefined
Default value:
policy = free
Example:
vars:
"varid" string => "value...",
policy => "free";
Notes:
The policy free
and overridable
are synonyms. The policy constant
is
deprecated, and has no effect. All variables are free
or overridable
by
default which means the variables values may be changed.
The policy ifdefined
applies only to lists and implies that unexpanded or
undefined lists are dropped. The default behavior is otherwise to retain this
value as an indicator of the failure to quench the variable reference, for
example:
"one" slist => { "1", "2", "3" };
"list" slist => { "@(one)", @(two) },
policy => "ifdefined";
This results in @(list)
being the same as @(one)
, and the reference to
@(two)
disappears. This is useful for combining lists.
For example:
example_com::
"domain"
string => "example.com",
comment => "Define a global domain for hosts in the example.com domain";
# The promise above will be overridden by one of the ones below on hosts
# within the matching subdomain
one_example_com::
"domain"
string => "one.example.com",
comment => "Define a global domain for hosts in the one.example.com domain";
two_example_com::
"domain"
string => "two.example.com",
comment => "Define a global domain for hosts in the two.example.com domain";
(Promises within the same bundle are evaluated top to bottom, so vars promises further down in a bundle can overwrite previous values of a variable. See normal ordering for more information).