# # Author:: Adam Jacob () # Author:: Christopher Brown () # Author:: AJ Christensen () # Author:: Mark Mzyk () # Author:: Kyle Goodwin () # Copyright:: Copyright (c) 2008 Opscode, Inc. # License:: Apache License, Version 2.0 # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. require 'chef/log' require 'chef/exceptions' require 'mixlib/config' require 'chef/util/selinux' require 'chef/util/path_helper' require 'pathname' require 'chef/mixin/shell_out' class Chef class Config extend Mixlib::Config extend Chef::Mixin::ShellOut PathHelper = Chef::Util::PathHelper # Evaluates the given string as config. # # +filename+ is used for context in stacktraces, but doesn't need to be the name of an actual file. def self.from_string(string, filename) self.instance_eval(string, filename, 1) end # Manages the chef secret session key # === Returns # :: A new or retrieved session key # def self.manage_secret_key newkey = nil if Chef::FileCache.has_key?("chef_server_cookie_id") newkey = Chef::FileCache.load("chef_server_cookie_id") else chars = ("a".."z").to_a + ("A".."Z").to_a + ("0".."9").to_a newkey = "" 40.times { |i| newkey << chars[rand(chars.size-1)] } Chef::FileCache.store("chef_server_cookie_id", newkey) end newkey end def self.inspect configuration.inspect end def self.platform_specific_path(path) path = PathHelper.cleanpath(path) if Chef::Platform.windows? # turns \etc\chef\client.rb and \var\chef\client.rb into C:/chef/client.rb if env['SYSTEMDRIVE'] && path[0] == '\\' && path.split('\\')[2] == 'chef' path = PathHelper.join(env['SYSTEMDRIVE'], path.split('\\', 3)[2]) end end path end def self.add_formatter(name, file_path=nil) formatters << [name, file_path] end def self.add_event_logger(logger) event_handlers << logger end # Config file to load (client.rb, knife.rb, etc. defaults set differently in knife, chef-client, etc.) configurable(:config_file) default(:config_dir) do if config_file PathHelper.dirname(config_file) else PathHelper.join(user_home, ".chef", "") end end default :formatters, [] # Override the config dispatch to set the value of multiple server options simultaneously # # === Parameters # url:: String to be set for all of the chef-server-api URL's # configurable(:chef_server_url).writes_value { |url| url.to_s.strip } # When you are using ActiveSupport, they monkey-patch 'daemonize' into Kernel. # So while this is basically identical to what method_missing would do, we pull # it up here and get a real method written so that things get dispatched # properly. configurable(:daemonize).writes_value { |v| v } # The root where all local chef object data is stored. cookbooks, data bags, # environments are all assumed to be in separate directories under this. # chef-solo uses these directories for input data. knife commands # that upload or download files (such as knife upload, knife role from file, # etc.) work. default :chef_repo_path do if self.configuration[:cookbook_path] if self.configuration[:cookbook_path].kind_of?(String) File.expand_path('..', self.configuration[:cookbook_path]) else self.configuration[:cookbook_path].map do |path| File.expand_path('..', path) end end else cache_path end end def self.find_chef_repo_path(cwd) # In local mode, we auto-discover the repo root by looking for a path with "cookbooks" under it. # This allows us to run config-free. path = cwd until File.directory?(PathHelper.join(path, "cookbooks")) new_path = File.expand_path('..', path) if new_path == path Chef::Log.warn("No cookbooks directory found at or above current directory. Assuming #{Dir.pwd}.") return Dir.pwd end path = new_path end Chef::Log.info("Auto-discovered chef repository at #{path}") path end def self.derive_path_from_chef_repo_path(child_path) if chef_repo_path.kind_of?(String) PathHelper.join(chef_repo_path, child_path) else chef_repo_path.map { |path| PathHelper.join(path, child_path)} end end # Location of acls on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /acls. # Only applies to Enterprise Chef commands. default(:acl_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('acls') } # Location of clients on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /acls. default(:client_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('clients') } # Location of cookbooks on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /cookbooks. If chef_repo_path # is not specified, this is set to [/var/chef/cookbooks, /var/chef/site-cookbooks]). default(:cookbook_path) do if self.configuration[:chef_repo_path] derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('cookbooks') else Array(derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('cookbooks')).flatten + Array(derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('site-cookbooks')).flatten end end # Location of containers on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /containers. # Only applies to Enterprise Chef commands. default(:container_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('containers') } # Location of data bags on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /data_bags. default(:data_bag_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('data_bags') } # Location of environments on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /environments. default(:environment_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('environments') } # Location of groups on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /groups. # Only applies to Enterprise Chef commands. default(:group_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('groups') } # Location of nodes on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /nodes. default(:node_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('nodes') } # Location of roles on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /roles. default(:role_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('roles') } # Location of users on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /users. # Does not apply to Enterprise Chef commands. default(:user_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('users') } # Location of policies on disk. String or array of strings. # Defaults to /policies. default(:policy_path) { derive_path_from_chef_repo_path('policies') } # Turn on "path sanity" by default. See also: http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/User+Environment+PATH+Sanity default :enforce_path_sanity, true # Formatted Chef Client output is a beta feature, disabled by default: default :formatter, "null" # The number of times the client should retry when registering with the server default :client_registration_retries, 5 # An array of paths to search for knife exec scripts if they aren't in the current directory default :script_path, [] # The root of all caches (checksums, cache and backup). If local mode is on, # this is under the user's home directory. default(:cache_path) do if local_mode PathHelper.join(config_dir, 'local-mode-cache') else primary_cache_root = platform_specific_path("/var") primary_cache_path = platform_specific_path("/var/chef") # Use /var/chef as the cache path only if that folder exists and we can read and write # into it, or /var exists and we can read and write into it (we'll create /var/chef later). # Otherwise, we'll create .chef under the user's home directory and use that as # the cache path. unless path_accessible?(primary_cache_path) || path_accessible?(primary_cache_root) secondary_cache_path = PathHelper.join(user_home, '.chef') Chef::Log.info("Unable to access cache at #{primary_cache_path}. Switching cache to #{secondary_cache_path}") secondary_cache_path else primary_cache_path end end end # Returns true only if the path exists and is readable and writeable for the user. def self.path_accessible?(path) File.exists?(path) && File.readable?(path) && File.writable?(path) end # Where cookbook files are stored on the server (by content checksum) default(:checksum_path) { PathHelper.join(cache_path, "checksums") } # Where chef's cache files should be stored default(:file_cache_path) { PathHelper.join(cache_path, "cache") } # Where backups of chef-managed files should go default(:file_backup_path) { PathHelper.join(cache_path, "backup") } # The chef-client (or solo) lockfile. # # If your `file_cache_path` resides on a NFS (or non-flock()-supporting # fs), it's recommended to set this to something like # '/tmp/chef-client-running.pid' default(:lockfile) { PathHelper.join(file_cache_path, "chef-client-running.pid") } ## Daemonization Settings ## # What user should Chef run as? default :user, nil default :group, nil default :umask, 0022 # Valid log_levels are: # * :debug # * :info # * :warn # * :fatal # These work as you'd expect. There is also a special `:auto` setting. # When set to :auto, Chef will auto adjust the log verbosity based on # context. When a tty is available (usually because the user is running chef # in a console), the log level is set to :warn, and output formatters are # used as the primary mode of output. When a tty is not available, the # logger is the primary mode of output, and the log level is set to :info default :log_level, :auto # Logging location as either an IO stream or string representing log file path default :log_location, STDOUT # Using `force_formatter` causes chef to default to formatter output when STDOUT is not a tty default :force_formatter, false # Using `force_logger` causes chef to default to logger output when STDOUT is a tty default :force_logger, false default :http_retry_count, 5 default :http_retry_delay, 5 default :interval, nil default :once, nil default :json_attribs, nil # toggle info level log items that can create a lot of output default :verbose_logging, true default :node_name, nil default :diff_disabled, false default :diff_filesize_threshold, 10000000 default :diff_output_threshold, 1000000 default :local_mode, false default :pid_file, nil # Whether Chef Zero local mode should bind to a port. All internal requests # will go through the socketless code path regardless, so the socket is # only needed if other processes will connect to the local mode server. # # For compatibility this is set to true but it will be changed to false in # the future. default :listen, true config_context :chef_zero do config_strict_mode true default(:enabled) { Chef::Config.local_mode } default :host, 'localhost' default :port, 8889.upto(9999) # Will try ports from 8889-9999 until one works end default :chef_server_url, "https://localhost:443" default :rest_timeout, 300 default :yum_timeout, 900 default :yum_lock_timeout, 30 default :solo, false default :splay, nil default :why_run, false default :color, false default :client_fork, true default :ez, false default :enable_reporting, true default :enable_reporting_url_fatals, false # Possible values for :audit_mode # :enabled, :disabled, :audit_only, # # TODO: 11 Dec 2014: Currently audit-mode is an experimental feature # and is disabled by default. When users choose to enable audit-mode, # a warning is issued in application/client#reconfigure. # This can be removed when audit-mode is enabled by default. default :audit_mode, :disabled # Chef only needs ohai to run the hostname plugin for the most basic # functionality. If the rest of the ohai plugins are not needed (like in # most of our testing scenarios) default :minimal_ohai, false # Policyfile is an experimental feature where a node gets its run list and # cookbook version set from a single document on the server instead of # expanding the run list and having the server compute the cookbook version # set based on environment constraints. # # Because this feature is experimental, it is not recommended for # production use. Developent/release of this feature may not adhere to # semver guidelines. default :use_policyfile, false # Set these to enable SSL authentication / mutual-authentication # with the server # Client side SSL cert/key for mutual auth default :ssl_client_cert, nil default :ssl_client_key, nil # Whether or not to verify the SSL cert for all HTTPS requests. When set to # :verify_peer (default), all HTTPS requests will be validated regardless of other # SSL verification settings. When set to :verify_none no HTTPS requests will # be validated. default :ssl_verify_mode, :verify_peer # Whether or not to verify the SSL cert for HTTPS requests to the Chef # server API. If set to `true`, the server's cert will be validated # regardless of the :ssl_verify_mode setting. This is set to `true` when # running in local-mode. # NOTE: This is a workaround until verify_peer is enabled by default. default(:verify_api_cert) { Chef::Config.local_mode } # Path to the default CA bundle files. default :ssl_ca_path, nil default(:ssl_ca_file) do if Chef::Platform.windows? and embedded_path = embedded_dir cacert_path = File.join(embedded_path, "ssl/certs/cacert.pem") cacert_path if File.exist?(cacert_path) else nil end end # A directory that contains additional SSL certificates to trust. Any # certificates in this directory will be added to whatever CA bundle ruby # is using. Use this to add self-signed certs for your Chef Server or local # HTTP file servers. default(:trusted_certs_dir) { PathHelper.join(config_dir, "trusted_certs") } # Where should chef-solo download recipes from? default :recipe_url, nil # Sets the version of the signed header authentication protocol to use (see # the 'mixlib-authorization' project for more detail). Currently, versions # 1.0 and 1.1 are available; however, the chef-server must first be # upgraded to support version 1.1 before clients can begin using it. # # Version 1.1 of the protocol is required when using a `node_name` greater # than ~90 bytes (~90 ascii characters), so chef-client will automatically # switch to using version 1.1 when `node_name` is too large for the 1.0 # protocol. If you intend to use large node names, ensure that your server # supports version 1.1. Automatic detection of large node names means that # users will generally not need to manually configure this. # # In the future, this configuration option may be replaced with an # automatic negotiation scheme. default :authentication_protocol_version, "1.0" # This key will be used to sign requests to the Chef server. This location # must be writable by Chef during initial setup when generating a client # identity on the server. # # The chef-server will look up the public key for the client using the # `node_name` of the client. # # If chef-zero is enabled, this defaults to nil (no authentication). default(:client_key) { chef_zero.enabled ? nil : platform_specific_path("/etc/chef/client.pem") } # When registering the client, should we allow the client key location to # be a symlink? eg: /etc/chef/client.pem -> /etc/chef/prod-client.pem # If the path of the key goes through a directory like /tmp this should # never be set to true or its possibly an easily exploitable security hole. default :follow_client_key_symlink, false # This secret is used to decrypt encrypted data bag items. default(:encrypted_data_bag_secret) do if File.exist?(platform_specific_path("/etc/chef/encrypted_data_bag_secret")) platform_specific_path("/etc/chef/encrypted_data_bag_secret") else nil end end # As of Chef 11.0, version "1" is the default encrypted data bag item # format. Version "2" is available which adds encrypt-then-mac protection. # To maintain compatibility, versions other than 1 must be opt-in. # # Set this to `2` if you have chef-client 11.6.0+ in your infrastructure. # Set this to `3` if you have chef-client 11.?.0+, ruby 2 and OpenSSL >= 1.0.1 in your infrastructure. (TODO) default :data_bag_encrypt_version, 1 # When reading data bag items, any supported version is accepted. However, # if all encrypted data bags have been generated with the version 2 format, # it is recommended to disable support for earlier formats to improve # security. For example, the version 2 format is identical to version 1 # except for the addition of an HMAC, so an attacker with MITM capability # could downgrade an encrypted data bag to version 1 as part of an attack. default :data_bag_decrypt_minimum_version, 0 # If there is no file in the location given by `client_key`, chef-client # will temporarily use the "validator" identity to generate one. If the # `client_key` is not present and the `validation_key` is also not present, # chef-client will not be able to authenticate to the server. # # The `validation_key` is never used if the `client_key` exists. # # If chef-zero is enabled, this defaults to nil (no authentication). default(:validation_key) { chef_zero.enabled ? nil : platform_specific_path("/etc/chef/validation.pem") } default :validation_client_name, "chef-validator" # When creating a new client via the validation_client account, Chef 11 # servers allow the client to generate a key pair locally and send the # public key to the server. This is more secure and helps offload work from # the server, enhancing scalability. If enabled and the remote server # implements only the Chef 10 API, client registration will not work # properly. # # The default value is `true`. Set to `false` to disable client-side key # generation (server generates client keys). default(:local_key_generation) { true } # Zypper package provider gpg checks. Set to true to enable package # gpg signature checking. This will be default in the # future. Setting to false disables the warnings. # Leaving this set to nil or false is a security hazard! default :zypper_check_gpg, nil # Report Handlers default :report_handlers, [] # Event Handlers default :event_handlers, [] default :disable_event_loggers, false default :event_loggers do evt_loggers = [] if Chef::Platform::windows? and not Chef::Platform::windows_server_2003? evt_loggers << :win_evt end evt_loggers end # Exception Handlers default :exception_handlers, [] # Start handlers default :start_handlers, [] # Syntax Check Cache. Knife keeps track of files that is has already syntax # checked by storing files in this directory. `syntax_check_cache_path` is # the new (and preferred) configuration setting. If not set, knife will # fall back to using cache_options[:path], which is deprecated but exists in # many client configs generated by pre-Chef-11 bootstrappers. default(:syntax_check_cache_path) { cache_options[:path] } # Deprecated: # Move this to the default value of syntax_cache_path when this is removed. default(:cache_options) { { :path => PathHelper.join(config_dir, "syntaxcache") } } # Whether errors should be raised for deprecation warnings. When set to # `false` (the default setting), a warning is emitted but code using # deprecated methods/features/etc. should work normally otherwise. When set # to `true`, usage of deprecated methods/features will raise a # `DeprecatedFeatureError`. This is used by Chef's tests to ensure that # deprecated functionality is not used internally by Chef. End users # should generally leave this at the default setting (especially in # production), but it may be useful when testing cookbooks or other code if # the user wishes to aggressively address deprecations. default(:treat_deprecation_warnings_as_errors) do # Using an environment variable allows this setting to be inherited in # tests that spawn new processes. ENV.key?("CHEF_TREAT_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS_AS_ERRORS") end # knife configuration data config_context :knife do default :ssh_port, nil default :ssh_user, nil default :ssh_attribute, nil default :ssh_gateway, nil default :bootstrap_version, nil default :bootstrap_proxy, nil default :bootstrap_template, nil default :secret, nil default :secret_file, nil default :identity_file, nil default :host_key_verify, nil default :forward_agent, nil default :sort_status_reverse, nil default :hints, {} end def self.set_defaults_for_windows # Those lists of regular expressions define what chef considers a # valid user and group name # From http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc776019(WS.10).aspx principal_valid_regex_part = '[^"\/\\\\\[\]\:;|=,+*?<>]+' default :user_valid_regex, [ /^(#{principal_valid_regex_part}\\)?#{principal_valid_regex_part}$/ ] default :group_valid_regex, [ /^(#{principal_valid_regex_part}\\)?#{principal_valid_regex_part}$/ ] default :fatal_windows_admin_check, false end def self.set_defaults_for_nix # Those lists of regular expressions define what chef considers a # valid user and group name # # user/group cannot start with '-', '+' or '~' # user/group cannot contain ':', ',' or non-space-whitespace or null byte # everything else is allowed (UTF-8, spaces, etc) and we delegate to your O/S useradd program to barf or not # copies: http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/pkg-shadow/debian/trunk/debian/patches/506_relaxed_usernames?view=markup default :user_valid_regex, [ /^[^-+~:,\t\r\n\f\0]+[^:,\t\r\n\f\0]*$/ ] default :group_valid_regex, [ /^[^-+~:,\t\r\n\f\0]+[^:,\t\r\n\f\0]*$/ ] end # Those lists of regular expressions define what chef considers a # valid user and group name if Chef::Platform.windows? set_defaults_for_windows else set_defaults_for_nix end # This provides a hook which rspec can stub so that we can avoid twiddling # global state in tests. def self.env ENV end def self.windows_home_path Chef::Log.deprecation("Chef::Config.windows_home_path is now deprecated. Consider using Chef::Util::PathHelper.home instead.") PathHelper.home end # returns a platform specific path to the user home dir if set, otherwise default to current directory. default( :user_home ) { PathHelper.home || Dir.pwd } # Enable file permission fixup for selinux. Fixup will be done # only if selinux is enabled in the system. default :enable_selinux_file_permission_fixup, true # Use atomic updates (i.e. move operation) while updating contents # of the files resources. When set to false copy operation is # used to update files. default :file_atomic_update, true # There are 3 possible values for this configuration setting. # true => file staging is done in the destination directory # false => file staging is done via tempfiles under ENV['TMP'] # :auto => file staging will try using destination directory if possible and # will fall back to ENV['TMP'] if destination directory is not usable. default :file_staging_uses_destdir, :auto # Exit if another run is in progress and the chef-client is unable to # get the lock before time expires. If nil, no timeout is enforced. (Exits # immediately if 0.) default :run_lock_timeout, nil # Number of worker threads for syncing cookbooks in parallel. Increasing # this number can result in gateway errors from the server (namely 503 and 504). # If you are seeing this behavior while using the default setting, reducing # the number of threads will help. default :cookbook_sync_threads, 10 # At the beginning of the Chef Client run, the cookbook manifests are downloaded which # contain URLs for every file in every relevant cookbook. Most of the files # (recipes, resources, providers, libraries, etc) are immediately synchronized # at the start of the run. The handling of "files" and "templates" directories, # however, have two modes of operation. They can either all be downloaded immediately # at the start of the run (no_lazy_load==true) or else they can be lazily loaded as # cookbook_file or template resources are converged which require them (no_lazy_load==false). # # The advantage of lazily loading these files is that unnecessary files are not # synchronized. This may be useful to users with large files checked into cookbooks which # are only selectively downloaded to a subset of clients which use the cookbook. However, # better solutions are to either isolate large files into individual cookbooks and only # include those cookbooks in the run lists of the servers that need them -- or move to # using remote_file and a more appropriate backing store like S3 for large file # distribution. # # The disadvantages of lazily loading files are that users some time find it # confusing that their cookbooks are not fully synchronzied to the cache initially, # and more importantly the time-sensitive URLs which are in the manifest may time # out on long Chef runs before the resource that uses the file is converged # (leading to many confusing 403 errors on template/cookbook_file resources). # default :no_lazy_load, true # Default for the chef_gem compile_time attribute. Nil is the same as true but will emit # warnings on every use of chef_gem prompting the user to be explicit. If the user sets this to # true then the user will get backcompat behavior but with a single nag warning that cookbooks # may break with this setting in the future. The false setting is the recommended setting and # will become the default. default :chef_gem_compile_time, nil # A whitelisted array of attributes you want sent over the wire when node # data is saved. # The default setting is nil, which collects all data. Setting to [] will not # collect any data for save. default :automatic_attribute_whitelist, nil default :default_attribute_whitelist, nil default :normal_attribute_whitelist, nil default :override_attribute_whitelist, nil config_context :windows_service do # Set `watchdog_timeout` to the number of seconds to wait for a chef-client run # to finish default :watchdog_timeout, 2 * (60 * 60) # 2 hours end # Chef requires an English-language UTF-8 locale to function properly. We attempt # to use the 'locale -a' command and search through a list of preferences until we # find one that we can use. On Ubuntu systems we should find 'C.UTF-8' and be # able to use that even if there is no English locale on the server, but Mac, Solaris, # AIX, etc do not have that locale. We then try to find an English locale and fall # back to 'C' if we do not. The choice of fallback is pick-your-poison. If we try # to do the work to return a non-US UTF-8 locale then we fail inside of providers when # things like 'svn info' return Japanese and we can't parse them. OTOH, if we pick 'C' then # we will blow up on UTF-8 characters. Between the warn we throw and the Encoding # exception that ruby will throw it is more obvious what is broken if we drop UTF-8 by # default rather than drop English. # # If there is no 'locale -a' then we return 'en_US.UTF-8' since that is the most commonly # available English UTF-8 locale. However, all modern POSIXen should support 'locale -a'. def self.guess_internal_locale # https://github.com/opscode/chef/issues/2181 # Some systems have the `locale -a` command, but the result has # invalid characters for the default encoding. # # For example, on CentOS 6 with ENV['LANG'] = "en_US.UTF-8", # `locale -a`.split fails with ArgumentError invalid UTF-8 encoding. locales = shell_out_with_systems_locale!("locale -a").stdout.split case when locales.include?('C.UTF-8') 'C.UTF-8' when locales.include?('en_US.UTF-8'), locales.include?('en_US.utf8') 'en_US.UTF-8' when locales.include?('en.UTF-8') 'en.UTF-8' else # Will match en_ZZ.UTF-8, en_ZZ.utf-8, en_ZZ.UTF8, en_ZZ.utf8 guesses = locales.select { |l| l =~ /^en_.*UTF-?8$/i } unless guesses.empty? guessed_locale = guesses.first # Transform into the form en_ZZ.UTF-8 guessed_locale.gsub(/UTF-?8$/i, "UTF-8") else Chef::Log.warn "Please install an English UTF-8 locale for Chef to use, falling back to C locale and disabling UTF-8 support." 'C' end end rescue if Chef::Platform.windows? Chef::Log.debug "Defaulting to locale en_US.UTF-8 on Windows, until it matters that we do something else." else Chef::Log.debug "No usable locale -a command found, assuming you have en_US.UTF-8 installed." end 'en_US.UTF-8' end default :internal_locale, guess_internal_locale # Force UTF-8 Encoding, for when we fire up in the 'C' locale or other strange locales (e.g. # japanese windows encodings). If we do not do this, then knife upload will fail when a cookbook's # README.md has UTF-8 characters that do not encode in whatever surrounding encoding we have been # passed. Effectively, the Chef Ecosystem is globally UTF-8 by default. Anyone who wants to be # able to upload Shift_JIS or ISO-8859-1 files needs to mark *those* files explicitly with # magic tags to make ruby correctly identify the encoding being used. Changing this default will # break Chef community cookbooks and is very highly discouraged. default :ruby_encoding, Encoding::UTF_8 # If installed via an omnibus installer, this gives the path to the # "embedded" directory which contains all of the software packaged with # omnibus. This is used to locate the cacert.pem file on windows. def self.embedded_dir Pathname.new(_this_file).ascend do |path| if path.basename.to_s == "embedded" return path.to_s end end nil end # Path to this file in the current install. def self._this_file File.expand_path(__FILE__) end end end