# # Author:: John Keiser # Copyright:: Copyright 2015-2016, John Keiser. # 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/exceptions" require "chef/delayed_evaluator" require "chef/chef_class" require "chef/log" class Chef # # Type and validation information for a property on a resource. # # A property named "x" manipulates the "@x" instance variable on a # resource. The *presence* of the variable (`instance_variable_defined?(@x)`) # tells whether the variable is defined; it may have any actual value, # constrained only by validation. # # Properties may have validation, defaults, and coercion, and have full # support for lazy values. # # @see Chef::Resource.property # @see Chef::DelayedEvaluator # class Property # # Create a reusable property type that can be used in multiple properties # in different resources. # # @param options [Hash] Validation options. See Chef::Resource.property for # the list of options. # # @example # Property.derive(default: 'hi') # def self.derive(**options) new(**options) end # # Create a new property. # # @param options [Hash] Property options, including # control options here, as well as validation options (see # Chef::Mixin::ParamsValidate#validate for a description of validation # options). # @option options [Symbol] :name The name of this property. # @option options [Class] :declared_in The class this property comes from. # @option options [Symbol] :instance_variable_name The instance variable # tied to this property. Must include a leading `@`. Defaults to `@`. # `nil` means the property is opaque and not tied to a specific instance # variable. # @option options [Boolean] :desired_state `true` if this property is part of desired # state. Defaults to `true`. # @option options [Boolean] :identity `true` if this property is part of object # identity. Defaults to `false`. # @option options [Boolean] :name_property `true` if this # property defaults to the same value as `name`. Equivalent to # `default: lazy { name }`, except that #property_is_set? will # return `true` if the property is set *or* if `name` is set. # @option options [Boolean] :nillable `true` opt-in to Chef-13 style behavior where # attempting to set a nil value will really set a nil value instead of issuing # a warning and operating like a getter [DEPRECATED] # @option options [Object] :default The value this property # will return if the user does not set one. If this is `lazy`, it will # be run in the context of the instance (and able to access other # properties) and cached. If not, the value will be frozen with Object#freeze # to prevent users from modifying it in an instance. # @option options [Proc] :coerce A proc which will be called to # transform the user input to canonical form. The value is passed in, # and the transformed value returned as output. Lazy values will *not* # be passed to this method until after they are evaluated. Called in the # context of the resource (meaning you can access other properties). # @option options [Boolean] :required `true` if this property # must be present; `false` otherwise. This is checked after the resource # is fully initialized. # def initialize(**options) options = options.inject({}) { |memo, (key, value)| memo[key.to_sym] = value; memo } @options = options options[:name] = options[:name].to_sym if options[:name] options[:instance_variable_name] = options[:instance_variable_name].to_sym if options[:instance_variable_name] # Replace name_attribute with name_property if options.has_key?(:name_attribute) # If we have both name_attribute and name_property and they differ, raise an error if options.has_key?(:name_property) raise ArgumentError, "Cannot specify both name_property and name_attribute together on property #{self}." end # replace name_property with name_attribute in place options = Hash[options.map { |k, v| k == :name_attribute ? [ :name_property, v ] : [ k, v ] }] @options = options end if options.has_key?(:default) && options.has_key?(:name_property) raise ArgumentError, "Cannot specify both default and name_property/name_attribute together on property #{self}" end # Validate the default early, so the user gets a good error message, and # cache it so we don't do it again if so begin # If we can validate it all the way to output, do it. @stored_default = input_to_stored_value(nil, default, is_default: true) rescue Chef::Exceptions::CannotValidateStaticallyError # If the validation is not static (i.e. has procs), we will have to # coerce and validate the default each time we run end end def to_s "#{name || ""}#{declared_in ? " of resource #{declared_in.resource_name}" : ""}" end # # The name of this property. # # @return [String] # def name options[:name] end # # The class this property was defined in. # # @return [Class] # def declared_in options[:declared_in] end # # The instance variable associated with this property. # # Defaults to `@` # # @return [Symbol] # def instance_variable_name if options.has_key?(:instance_variable_name) options[:instance_variable_name] elsif name :"@#{name}" end end # # The raw default value for this resource. # # Does not coerce or validate the default. Does not evaluate lazy values. # # Defaults to `lazy { name }` if name_property is true; otherwise defaults to # `nil` # def default return options[:default] if options.has_key?(:default) return Chef::DelayedEvaluator.new { name } if name_property? nil end # # Whether this is part of the resource's natural identity or not. # # @return [Boolean] # def identity? options[:identity] end # # Whether this is part of desired state or not. # # Defaults to true. # # @return [Boolean] # def desired_state? return true if !options.has_key?(:desired_state) options[:desired_state] end # # Whether this is name_property or not. # # @return [Boolean] # def name_property? options[:name_property] end # # Whether this property has a default value. # # @return [Boolean] # def has_default? options.has_key?(:default) || name_property? end # # Whether this property is required or not. # # @return [Boolean] # def required? options[:required] end # # Whether this property is sensitive or not. # # Defaults to false. # # @return [Boolean] # def sensitive? options.fetch(:sensitive, false) end # # Validation options. (See Chef::Mixin::ParamsValidate#validate.) # # @return [Hash] # def validation_options @validation_options ||= options.reject do |k, v| [:declared_in, :name, :instance_variable_name, :desired_state, :identity, :default, :name_property, :coerce, :required, :nillable, :sensitive].include?(k) end end # # Handle the property being called. # # The base implementation does the property get-or-set: # # ```ruby # resource.myprop # get # resource.myprop value # set # ``` # # Subclasses may implement this with any arguments they want, as long as # the corresponding DSL calls it correctly. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource to get the property from. # @param value The value to set (or NOT_PASSED if it is a get). # # @return The current value of the property. If it is a `set`, lazy values # will be returned without running, validating or coercing. If it is a # `get`, the non-lazy, coerced, validated value will always be returned. # def call(resource, value = NOT_PASSED) if value == NOT_PASSED get(resource) else set(resource, value) end end # # Get the property value from the resource, handling lazy values, # defaults, and validation. # # - If the property's value is lazy, it is evaluated, coerced and validated. # - If the property has no value, and is required, raises ValidationFailed. # - If the property has no value, but has a lazy default, it is evaluated, # coerced and validated. If the evaluated value is frozen, the resulting # - If the property has no value, but has a default, the default value # will be returned and frozen. If the default value is lazy, it will be # evaluated, coerced and validated, and the result stored in the property. # - If the property has no value, but is name_property, `resource.name` # is retrieved, coerced, validated and stored in the property. # - Otherwise, `nil` is returned. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource to get the property from. # # @return The value of the property. # # @raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed If the value is invalid for # this property, or if the value is required and not set. # def get(resource, nil_set: false) # If it's set, return it (and evaluate any lazy values) value = nil if is_set?(resource) value = get_value(resource) value = stored_value_to_output(resource, value) else # We are getting the default value. # If the user does something like this: # # ``` # class MyResource < Chef::Resource # property :content # action :create do # file '/x.txt' do # content content # end # end # end # ``` # # It won't do what they expect. This checks whether you try to *read* # `content` while we are compiling the resource. if !nil_set && resource.respond_to?(:resource_initializing) && resource.resource_initializing && resource.respond_to?(:enclosing_provider) && resource.enclosing_provider && resource.enclosing_provider.new_resource && resource.enclosing_provider.new_resource.respond_to?(name) Chef::Log.warn("#{Chef::Log.caller_location}: property #{name} is declared in both #{resource} and #{resource.enclosing_provider}. Use new_resource.#{name} instead. At #{Chef::Log.caller_location}") end if has_default? # If we were able to cache the stored_default, grab it. if defined?(@stored_default) value = @stored_default else # Otherwise, we have to validate it now. value = input_to_stored_value(resource, default, is_default: true) end value = stored_value_to_output(resource, value, is_default: true) # If the value is mutable (non-frozen), we set it on the instance # so that people can mutate it. (All constant default values are # frozen.) if !value.frozen? && !value.nil? set_value(resource, value) end end end if value.nil? && required? raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed, "#{name} is required" else value end end # # Set the value of this property in the given resource. # # Non-lazy values are coerced and validated before being set. Coercion # and validation of lazy values is delayed until they are first retrieved. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource to set this property in. # @param value The value to set. # # @return The value that was set, after coercion (if lazy, still returns # the lazy value) # # @raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed If the value is invalid for # this property. # def set(resource, value) value = set_value(resource, input_to_stored_value(resource, value)) if value.nil? && required? raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed, "#{name} is required" else value end end # # Find out whether this property has been set. # # This will be true if: # - The user explicitly set the value # - The property has a default, and the value was retrieved. # # From this point of view, it is worth looking at this as "what does the # user think this value should be." In order words, if the user grabbed # the value, even if it was a default, they probably based calculations on # it. If they based calculations on it and the value changes, the rest of # the world gets inconsistent. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource to get the property from. # # @return [Boolean] # def is_set?(resource) value_is_set?(resource) end # # Reset the value of this property so that is_set? will return false and the # default will be returned in the future. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource to get the property from. # def reset(resource) reset_value(resource) end # # Coerce an input value into canonical form for the property. # # After coercion, the value is suitable for storage in the resource. # You must validate values after coercion, however. # # Does no special handling for lazy values. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource we're coercing against # (to provide context for the coerce). # @param value The value to coerce. # # @return The coerced value. # # @raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed If the value is invalid for # this property. # def coerce(resource, value) if options.has_key?(:coerce) # nil is never coerced unless value.nil? value = exec_in_resource(resource, options[:coerce], value) end end value end # # Validate a value. # # Calls Chef::Mixin::ParamsValidate#validate with #validation_options as # options. # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource we're validating against # (to provide context for the validate). # @param value The value to validate. # # @raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed If the value is invalid for # this property. # def validate(resource, value) # nils are not validated unless we have an explicit default value if !value.nil? || has_default? if resource resource.validate({ name => value }, { name => validation_options }) else name = self.name || :property_type Chef::Mixin::ParamsValidate.validate({ name => value }, { name => validation_options }) end end end # # Derive a new Property that is just like this one, except with some added or # changed options. # # @param options [Hash] List of options that would be passed # to #initialize. # # @return [Property] The new property type. # def derive(**modified_options) # Since name_property, name_attribute and default override each other, # if you specify one of them in modified_options it overrides anything in # the original options. options = self.options if modified_options.has_key?(:name_property) || modified_options.has_key?(:name_attribute) || modified_options.has_key?(:default) options = options.reject { |k, v| k == :name_attribute || k == :name_property || k == :default } end self.class.new(options.merge(modified_options)) end # # Emit the DSL for this property into the resource class (`declared_in`). # # Creates a getter and setter for the property. # def emit_dsl # We don't create the getter/setter if it's a custom property; we will # be using the existing getter/setter to manipulate it instead. return if !instance_variable_name # Properties may override existing properties up the inheritance heirarchy, but # properties must not override inherited methods like Object#hash. When the Resource is # placed into the resource collection the ruby Hash object will call the # Object#hash method on the resource, and overriding that with a property will cause # very confusing results. if property_redefines_method? resource_name = declared_in.respond_to?(:resource_name) ? declared_in.resource_name : declared_in raise ArgumentError, "Property `#{name}` of resource `#{resource_name}` overwrites an existing method." end # We prefer this form because the property name won't show up in the # stack trace if you use `define_method`. declared_in.class_eval <<-EOM, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1 def #{name}(value=NOT_PASSED) raise "Property `#{name}` of `\#{self}` was incorrectly passed a block. Possible property-resource collision. To call a resource named `#{name}` either rename the property or else use `declare_resource(:#{name}, ...)`" if block_given? self.class.properties[#{name.inspect}].call(self, value) end def #{name}=(value) raise "Property `#{name}` of `\#{self}` was incorrectly passed a block. Possible property-resource collision. To call a resource named `#{name}` either rename the property or else use `declare_resource(:#{name}, ...)`" if block_given? self.class.properties[#{name.inspect}].set(self, value) end EOM rescue SyntaxError # If the name is not a valid ruby name, we use define_method. declared_in.define_method(name) do |value = NOT_PASSED, &block| raise "Property `#{name}` of `#{self}` was incorrectly passed a block! Possible property-resource collision. To call a resource named `#{name}` either rename the property or else use `declare_resource(:#{name}, ...)`" if block self.class.properties[name].call(self, value) end declared_in.define_method("#{name}=") do |value, &block| raise "Property `#{name}` of `#{self}` was incorrectly passed a block! Possible property-resource collision. To call a resource named `#{name}` either rename the property or else use `declare_resource(:#{name}, ...)`" if block self.class.properties[name].set(self, value) end end # # The options this Property will use for get/set behavior and validation. # # @see #initialize for a list of valid options. # attr_reader :options # # Find out whether this type accepts nil explicitly. # # A type accepts nil explicitly if "is" allows nil, it validates as nil, *and* is not simply # an empty type. # # A type is presumed to accept nil if it does coercion (which must handle nil). # # These examples accept nil explicitly: # ```ruby # property :a, [ String, nil ] # property :a, [ String, NilClass ] # property :a, [ String, proc { |v| v.nil? } ] # ``` # # This does not (because the "is" doesn't exist or doesn't have nil): # # ```ruby # property :x, String # ``` # # These do not, even though nil would validate fine (because they do not # have "is"): # # ```ruby # property :a # property :a, equal_to: [ 1, 2, 3, nil ] # property :a, kind_of: [ String, NilClass ] # property :a, respond_to: [ ] # property :a, callbacks: { "a" => proc { |v| v.nil? } } # ``` # # @param resource [Chef::Resource] The resource we're coercing against # (to provide context for the coerce). # # @return [Boolean] Whether this value explicitly accepts nil. # # @api private def explicitly_accepts_nil?(resource) options.has_key?(:coerce) || (options.has_key?(:is) && resource.send(:_pv_is, { name => nil }, name, options[:is], raise_error: false)) end # @api private def get_value(resource) if instance_variable_name resource.instance_variable_get(instance_variable_name) else resource.send(name) end end # @api private def set_value(resource, value) if instance_variable_name resource.instance_variable_set(instance_variable_name, value) else resource.send(name, value) end end # @api private def value_is_set?(resource) if instance_variable_name resource.instance_variable_defined?(instance_variable_name) else true end end # @api private def reset_value(resource) if instance_variable_name if value_is_set?(resource) resource.remove_instance_variable(instance_variable_name) end else raise ArgumentError, "Property #{name} has no instance variable defined and cannot be reset" end end private def property_redefines_method? # We only emit deprecations if this property already exists as an instance method. # Weeding out class methods avoids unnecessary deprecations such Chef::Resource # defining a `name` property when there's an already-existing `name` method # for a Module. return false unless declared_in.instance_methods.include?(name) # Only emit deprecations for some well-known classes. This will still # allow more advanced users to subclass their own custom resources and # override their own properties. return false unless [ Object, BasicObject, Kernel, Chef::Resource ].include?(declared_in.instance_method(name).owner) # Allow top-level Chef::Resource proprties, such as `name`, to be overridden. # As of this writing, `name` is the only Chef::Resource property created with the # `property` definition, but this will allow for future properties to be extended # as needed. !Chef::Resource.properties.keys.include?(name) end def exec_in_resource(resource, proc, *args) if resource if proc.arity > args.size value = proc.call(resource, *args) else value = resource.instance_exec(*args, &proc) end else # If we don't have a resource yet, we can't exec in resource! raise Chef::Exceptions::CannotValidateStaticallyError, "Cannot validate or coerce without a resource" end end def input_to_stored_value(resource, value, is_default: false) unless value.is_a?(DelayedEvaluator) value = coerce_and_validate(resource, value, is_default: is_default) end value end def stored_value_to_output(resource, value, is_default: false) # Crack open lazy values before giving the result to the user if value.is_a?(DelayedEvaluator) value = exec_in_resource(resource, value) value = coerce_and_validate(resource, value, is_default: is_default) end value end # Coerces and validates the value. If the value is a default, it will warn # the user that invalid defaults are bad mmkay, and return it as if it were # valid. def coerce_and_validate(resource, value, is_default: false) result = coerce(resource, value) validate(resource, result) result end end end