foreman_templates

This plugin will sync the contents of the Foreman Community Templates repository (or a git repo of your choice) to your local Foreman instance

Installation

See Install a plugin in the Foreman documentation for how to install Foreman plugins.

The gem name is "foreman_templates".

RPM users can install the "ruby193-rubygem-foreman_templates" or "rubygem-foreman_templates" packages.

Latest code

You can get the develop branch of the plugin by specifying your Gemfile in this way:

gem 'foreman_templates', :git => "https://github.com/theforeman/foreman_templates.git"

Configuration

The plugin comes with settings providing sane defaults for import. You can change them under Administer > Settings, TemplateSync tab. These can be overriden for each import by passing options directly to a Rake task (see Usage section for how to do that)

Usage

Import

The plugin provides a Rake task to import the templates. To use it, simply do

foreman-rake templates:sync

This will create a set of templates named "Community ...." (or update them if they already exist). Audit history is preserved, but no comment is currently added for any changes made.

The importer will attempt to figure out the OS and Release the template refers to. If this is a new template being created, and we can find a matching OS in Foreman, the template will be automatically associated with the OS

Rake options

  • verbose => Print extra information during the run [false]
  • repo => Sync templates from a different repo [https://github.com/theforeman/community-templates]. Importing from git and file system is supported.
  • branch => Branch in Git repo [see note below]
  • prefix => The string all imported templates should begin with [Community]
  • dirname => The directory within the git tree containing the templates [/]
  • filter => Import names matching this regex (case-insensitive; snippets are not filtered)
  • associate => Associate to OS, "always", when "new" or "never" [new]

The branch default will use develop if you're on Foreman-nightly; or the matching 1.X-stable branch for your version of Foreman (if it exists); or finally it will remain on the default branch as a fallback.

Passing any option to a Rake task overrides its default value from a corresponding Setting.

Examples

Just import all the templates from the default repo

foreman-rake templates:sync

Import all templates from a custom repo, with a different prefix

foreman-rake templates:sync repo="http://github.com/GregSutcliffe/community-templates" prefix="Greg"

Import templates matching the name "Fedora"

foreman-rake templates:sync filter='fedora'

Import templates from a subdirectory of a git repo:

foreman-rake templates:sync repo="http://github.com/GregSutcliffe/community-templates" dirname='/subdir'

Import templates from file system:

foreman-rake templates:sync repo="/path/to/my/templates"

Purge

This task deletes matching templates from the Foreman DB

Rake options

  • prefix => The string all templates to be purged should begin with [Community ]
  • negate => Negate the search [false]
  • verbose => Print extra information during the run [false]

Examples

Just purge all the templates the begin with 'Community '

foreman-rake templates:purge

Purge all templates that begin with 'Oops '

foreman-rake templates:purge prefix='Oops '

Purge all templates that do not begin with 'Community '

foreman-rake templates:purge negate=true

Integration with other Foreman Plugins

templates will start processing a template by looking for a metadata entry of model. If this is found, templates will call import! on this model.

That means it's possible for a plugin to define it's own handling of text and metadata, relevant to the plugins own interests. The import! method will be sent 3 arguments - the name of the template, the text of the template, and a complete copy of the metadata.

As a trivial example for a random plugin, suppose foreman_nosuchplugin has this code:

module ForemanNosuchplugin
  class SomeTemplate
    def self.import!(name, text, )
      File.open("/tmp/#{name}",'w') {|f| f.write text }
    end
  end
end

Assuming a template had "model: SomeTemplate" in it's metadata, this would then get written to a file in /tmp.

templates will expect the import! method to return a Hash, containing:

  • :status (boolean),
  • :diff (text, may be nil), or
    • :old and :new (in which case this plugin will calculate the diff)
  • :result` (text, may be nil).

TODO

  • Add a button to the UI with Deface to run the rake task

Copyright (c) 2013 Greg Sutcliffe

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.