Module: Kitchen::Util

Defined in:
lib/kitchen/util.rb

Overview

Stateless utility methods used in different contexts. Essentially a mini PassiveSupport library.

Class Method Summary collapse

Class Method Details

.camel_case(a_string) ⇒ Object



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 212

def self.camel_case(a_string)
  Thor::Util.camel_case(a_string)
end

.duration(total) ⇒ String

Returns a formatted string representing a duration in seconds.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 96

def self.duration(total)
  total = 0 if total.nil?
  minutes = (total / 60).to_i
  seconds = (total - (minutes * 60))
  format("(%dm%.2fs)", minutes, seconds)
end

.from_logger_level(const) ⇒ Symbol

Returns the symbol represenation of a logging levels for a given standard library Logger::Severity constant.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 48

def self.from_logger_level(const)
  case const
  when Logger::DEBUG then :debug
  when Logger::INFO then :info
  when Logger::WARN then :warn
  when Logger::ERROR then :error
  else :fatal
  end
end

.list_directory(path, include_dot: false, recurse: false) ⇒ Object

Note:

You should prefer this method to using Dir.glob directly. The reason is

Note:

Dir.chdir is applied to the process, thus it is not thread-safe

Lists the contents of the given directory. path will be prepended to the list returned. ‘.’ and ‘..’ are never returned.

because Dir.glob behaves strangely on Windows. It wont accept ‘' and doesn’t like fake directories (C:Documents and Settings) It also does not do any sort of error checking, so things one would expect to fail just return an empty list

and must be synchronized.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 164

def self.list_directory(path, include_dot: false, recurse: false)
  # Things (such as tests) are relying on this to not blow up if
  # the directory does not exist
  return [] if !Dir.exist?(path)

  Kitchen.mutex_chdir.synchronize do
    Dir.chdir(path) do
      glob_pattern = if recurse
                       "**/*"
                     else
                       "*"
                     end
      flags = if include_dot
                [File::FNM_DOTMATCH]
              else
                []
              end
      Dir.glob(glob_pattern, *flags)
        .reject { |f| [".", ".."].include?(f) }
        .map { |f| File.join(path, f) }
    end
  end
end

.outdent!(string) ⇒ String

Modifes the given string to strip leading whitespace on each line, the amount which is calculated by using the first line of text.

Examples:


string = "  a\n    b\nc\n"
Util.outdent!(string) # => "a\n  b\nc\n"


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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 133

def self.outdent!(string)
  string.gsub!(/^ {#{string.index(/[^ ]/)}}/, "")
end

.safe_glob(path, pattern, *flags) ⇒ Object

Note:

Dir.chdir is applied to the process, thus it is not thread-safe

Similar to Dir.glob.

The difference is this function forces you to specify where to glob from. You should glob from the path closest to what you want. The reason for this is because if you have symlinks on windows of any kind, Dir.glob will not traverse them.

and must be synchronized.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 202

def self.safe_glob(path, pattern, *flags)
  return [] if !Dir.exist?(path)

  Kitchen.mutex_chdir.synchronize do
    Dir.chdir(path) do
      Dir.glob(pattern, *flags).map { |f| File.join(path, f) }
    end
  end
end

.shell_helpersString

Returns a set of Bourne Shell (AKA /bin/sh) compatible helper functions. This function is usually called inline in a string that will be executed remotely on a test instance.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 142

def self.shell_helpers
  IO.read(File.join(
            File.dirname(__FILE__), %w{.. .. support download_helpers.sh}
  ))
end

.snake_case(a_string) ⇒ Object



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 216

def self.snake_case(a_string)
  Thor::Util.snake_case(a_string)
end

.stringified_hash(obj) ⇒ Object

Returns a new Hash with all key values coerced to strings. All keys within a Hash are coerced by calling #to_s and hashes with arrays and other hashes are traversed.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 82

def self.stringified_hash(obj)
  if obj.is_a?(Hash)
    obj.inject({}) { |h, (k, v)| h[k.to_s] = stringified_hash(v); h }
  elsif obj.is_a?(Array)
    obj.inject([]) { |a, e| a << stringified_hash(e); a }
  else
    obj
  end
end

.symbolized_hash(obj) ⇒ Object

Returns a new Hash with all key values coerced to symbols. All keys within a Hash are coerced by calling #to_sym and hashes within arrays and other hashes are traversed.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 65

def self.symbolized_hash(obj)
  if obj.is_a?(Hash)
    obj.inject({}) { |h, (k, v)| h[k.to_sym] = symbolized_hash(v); h }
  elsif obj.is_a?(Array)
    obj.inject([]) { |a, e| a << symbolized_hash(e); a }
  else
    obj
  end
end

.to_logger_level(symbol) ⇒ Integer

Returns the standard library Logger level constants for a given symbol representation.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 35

def self.to_logger_level(symbol)
  return nil unless [:debug, :info, :warn, :error, :fatal].include?(symbol)

  Logger.const_get(symbol.to_s.upcase)
end

.wrap_command(cmd) ⇒ String

Generates a command (or series of commands) wrapped so that it can be invoked on a remote instance or locally.

This method uses the Bourne shell (/bin/sh) to maximize the chance of cross platform portability on Unixlike systems.



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# File 'lib/kitchen/util.rb', line 111

def self.wrap_command(cmd)
  cmd = "false" if cmd.nil?
  cmd = "true" if cmd.to_s.empty?
  cmd = cmd.sub(/\n\Z/, "") if cmd =~ /\n\Z/

  "sh -c '\n#{cmd}\n'"
end