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Hiera is sometimes inscrutable. Its data retrieval model can be surprising in its simplicity. It's common for people to struggle with how to format data in their Hiera datasources and retrieve it properly.
This tool is designed to help demystify Hiera. When you invoke hiera_explain
,
it will use whatever scope you provide to evaluate the hiera.yaml
file and
print it out exactly as Hiera will interpret it. What is scope? That's merely
the collection of facts or other variables provided for Hiera to use.
The examples here will use this sample hiera.yaml
configuration file:
---
:backends:
- yaml
- json
:yaml:
:datadir: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
:json:
:datadir: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
:hierarchy:
- "%{clientcert}"
- overrides
- "environments/%{environment}/hieradata/%{osfamily}"
- "environments/%{environment}/hieradata/%{clientcert}"
- "environments/%{environment}/hieradata/defaults"
- classroom
- tuning
- common
- defaults
When you invoke hiera_explain
, it will first show you each datadir
expanded
out with any variables Hiera can interpolate. Then it will evaluate and display
the hierarchy, as Hiera would interpret it.
root@master:~ # hiera_explain
Backend data directories:
* yaml: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
* json: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
Expanded hierarchy:
* master.puppetlabs.vm
* overrides
* environments/production/hieradata/RedHat
* environments/production/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm
* environments/production/hieradata/defaults
* classroom
* tuning
* common
* defaults
Next it will show you the exact file paths that Hiera will look in as it's resolving the keys you're looking up. It will indicate which files exist with a checked box and with color coding.
File lookup order:
[X] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/overrides.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/RedHat.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/defaults.yaml
[X] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/classroom.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/tuning.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/common.yaml
[X] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.yaml
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.json
[X] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/overrides.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/RedHat.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/environments/production/hieradata/defaults.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/classroom.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/tuning.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/common.json
[ ] /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.json
Finally, it will actually dump out all data available for you to look up with
Hiera functions in your Puppet code. It is also color coded, and and will indicate
which values are unable to be resolved with hiera_hash()
.
Priority lookup results:
* hiera('foo') => bar
* hiera('message') => This is a sample variable that came from a Hiera datasource
* hiera('hashies') => {"key"=>"value"}
* hiera('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => 4320
* hiera('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => 0.0.0.0
* hiera('pe_repo::base_path') =>
Array lookup results:
* hiera_array('pe_repo::base_path') => [nil, "https://master.puppetlabs.vm:8140/packages/classroom"]
* hiera_array('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => [4320]
* hiera_array('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => ["0.0.0.0"]
* hiera_array('message') => ["This is a sample variable that came from a Hiera datasource", "this comes from json"]
* hiera_array('foo') => ["bar"]
* hiera_array('hashies') => [{"key"=>"value"}]
Hash lookup results:
* hiera_hash('pe_repo::base_path') => Not a hash datatype in ["master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml", "classroom.yaml"]
* hiera_hash('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => Not a hash datatype in ["classroom.yaml"]
* hiera_hash('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => Not a hash datatype in ["classroom.yaml"]
* hiera_hash('message') => Not a hash datatype in ["defaults.yaml", "overrides.json"]
* hiera_hash('foo') => Not a hash datatype in ["overrides.json"]
* hiera_hash('hashies') => {"key"=>"value"}
hiera_explain
can use scope from a variety of sources. You can pass a JSON or
YAML file containing a full dump of facts, or you can retrieve those using
MCollective or PuppetDB. You can pass in as many sources of scope data as you like.
root@master:~ # hiera_explain -h
Usage : hiera_explain [--json PATH] [--yaml PATH] [--mcollective IDENTITY] [--puppetdb IDENTITY].
-c, --config CONFIG Load Hiera settings from an alternate hiera.yaml.
-f, --filter FILTER Only keys matching this string or regex will be displayed.
-v, --verbose Show verbose datasource details.
-j, --json PATH Load scope from a JSON file.
-y, --yaml PATH Load scope from a YAML file.
-C, --cached IDENTITY Use the Puppet Master's cached facts file for an identity.
-m, --mcollective IDENTITY Use MCollective to retrieve scope for an identity.
-p, --puppetdb IDENTITY Use PuppetDB to retrieve scope for an identity.
-i, --inventory IDENTITY Use Puppet's inventory service to retrieve scope (deprecated!)
-n, --no-color Disable console colors.
-d, --debug Display debugging messages
-h, --help Displays this help
You can even override facts one at a time on the command line.
root@master:~ # hiera_explain -p master.puppetlabs.vm clientcert=foo.bar.baz
Backend data directories:
* yaml: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
* json: /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata
Expanded hierarchy:
* foo.bar.baz
* overrides
* environments/production/hieradata/RedHat
* environments/production/hieradata/foo.bar.baz
* environments/production/hieradata/defaults
* classroom
* tuning
* common
* defaults
If you have many keys set and the output is too long, you can pass in a filter using either a full string or a regular expression. For example:
root@master:~ # hiera_explain -f message
[...]
Priority lookup results:
* hiera('message') => This message is customized for the master.
Array lookup results:
* hiera_array('message') => ["This message is customized for the master.", "This is a sample variable that came from a Hiera datasource"]
Hash lookup results:
* hiera_hash('message') => Not a hash datatype in ["master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml", "defaults.yaml"]
root@master:~ # hiera_explain -f /^puppet_enterprise/
[...]
Priority lookup results:
* hiera('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => 4320
* hiera('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => 0.0.0.0
Array lookup results:
* hiera_array('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => [4320]
* hiera_array('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => ["0.0.0.0"]
Hash lookup results:
* hiera_hash('puppet_enterprise::profile::console::rbac_session_timeout') => Not a hash datatype in ["classroom.yaml"]
* hiera_hash('puppet_enterprise::profile::puppetdb::listen_address') => Not a hash datatype in ["classroom.yaml"]
To see which datasource(s) resolved any given variable returned, you can pass the
--verbose
flag. This might generate a very long printout, so you might want to
couple it with the --filter
flag as well.
root@master:~ # hiera_explain -v -f /message/
[...]
Priority lookup results:
* hiera('message') => This message is customized for the master.
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml
* hiera('hashmessage') => {"key"=>"A message embedded in a hash"}
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.yaml
Array lookup results:
* hiera_array('message') => ["This message is customized for the master.", "This is a sample variable t4hat came from a Hiera datasource"]
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.yaml
* hiera_array('hashmessage') => [{"key"=>"A message embedded in a hash"}]
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.yaml
Hash lookup results:
* hiera_hash('message') => Not a hash datatype in ["master.puppetlabs.vm.yaml", "defaults.yaml"]
* hiera_hash('hashmessage') => {"key"=>"A message embedded in a hash"}
- /etc/puppetlabs/code/hieradata/defaults.yaml
A standard Hiera backend won't provide the data we need to look up all available
data. I've added support for yaml
, json
, and eyaml
backend out-of-the-box,
but it's fairly easy to add support for your own backend.
Simply provide a monkeypatching class like the following. It should return a hash of Hiera data, given a path.
class HieraExplain::Datasource
# marshal is a data serialization format for Ruby. There does not exist
# a Hiera backend for using it, nor should there be as it's a binary format.
# But if there were, this would make hiera_explain understand it.
def self.marshal(path)
Marshal::load(File.read(path))
end
end
The filename and the method it provides must be the same as the name for your backend.
root@master:modules # $ tree marshal
marshal
└── lib
├── hiera
│ └── backends
│ └── marshal_backend.rb
└── hiera_explain
└── datasource
└── marshal.rb
This is early in development, although the script this is based on has been used
in the classroom for quite a while now. This currently only supports version 1.x.
of the hiera.yaml
config file. (It will work with current Hiera, but doesn't
understand the new data plugins.)
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that hiera_explain demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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