* install the correct CAs in the correct places so windows can install gems
* use a gem_command abstraction to find the correct puppet gem exe
[skip ci]
Because Puppet 4 is typed, parameter type information can
be automatically determined without any explicit documentation
in @param tags. However, users may desire to do so anyway for
consistency. This commit allows @param tags to include a [type]
in Puppet 4 code. Strings will emit a warning if the documented
type does not match the actual type. In such an event, the incorrect
documented type will be ignored in favor of the real one.
Previously, overload objects were not displaying their tags when
they had no docstring text. This was due to an issue in the overload
`to_hash` method, which prevented the tags from being serialized when
the dispatch had no top-level text. This commit updates that logic
so that the tags will always be included in the hash if they exist.
Previously, Strings ignored calls to `return_type` in Puppet 4.x API
function dispatches, preventing the return types of overloads from
being automatically determined. This commit adds a check for a node
with a `return_type` call and handles it properly.
Previously, Strings ignored the return type in Puppet language functions
that used the following syntax:
function foo() >> String {}
This commit updates the FunctionStatement class to use the return
type from such a statement if it exists. In addition, Strings will
now emit a warning if the return type specified in the @return tag
doesn't match the type specified in the function definition.
Previously, YARD would parse ruby strings which used %Q notation
and return the syntax literally. This commit adds a new Util
module with a `scrub_string` method to check for such a string
and remove the errant %Q and %q's.
Prior to this commit, strings did not properly handle providers
which had multiple related `defaultfor`s. In code, these are written
as comma-separated constraints. This commit updates strings' puppet
provider handler, as well as the template which generates HTML for
`defaultfor` statements.
Note that it was necessary to make a breaking change to the JSON
schema to accomodate multiple AND'ed defaults. Previously, provider
defaults were contained in a single key-value map. Now, they are
contained in an array of key-value lists, which allows multiple
constraints to be associated with each other.
When `newfunction` is separated from the Puppet::Parser::Functions module name by a
newline, YARD ignores the namespace and uses `newfunction` as the source of the
first statement.
Prior to this commit, strings didn't recognize this case, and 3.x functions written
in this way were not parsed as functions. This commit updates the ruby function handler
to identify and properly parse 3.x functions that include a newline between the
Puppet::Parser::Function namespace and the newfunction method call.
Previously the acceptance test was implemented under the `spec` directory and
was moved out to a top level `acceptance` directory.
This broke the expected location for the node configuration files.
This commit puts the acceptance test back where it was previously.
Also fixes a failure in the test now that Markdown is the default markup
language used.
The specs test functions written in the Puppet language in a few places, but
this feature is only supported in Puppet 4.1+. This commit prevents these
specs from running if targeting older versions of Puppet.
This commit deletes the old implementation to assist in cleaner code reviews of
the upcoming reimplementation.
This commit also moves YARD to version 0.9.5 and lays down a bare bones
implementation of Puppet Strings that currently does nothing.
This commit changes the source and documentation to reference this project as
`puppet-strings` rather than `puppetlabs-strings`.
This makes the source and project match the gem name.
This is additional work for QENG-3888 in ci-job-configs. We were using static
nodesets within specs/acceptance/nodesets before and this commit will instead use beaker-hostgenerator
to get the specified platform .yml configurations.
Prior to this commit, strings had a hostfile that was using an old
format that is no longer compatible with beaker which was causing
the acceptance tests to fail.
Update the hostfile so that it works.
Prior to this commit, the acceptance tests were trying to install
strings as a module and failing due to the fact that strings has
transition to a gem and does not have metadata. Update the tests
so that they install strings as a gem instead.
Prior to this commit, strings relied on failure_message_for_should
which produced a deprecation warning. Use the suggested alternative
'failure_message' instead to removed the deprecation warning and
ensure the tests are up to date.
Puppet defined types would print the string representation of the ruby object,
and not representation you would see in puppet. This is the difference between
`Puppet::Pops::Types::PStringType` and `String`.
If a provider and a type with the same name conflict strings will overwrite the
documentation of one of them with the other. That is if both a provider and a
type are named apt_key, strings will write the type to doc/apt_key.html and the
provider to doc/apt_key.html. The fix is to write the provider to
doc/apt_key_provider.html and the type to doc/apt_key_type.html.
* Dunno, I just plowed through a bunch of features
* Expect puppet provider in stats output
* Fetch default values for Type params and props
* Detect allowed values
* Add allowed values to test
* htmlify scrubbed text
* Add features to Type html output
* Add infrastructure for types
* Add methods for generating lists, etc.
* Add provider code object
* Add provider handler
* Generate list for puppet provider dropdown
* Add puppet provider template
* Add provider details to puppet type template
* Get description properly for types
Adding a provider page and menu
* Add categories to html search bar
* Require provider handler and object classes
* Fetch provider code objects from registry
* Add function to generate the provider list
* Fetch providers from registry in monkey patches
* Add provider templates
* Add provider code object
* Add provider handler
* Add erb file to populate the provider list
* Don't emit type information for providers in html
* Add tests for provider handler
Refactor heredoc:
* Remove heredoc annotations
* Move heredoc functions into a heredoc helper
* Add heredoc helper class
Since we threw away all of Yard's warnings we are no longer checking that the
parameter names match for Ruby methods. Thus we need to override Yard's
method_details template with our own to trigger our warning function. However,
there's a catch. If this ruby method is in a Puppet 4x function, we don't want
our warning function to trigger because the user has already been warned. Look
in the registry to see if there is already a Puppet 4x function with the same
name registered.
Also, print errors to stderr instead of using log.warn.
* Add testing file based off shaigy's tests.
* Refactor using_module into a helper class.
* Expect that the warnings printed to stdout are *exactly* what I want to see
and nothing else.