# Copyright 2017, David Wilson # # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: # # 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, # this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. # # 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, # this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation # and/or other materials provided with the distribution. # # 3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its contributors # may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without # specific prior written permission. # # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" # AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE # IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE # ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE # LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR # CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF # SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS # INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN # CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) # ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE # POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. """ This exists to detect every case defined in [0] and prepare arguments necessary for the executor implementation running within the target, including preloading any requisite files/Python modules known to be missing. [0] "Ansible Module Architecture", developing_program_flow_modules.html """ from __future__ import absolute_import from ansible.executor import module_common import mitogen import mitogen.service import ansible_mitogen.helpers class Planner(object): """ A Planner receives a module name and the contents of its implementation file, indicates whether or not it understands how to run the module, and exports a method to run the module. """ def detect(self, name, source): assert 0 def run(self, connection, name, source, args, env): assert 0 class JsonArgsPlanner(Planner): """ Script that has its interpreter directive and the task arguments substituted into its source as a JSON string. """ def detect(self, name, source): return module_common.REPLACER_JSONARGS in source def run(self, name, source, args, env): path = None # TODO mitogen.service.call(501, ('register', path)) return { 'func': 'run_json_args_module', 'binary': source, 'args': args, 'env': env, } class WantJsonPlanner(Planner): """ If a module has the string WANT_JSON in it anywhere, Ansible treats it as a non-native module that accepts a filename as its only command line parameter. The filename is for a temporary file containing a JSON string containing the module’s parameters. The module needs to open the file, read and parse the parameters, operate on the data, and print its return data as a JSON encoded dictionary to stdout before exiting. These types of modules are self-contained entities. As of Ansible 2.1, Ansible only modifies them to change a shebang line if present. """ def detect(self, name, source): return 'WANT_JSON' in source def run(self, name, source, args, env): return { 'func': 'run_want_json_module', 'binary': source, 'args': args, 'env': env, } class ReplacerPlanner(Planner): """ The Module Replacer framework is the original framework implementing new-style modules. It is essentially a preprocessor (like the C Preprocessor for those familiar with that programming language). It does straight substitutions of specific substring patterns in the module file. There are two types of substitutions. * Replacements that only happen in the module file. These are public replacement strings that modules can utilize to get helpful boilerplate or access to arguments. "from ansible.module_utils.MOD_LIB_NAME import *" is replaced with the contents of the ansible/module_utils/MOD_LIB_NAME.py. These should only be used with new-style Python modules. "#<>" is equivalent to "from ansible.module_utils.basic import *" and should also only apply to new-style Python modules. "# POWERSHELL_COMMON" substitutes the contents of "ansible/module_utils/powershell.ps1". It should only be used with new-style Powershell modules. """ def detect(self, name, source): return module_common.REPLACER in source def run(self, name, source, args, env): return { 'func': 'run_replacer_module', 'binary': source, 'args': args, 'env': env, } class BinaryPlanner(Planner): """ Binary modules take their arguments and will return data to Ansible in the same way as want JSON modules. """ helper = staticmethod(ansible_mitogen.helpers.run_binary) def detect(self, name, source): return module_common._is_binary(source) def run(self, name, source, args, env): return { 'func': 'run_binary_module', 'binary': source, 'args': args, 'env': env, } class PythonPlanner(Planner): """ The Ansiballz framework differs from module replacer in that it uses real Python imports of things in ansible/module_utils instead of merely preprocessing the module. """ helper = staticmethod(ansible_mitogen.helpers.run_module) def detect(self, name, source): return True def run(self, name, source, args, env): return { 'func': 'run_python_module', 'module': name, 'args': args, 'env': env } _planners = [ # JsonArgsPlanner, # WantJsonPlanner, # ReplacerPlanner, BinaryPlanner, PythonPlanner, ] def plan(): pass