1

I need an environment variable added to the front of $PATH that:

  1. Doesn't last beyond the provisioning run.
  2. Is dependent i.e. something will be installed earlier in the run that is then is available via $PATH, so I can't set it globally as this cookbook says to.

I tried the answer here:

Exec { environment => [ "foo=$bar" ] }

but I get the error Error: All resource specifications require names. When I add a name I get other errors about syntax, for which my fiddling around to fix just gives me other errors (the error Syntax error at '}'; expected '}' is my favourite!)

I've tried using export to set it, but I see: Error: Could not find command 'export'

I've tried using set and setenv too, with similar results. There must be a straightforward way to do this, but I can't find it.

Edit

Just to add, these are the available shells:

$ cat /etc/shells
# /etc/shells: valid login shells
/bin/sh
/bin/dash
/bin/bash
/bin/rbash
/bin/zsh
/usr/bin/zsh

zsh is part of the provisioning, but it could be a requirement of the answer, if needs be.

0

2 Answers 2

1

Added to the front of your path, you want to add your resource default like this I believe:

Exec { environment => "PATH=value:$PATH", }

This could be incorrect, but I do know that it will replace the variables you set, not append to them by default. More details at https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/type.html#exec-attribute-environment

0

I tried a few ways for this, but the best I found was to use Hiera. I read quite a few blogs on how to set this up with Vagrant too, but this was the best I found.

My project directory layout

Vagrantfile
pp/
  manifests/
  modules/
  data/
    hiera.yml
    common.yml

Vagrantfile

The relevant part of the Vagrantfile:

  config.vm.provision "puppet" do |puppet|
    puppet.manifests_path = "pp/manifests"
    puppet.module_path = "pp/modules/custom"
    puppet.manifest_file  = "default.pp"
    puppet.hiera_config_path = "pp/data/hiera.yaml"
  end

I've no idea yet why there needs to be a hiera.yaml which points to a common.yaml, but that's the way it is.

hiera.yaml

---
:backends:
  - yaml

:hierarchy:
  - "common"

:yaml:
  :datadir: '/vagrant/pp/data'

common.yaml

---
ruby_version: "2.3.0"
ruby_prefix: "/opt/rubies"
...

Then in a manifest

$ruby_version = hiera("ruby_version")
$ruby_prefix = hiera("ruby_prefix")
$ruby_dir_fullpath = "${ruby_prefix}/ruby-${ruby_version}"

Seems like a lot of effort to me, but again, that's the way it is.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.