Thank-you to AnthonyY.
I didn't know where to put the code for his function, and as a result of my research ended up rewriting the whole thing using the newer syntax, but keeping his logic.
It took me quite a while to work it all out, so I figured it would be good to post it back here. ...I would have just added it as a comment to his answer, but apparently I need 50 points to do that, not zero.
The code should be saved in it's own file inside your Puppet environment directory as follows:
lib/puppet/functions/parentdirs.rb
...so the full path would be something like this (on Ubuntu server 18.04, using the Puppet packages, not the repo ones):
/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/testing/lib/puppet/functions/parentdirs.rb
...there seem to be other places you can put it, but this is what I did.
Notice that the file is .rb
, not .pp
(because it's Ruby code, not Puppet).
I got most of my information from https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/5.5/functions_ruby_overview.html and the sub-pages.
The usage is the same as the original function, and somewhat re-explained in the comments
# Returns an array of the parent directories to the given file or directory. This can then be passed to File to create the directory tree require for a dynamic path value.
# Parameter 2 is an optional, higher level of the same path. These higher level directories will not be in the array.
# Example 1: parameter 1 is '/var/www/mysite'; parameter 2 is not given; returns array ['/var', '/var/www']
# Example 2: parameter 1 is '/var/www/mysite'; parameter 2 is '/var'; returns array ['/var/www']
Puppet::Functions.create_function(:parentdirs) do
dispatch :parents do
required_param 'String', :target_dir
optional_param 'String', :dir_until
return_type 'Array'
end
def parents(target_dir, dir_until = '')
cur = File.dirname(target_dir)
result = []
begin
result.unshift(cur)
last = cur
cur = File.dirname(cur)
end while cur != last and !cur.end_with?('/') and cur != dir_until
return result
end
end