0

I edited sample code to clarify my issue. I think the answers make more sense now since my first recipe is indeed inside a ruby_block.

When are default node attributes available during a client run? Let me clarify. My example is simplified, but what I'm trying to do is more complex than this, but the concept is similar.

I bootstrapped a node, which ran with an empty run list. So far so good.

Now I add my hello_world cookbook to my node's run list.

knife node run_list add node_name "recipe[hello_world]"

In my hello_world cookbook, I have the following default attribute defined in attributes/default.rb

default.hello_world.location = ''

I have a recipes/default.rb that does this

include_recipe "hello_world::set_location"
include_recipe "hello_world::show_location"

recipes/set_location.rb does

ruby_block "Set location" do
  block do
    node.set.hello_world.location = "New York!"
  end
end

and recipes/show_location.rb does this, using the log resource

log "Hello #{node.hello_world.location}"

Should I expect to see this in the chef-client run...

Hello New York!

...or simply this, since the cookbook has not completely run yet and therefore its attributes have not been sync'ed with the Chef server?

Hello

I am getting the latter, that is, just "Hello" without "New York!"

How can I get my cookbook to log "Hello New York!" after its client run?

That is, in general, how can I set node attributes in one recipe so I can use them in a different recipe of the same cookbook during a chef-client run?

1 Answer 1

1

The loading of chef is described here and the attribute precedence is described here

You should have the expected result as you're updating the attribute value before the log resource is compiled, because the node.set is not in a ruby_block.

I suspect the use of method syntax to be the problem, prefer using the hash access.

i.e:

node.set['hello_world']['location'] = "New York!"

and

log "Hello #{node['hello_world']['location']}"

But as it's not real code (if I understood correctly) I can't swear it's the real case, without a real case I can't be sure why you get this result.

You may use lazy evaluation in other context (attribute updated within a ruby_block)

5
  • These are equivalent: node.set.hello_world.location = "New York!" and node.set['hello_world']['location'] = "New York!" I will look at lazy evaluation.
    – Chris F
    Feb 6, 2015 at 14:21
  • @ChrisF Is it a real "test cookbook" or is it an example based on your actual problem ?
    – Tensibai
    Feb 6, 2015 at 14:32
  • It's an actual cookbook I'm having issues with. The concept is similar though
    – Chris F
    Feb 6, 2015 at 18:23
  • Similar is my reason to doubt, if the attribute is changed in a resource (ruby_block for exemple) it will give your actual output
    – Tensibai
    Feb 6, 2015 at 18:55
  • Tensibai you are absolutely correct. I edited my sample code. Thanks!
    – Chris F
    Feb 7, 2015 at 17:51

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.