Properties
Names
The names of properties may not end in the character .
, because that has a
special meaning in unevaluated property application specifications.
Properties with :APPLY
subroutines occupy the function cells of symbols,
so except in the case of properties with no :APPLY
subroutine, do not try
to define an ordinary function with the same name as a property.
Working directories
Except where specified otherwise in property docstrings, relative paths are
relative to the remote home directory. :LISP
properties may assume they
will be executed in the remote home directory, and :POSIX
properties may
assume that commands will be executed in the remote home directory, and that
relative paths passed to READ-REMOTE-FILE
and WRITE-REMOTE-FILE
are
relative to the remote home directory. Use WITH-REMOTE-CURRENT-DIRECTORY
to change the remote working directory in a way which ensures it will get
changed back.
Property subroutines
A property is composed of up to five subroutines, which all have the same
lambda list (take the same arguments). At least one of :hostattrs
,
:apply
or :unapply
must be present.
:desc
subroutines
Pure function of the property’s arguments which returns a description of applying the property, to be used in stdout by deployments to inform the user what work is being done.
:preprocess
subroutines
Pure function executed to modify the arguments that will be passed to the other subroutines; should return a fresh list of the new arguments. This subroutine is called on each atomic property application within a property application specification before the effects of property combinators have been applied. That is, it is effectively executed on atomic property applications in isolation from the property application specifications in which they occur.
:hostattrs
subroutines
Executed in the root Lisp to (i) add static informational attributes of hosts to which this property is applied or is to be applied; and (ii) check that applying this property makes sense – e.g. that we’re not trying to install a package using apt(1) on a FreeBSD host.
Can retrieve existing static informational attributes using GET-HOSTATTRS
,
or things which wrap GET-HOSTATTRS
, such as GET-HOSTNAME
. Should
signal the condition INCOMPATIBLE-PROPERTY
if existing static
informational attributes indicate that the property should not be applied to
this host. Can use PUSH-HOSTATTRS
and REQUIRE-DATA
to add new entries
to the host’s static information atributes.
Other than as described in the previous paragraph, should be a pure function. In particular, should not examine the actual state of the host. Essentially a conversion of the arguments to the property to appropriate static informational attributes.
:check
subroutines
Determine whether or not the property is already applied to the host and
return a generalised boolean indicating such. Whether or not the :apply
and :unapply
subroutines get called depends on this return value. If
absent, it is always assumed the property is unapplied, i.e., an attempt to
apply the property will always be made.
:apply
and :unapply
subroutines
Apply or unapply the property. Should return :no-change
if the property
was already applied; any other return value is interpreted as meaning that the
property was not (fully) applied before we ran, but now it is. (If the
:check
function indicated that neither :apply
nor :unapply
should
be run, then this is equivalent to those subroutines returning :no-change
.)
The point of having both these return value semantics and the :check
subroutine is that a property might only be able to check whether it made a
change after trying to apply itself – it might check whether running a
command actually made a change to a particular file, for example.
Errors in attempting to apply a property are indicated by signalling a
FAILED-CHANGE
error condition.
:posix
vs. :lisp
properties
:posix
properties should not make any assumptions about what localhost is
– they may be running in the root Lisp, but they might be running in a Lisp
image running on an intermediary host, or even on the host to be configured.
They should perform I/O only by calling RUN
, RUNLINES
,
READ-REMOTE-FILE
, WRITE-REMOTE-FILE
, requesting prerequisite data, and
applying or unapplying other :posix
properties. Otherwise, they should be
pure functions.
:lisp
properties, by contrast, may (and should) assume that they are
running in a Lisp image on the host to which they are to be applied, so they
can perform arbitrary I/O in that context. They can also make use of RUN
,
RUNLINES
, READ-REMOTE-FILE
and WRITE-REMOTE-FILE
if desired.
:posix
properties are characterised by the limited set of ways in which
they perform I/O, not by the use of only facilities defined in the Single UNIX
Specification. Nevertheless, if a :posix
property or function intended to
be called by :posix
properties uses non-POSIX facilities, but it is not
obvious given the stated purpose of the property that it will do this, it is
good to mention the use of non-POSIX facilities in the docstring. For
examples of this, see USER:HAS-LOGIN-SHELL
and USER:PASSWD-FIELD
.