#powershell
####Table of Contents
- Overview
- Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful
- Setup - The basics of getting started with powershell
- Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
- Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
##Overview
This module adds a new exec provider capable of executing PowerShell commands.
##Module Description
Puppet provides a built-in exec
type that is capable of executing commands. This module adds a powershell
provider to the exec
type, which enables exec
parameters, listed below. This module is particularly helpful if you need to run PowerShell commands but don't know the details about how PowerShell is executed, since you can technically run PowerShell commands in Puppet without the module.
##Setup
###Setup Requirements
This module requires PowerShell to be installed and the powershell.exe
to be available in the system PATH.
###Beginning with powershell
The powershell module adapts the Puppet exec resource to run PowerShell commands. To get started, simply install the module and declare 'powershell' in provider
with the applicable command.
exec { 'RESOURCENAME':
command => '$(SOMECOMMAND)',
provider => powershell,
}
##Usage
When using exec
resources with the powershell
provider, the command
parameter must be single-quoted to prevent Puppet from interpolating $(..)
.
For instance, if you wanted to rename the Guest account:
exec { 'rename-guest':
command => '$(Get-WMIObject Win32_UserAccount -Filter "Name=\'guest\'").Rename("new-guest")',
unless => 'if (Get-WmiObject Win32_UserAccount -Filter "Name=\'guest\'") { exit 1 }',
provider => powershell,
}
Note that the example uses the unless
parameter to make the resource idempotent. The command
is only executed if the Guest account does not exist, as indicated by unless
returning 0.
Note: PowerShell variables (e.g. $_
), must be escaped in Puppet manifests either using backslashes or single quotes.
Alternatively, you can put the PowerShell code for the command
, onlyif
, and unless
parameters into separate files and then invoke the file function in the resource. Templates and the template()
function could also be used here if the PowerShell scripts need to have access to variables from Puppet.
exec { 'rename-guest':
command => file('guest/rename-guest.ps1'),
onlyif => file('guest/guest-exists.ps1'),
provider => powershell,
logoutput => true,
}
Each file is a PowerShell script that should be in the module's files/
folder.
For example, here is the script at: guest/files/rename-guest.ps1
$obj = $(Get-WMIObject Win32_UserAccount -Filter "Name='Guest'")
$obj.Rename("OtherGuest")
This has the added benefit of not requiring escaping '$' in the PowerShell code. Note that the files need to have DOS linefeeds or they will not work as expected. One tool for converting UNIX linefeeds to DOS linefeeds is unix2dos.
##Reference
####Provider
- powershell - Adapts the Puppet
exec
resource to run PowerShell commands.
####Parameters All parameters are optional.
#####creates
Specifies the file to look for before running the command. The command will only run if the file doesn't exist. Note: This parameter will not create a file, it will simpy look for one. Valid options: A string of the path to the file. Default: Undefined.
#####cwd
Sets the directory from which to run the command. Valid options: A string of the directory path. Default: Undefined.
#####command
Specifies the actual PowerShell command to execute. Must either be fully qualified or a search path for the command must be provided. Valid options: String. Default: Undefined.
#####environment
Sets additional environment variables to set for a command. Valid options: String, or an array of multiple options. Default: Undefined.
#####logoutput
Defines whether to log command output in addition to logging the exit code. If you specify 'on_failure', it only logs the output when the command has an exit code that does not match any value specified by the returns
attribute. Valid options: 'true', 'false', and 'on_failure'. Default: 'on_failure'.
#####onlyif
Runs the exec only if the command returns 0. Valid options: String. Default: Undefined.
#####path
Specifies the search path used for command execution. Valid options: String of the path, an array, or a semicolon-separated list. Default: Undefined.
#####refresh
Refreshes the command. Valid options: String. Default: Undefined.
#####refreshonly
Refreshes the command only when a dependent object is changed. Used with subscribe
and notify
metaparameters. Valid options: 'true', 'false'. Default: 'false'.
#####returns
Lists the expected return code(s). An error will be returned if the executed command returns something else. Valid options: An array of acceptable return codes or a single value. Default: 0.
#####timeout
Sets the maximum time in seconds that the command should take. Valid options: Number or string representation of a number. Default: 300.
#####tries
Determines the number of times execution of the command should be attempted. Valid options: Number or a string representation of a number. Default: '1'.
#####try_sleep
Specifies the time to sleep in seconds between tries
. Valid options: Number or a string representation of a number. Default: Undefined.
#####unless
Runs the exec
, unless the command returns 0. Valid options: String. Default: Undefined.
##Limitations
- Only supported on Windows Server 2003 and above, and Windows 7 and above.
##Development
Puppet Inc modules on the Puppet Forge are open projects, and community contributions are essential for keeping them great. We can’t access the huge number of platforms and myriad hardware, software, and deployment configurations that Puppet is intended to serve. We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes so that our modules work in your environment. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things. For more information, see our module contribution guide.