correct typos and metacharecter expansion
Signed-off-by: Nico Schottelius <nico@brief.schottelius.org>
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1 changed files with 11 additions and 7 deletions
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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
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## Introduction
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This article describes one solution to transfer a folder
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and all of its contents recursively with [[cdist homepage|software/cdist]]
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and all of its contents recursively with [[cdist|software/cdist]]
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to target hosts. I am motivated to do so, because I want to have one
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central place to configure the tftproot that I may use on a variety
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of KVM hosts.
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@ -11,7 +11,11 @@ of KVM hosts.
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Traditionally, it is not an easy job to handle recursive transfer correctly
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and efficiently in a configuration management system. Using a sophisticated
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tool like [rsync](http://rsync.samba.org/) or
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[unison](http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/) makes life way easier.
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[unison](http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/) makes life
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usually way easier.
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If you just have a minor number of files, like I have in this case,
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doing a recursive copy with cdist may be the easist way.
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## Copying the files recursively
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@ -20,14 +24,14 @@ file transfer and directory management.
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The type **\_\_nico\_tftp\_root**,
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which can be found in the
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[cdist-nico git repository](http://git.schottelius.org/?p=cdist-nico)
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(below **cdist/conf/type**) recursively copies all files it has to
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(below **cdist/conf/type**) recursively copies all files it contains to
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the folder **/home/service/tftp**. Only when a file is changed, it
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is transferred again (the **\_\_file** type takes care of this).
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## The manifest
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In cdist, a manifest of a type defines, which other types to use.
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A manifest file is essentially shell code, that can call other
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A manifest file is essentially shell code that can call other
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cdist types.
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To accomplish the task, first of all the base directory is created
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@ -51,7 +55,7 @@ Now, for every file I determine the remote file name. Furthermore
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dependencies to the required directories are setup:
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You can **require** another type to be run before a type, by setting
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up the **require** environment variable (this will be changed in cdist
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2.1. and replaced in 2.2, but there is still some time until this is released).
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2.1. and replaced in 2.2, but there is still some time until this happens).
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The remote name is constructed by this line:
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@ -62,8 +66,8 @@ And the requirement is setup using this line:
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# Require the previous directory in the path
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export require="__directory/${name%/*}"
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The shell (!) knows about string manipulation: ${variablename%/*} replaces
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the shortest matching suffix that equals "/*". And thus the previous
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The shell (!) knows about string manipulation: ${variablename%/\*} replaces
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the shortest matching suffix that equals "/\*". And thus the previous
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statement removes the last part of the path (also known as dirname).
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If the file found by find is a file, we call the \_\_file type,
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