Merge pull request #12436 from amenonsen/ranges

Support «hosts: foo[1:]» and add tests for split/apply_subscript
This commit is contained in:
James Cammarata 2015-09-18 15:32:15 -04:00
commit 37f2cbc429
3 changed files with 41 additions and 5 deletions

View file

@ -79,8 +79,9 @@ You can refer to hosts within the group by adding a subscript to the group name:
webservers[0] # == cobweb
webservers[-1] # == weber
webservers[0:1] # == webservers[0]:webservers[1]
# == cobweb:webbing
webservers[0:1] # == webservers[0],webservers[1]
# == cobweb,webbing
webservers[1:] # == webbing,weber
Most people don't specify patterns as regular expressions, but you can. Just start the pattern with a '~'::

View file

@ -342,9 +342,9 @@ class Inventory(object):
r'''^
(.+) # A pattern expression ending with...
\[(?: # A [subscript] expression comprising:
(-?[0-9]+) # A single positive or negative number
| # Or a numeric range
([0-9]+)([:-])([0-9]+)
(-?[0-9]+)| # A single positive or negative number
([0-9]+)([:-]) # Or an x:y or x: range.
([0-9]*)
)\]
$
''', re.X
@ -357,6 +357,8 @@ class Inventory(object):
if idx:
subscript = (int(idx), None)
else:
if not end:
end = -1
subscript = (int(start), int(end))
if sep == '-':
display.deprecated("Use [x:y] inclusive subscripts instead of [x-y]", version=2.0, removed=True)
@ -375,6 +377,8 @@ class Inventory(object):
(start, end) = subscript
if end:
if end == -1:
end = len(hosts)-1
return hosts[start:end+1]
else:
return [ hosts[start] ]

View file

@ -19,6 +19,8 @@
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
import string
from ansible.compat.tests import unittest
from ansible.compat.tests.mock import patch, MagicMock
@ -44,6 +46,7 @@ class TestInventory(unittest.TestCase):
' a : b ': ['a', 'b'],
'foo:bar:baz[1:2]': ['foo', 'bar', 'baz[1:2]'],
}
pattern_lists = [
[['a'], ['a']],
[['a', 'b'], ['a', 'b']],
@ -52,6 +55,21 @@ class TestInventory(unittest.TestCase):
['9a01:7f8:191:7701::9', '9a01:7f8:191:7701::9','foo']]
]
# pattern_string: [ ('base_pattern', (a,b)), ['x','y','z'] ]
# a,b are the bounds of the subscript; x..z are the results of the subscript
# when applied to string.ascii_letters.
subscripts = {
'a': [('a',None), list(string.ascii_letters)],
'a[0]': [('a', (0, None)), ['a']],
'a[1]': [('a', (1, None)), ['b']],
'a[2:3]': [('a', (2, 3)), ['c', 'd']],
'a[-1]': [('a', (-1, None)), ['Z']],
'a[-2]': [('a', (-2, None)), ['Y']],
'a[48:]': [('a', (48, -1)), ['W', 'X', 'Y', 'Z']],
'a[49:]': [('a', (49, -1)), ['X', 'Y', 'Z']],
'a[1:]': [('a', (1, -1)), list(string.ascii_letters[1:])],
}
def setUp(self):
v = VariableManager()
@ -67,3 +85,16 @@ class TestInventory(unittest.TestCase):
for p, r in self.pattern_lists:
self.assertEqual(r, self.i._split_pattern(p))
def test_ranges(self):
for s in self.subscripts:
r = self.subscripts[s]
self.assertEqual(r[0], self.i._split_subscript(s))
self.assertEqual(
r[1],
self.i._apply_subscript(
list(string.ascii_letters),
r[0][1]
)
)