Templating recipe with remote resource support.
Project description
Template recipe which supports remote resource.
Inspired by collective.recipe.template, with minimum set of features, but with (hopefully) safer buildout-based templating.
“jinja2” entry point allows rendering jinja2 templates.
Usage
Getting started
You can start by a simple buildout:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... ... [section] ... option = value ... ''')
And a simple template:
>>> write('template.in', '${section:option}')
We run buildout:
>>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Installing template.
And the output file has been parsed by buildout itself:
>>> cat('template.out') value
Full options
There is two non required options:
- md5sum
Check the integrity of the input file.
- mode
Specify the filesystem permissions in octal notation.
Check file integrity
Let’s write a file template:
>>> write('template.in', '${buildout:parts}')
Compute its MD5 sum:
>>> import md5 >>> md5sum = md5.new(open('template.in', 'r').read()).hexdigest()
Write the buildout.cfg using slapos.recipe.template:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... md5sum = ''' + md5sum + ''' ... ''')
And run buildout, and see the result:
>>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('template.out') template
If the md5sum doesn’t match, the buildout fail:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... md5sum = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), While: Installing. Getting section template. Initializing part template. Error: MD5 checksum mismatch for local resource at 'template.in'.
Specify filesystem permissions
You can specify the mode of the written file:
>>> write('template.in', '${buildout:installed}') >>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... mode = 0627 ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template.
And the generated file with have the right permissions:
>>> import stat >>> import os >>> print oct(stat.S_IMODE(os.stat('template.out').st_mode)) 0627
Section dependency
You can use other part of buildout in the template. This way this parts will be installed as dependency:
>>> write('template.in', '${dependency:foobar}') >>> write('buildout.cfg', ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... ... [dependency] ... foobar = dependency content ... recipe = zc.buildout:debug ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing dependency. foobar='dependency content' recipe='zc.buildout:debug' Installing template.
This way you can get options which are computed in the __init__ of the dependent recipe.
Let’s create a sample recipe modifying its option dict:
>>> write('setup.py', ... ''' ... from setuptools import setup ... ... setup(name='samplerecipe', ... entry_points = { ... 'zc.buildout': [ ... 'default = main:Recipe', ... ], ... } ... ) ... ''') >>> write('main.py', ... ''' ... class Recipe(object): ... ... def __init__(self, buildout, name, options): ... options['data'] = 'foobar' ... ... def install(self): ... return [] ... ''')
Let’s just use buildout.cfg using this egg:
>>> write('template.in', '${sample:data}') >>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... develop = . ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template ... url = template.in ... output = template.out ... ... [sample] ... recipe = samplerecipe ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Develop: ... Uninstalling template. Uninstalling dependency. Installing sample. Installing template. >>> cat('template.out') foobar
Jinja2 usage
Getting started
Example buildout demonstrating some types:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = foo.in ... rendered = foo ... context = ... key bar section:key ... key recipe :recipe ... raw knight Ni ! ... import json_module json ... section param_dict parameter-collection ... ... [parameter-collection] ... foo = 1 ... bar = bar ... ... [section] ... key = value ... ''')
And according Jinja2 template (kept simple, control structures are possible):
>>> write('foo.in', ... '{{bar}}\n' ... 'Knights who say "{{knight}}"\n' ... '${this:is_literal}\n' ... '${foo:{{bar}}}\n' ... 'swallow: {{ json_module.dumps(("african", "european")) }}\n' ... 'parameters from section: {{ param_dict | dictsort }}\n' ... 'Rendered with {{recipe}}' ... )
We run buildout:
>>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Installing template.
And the template has been rendered:
>>> cat('foo') value Knights who say "Ni !" ${this:is_literal} ${foo:value} swallow: ["african", "european"] parameters from section: [('bar', 'bar'), ('foo', '1')] Rendered with slapos.recipe.template:jinja2
Parameters
Mandatory:
- template
Template url/path, as accepted by zc.buildout.download.Download.__call__ . For very short template, it can make sense to put it directly into buildout.cfg: the value is the template itself, prefixed by the string “inline:” + an optional newline.
- rendered
Where rendered template should be stored.
Optional:
- context
Jinja2 context specification, one variable per line, with 3 whitespace-separated parts: type, name and expression. Available types are described below. “name” is the variable name to declare. Expression semantic varies depending on the type.
Available types:
- raw
Immediate literal string.
- key
Indirect literal string.
- import
Import a python module.
- section
Make a whole buildout section available to template, as a dictionary.
Indirection targets are specified as: [section]:key . It is possible to use buildout’s buit-in variable replacement instead instead of key type, but keep in mind that different lines are different variables for this recipe. It might be what you want (factorising context chunk declarations), otherwise you should use indirect types.
- md5sum
Template’s MD5, for file integrity checking. By default, no integrity check is done.
- mode
Mode, in octal representation (no need for 0-prefix) to set output file to. This is applied before storing anything in output file.
- extensions
Jinja2 extensions to enable when rendering the template, whitespace-separated. By default, none is loaded.
- import-delimiter
Delimiter character for in-temlate imports. Defaults to /. See also: import-list
- import-list
Declares a list of import paths. Format is similar to context. “name” becomes import’s base name.
Available types:
- rawfile
Literal path of a file.
- file
Indirect path of a file.
- rawfolder
Literal path of a folder. Any file in such folder can be imported.
- folder
Indirect path of a folder. Any file in such folder can be imported.
FAQ
Q: How do I generate ${foo:bar} where foo comes from a variable ?
- A: {{ '${' ~ foo_var ~ ':bar}' }}
This is required as jinja2 fails parsing “${{{ foo_var }}:bar}”. Though, jinja2 succeeds at parsing “${foo:{{ bar_var }}}” so this trick isn’t needed for that case.
Use jinja2 extensions
>>> write('foo.in', ... '''{% set foo = ['foo'] -%} ... {% do foo.append(bar) -%} ... {{ foo | join(', ') }}''') >>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = foo.in ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar buildout:parts ... # We don't actually use all those extensions in this minimal example. ... extensions = jinja2.ext.do jinja2.ext.loopcontrols ... jinja2.ext.with_ ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template.>>> cat('foo') foo, template
Check file integrity
Compute template’s MD5 sum:
>>> write('foo.in', '{{bar}}') >>> import md5 >>> md5sum = md5.new(open('foo.in', 'r').read()).hexdigest() >>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = foo.in ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar buildout:parts ... md5sum = ''' + md5sum + ''' ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('foo') template
If the md5sum doesn’t match, the buildout fail:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = foo.in ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar buildout:parts ... md5sum = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), While: Installing. Getting section template. Initializing part template. Error: MD5 checksum mismatch for local resource at 'foo.in'.
Specify filesystem permissions
You can specify the mode for rendered file:
>>> write('template.in', '{{bar}}') >>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = template.in ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar buildout:parts ... mode = 205 ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template.
And the generated file with have the right permissions:
>>> import stat >>> import os >>> print oct(stat.S_IMODE(os.stat('foo').st_mode)) 0205
Note that Buildout will not allow you to have write permission for others and will silently remove it (i.e a 207 mode will become 205).
Template imports
Here is a simple template importing an equaly-simple library:
>>> write('template.in', ''' ... {%- import "library" as library -%} ... {{ library.foo() }} ... ''') >>> write('library.in', '{% macro foo() %}FOO !{% endmacro %}')
To import a template from rendered template, you need to specify what can be imported:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = template.in ... rendered = bar ... import-list = rawfile library library.in ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('bar') FOO !
Just like context definition, it also works with indirect values:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template-library] ... path = library.in ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = template.in ... rendered = bar ... import-list = file library template-library:path ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('bar') FOO !
This also works to allow importing from identically-named files in different directories:
>>> write('template.in', ''' ... {%- import "dir_a/1.in" as a1 -%} ... {%- import "dir_a/2.in" as a2 -%} ... {%- import "dir_b/1.in" as b1 -%} ... {%- import "dir_b/c/1.in" as bc1 -%} ... {{ a1.foo() }} ... {{ a2.foo() }} ... {{ b1.foo() }} ... {{ bc1.foo() }} ... ''') >>> mkdir('a') >>> mkdir('b') >>> mkdir(join('b', 'c')) >>> write(join('a', '1.in'), '{% macro foo() %}a1foo{% endmacro %}') >>> write(join('a', '2.in'), '{% macro foo() %}a2foo{% endmacro %}') >>> write(join('b', '1.in'), '{% macro foo() %}b1foo{% endmacro %}') >>> write(join('b', 'c', '1.in'), '{% macro foo() %}bc1foo{% endmacro %}')
All templates can be accessed inside both folders:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template-library] ... path = library.in ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = template.in ... rendered = bar ... import-list = ... rawfolder dir_a a ... rawfolder dir_b b ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('bar') a1foo a2foo b1foo bc1foo
It is possible to override default path delimiter (without any effect on final path):
>>> write('template.in', r''' ... {%- import "dir_a\\1.in" as a1 -%} ... {%- import "dir_a\\2.in" as a2 -%} ... {%- import "dir_b\\1.in" as b1 -%} ... {%- import "dir_b\\c\\1.in" as bc1 -%} ... {{ a1.foo() }} ... {{ a2.foo() }} ... {{ b1.foo() }} ... {{ bc1.foo() }} ... ''') >>> write('buildout.cfg', r''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template-library] ... path = library.in ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = template.in ... rendered = bar ... import-delimiter = \ ... import-list = ... rawfolder dir_a a ... rawfolder dir_b b ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing template. >>> cat('bar') a1foo a2foo b1foo bc1foo
Section dependency
You can use other part of buildout in the template. This way this parts will be installed as dependency:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ''' ... [buildout] ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = inline:{{bar}} ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar dependency:foobar ... ... [dependency] ... foobar = dependency content ... recipe = zc.buildout:debug ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Uninstalling template. Installing dependency. foobar='dependency content' recipe='zc.buildout:debug' Installing template.
This way you can get options which are computed in the __init__ of the dependent recipe.
Let’s create a sample recipe modifying its option dict:
>>> write('setup.py', ... ''' ... from setuptools import setup ... ... setup(name='samplerecipe', ... entry_points = { ... 'zc.buildout': [ ... 'default = main:Recipe', ... ], ... } ... ) ... ''') >>> write('main.py', ... ''' ... class Recipe(object): ... ... def __init__(self, buildout, name, options): ... options['data'] = 'foobar' ... ... def install(self): ... return [] ... ''')
Let’s just use buildout.cfg using this egg:
>>> write('buildout.cfg', ... ''' ... [buildout] ... develop = . ... parts = template ... ... [template] ... recipe = slapos.recipe.template:jinja2 ... template = inline: ... {{bar}} ... rendered = foo ... context = key bar sample:data ... ... [sample] ... recipe = samplerecipe ... ''') >>> print system(join('bin', 'buildout')), Develop: ... Uninstalling template. Uninstalling dependency. Installing sample. Installing template. >>> cat('foo') foobar
2.7 (2015-05-18)
jinja2: fix display of source in traceback when there is an error in the root template (or in instance parameters).
2.6 (2014-11-26)
jinja2: add many built-in functions from Python.
2.5 (2013-08-07)
Fix file import with Jinja2 >= 2.7
2.4.3 (2013-08-02)
jinja2: add support for inline templates.
2.4.2 (2012-08-21)
jinja2: Mode shall be used instead of umask. [Vincent Pelletier]
jinja2: Add jinja2 “import” directive support. [Vincent Pelletier, Timothee Lacroix]
Added rawfile and rawfolder types. [Vincent Pelletier, Timothee Lacroix]
Reworked loader classes [Vincent Pelletier]
2.4.1 (2012-08-01)
jinja2: Make “context” parameter really optional. [Vincent Pelletier]
2.4 (2012-06-01)
Provide access to zc.buildout.buildout.dumps when it exists. [Vincent Pelletier]
Fix missing jinja2 entry point documentation in pacakge description [Vincent Pelletier]
2.3 (2012-03-29)
Add jinja2 entry point with jinja2 template support. [Vincent Pelletier]
2.2 (2011-10-12)
Include missing files in package. [Łukasz Nowak]
2.1 (2011-10-12)
Description update. [Łukasz Nowak]
2.0 (2011-10-12)
Dropping collective.recipe.template dependency. [Romain Courteaud, Antoine Catton]
1.1 (2011-05-30)
Moved out from slapos.cookbook in order to minimise depenencies [Łukasz Nowak]
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