#!/usr/bin/python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # (c) 2012, Michael DeHaan , and others # # This file is part of Ansible # # Ansible is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # Ansible is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with Ansible. If not, see . import subprocess import sys import datetime import traceback import re import shlex import os DOCUMENTATION = ''' --- module: command short_description: Executes a command on a remote node description: - The command module takes the command name followed by a list of arguments, space delimited. - The given command will be executed on all selected nodes. It will not be processed through the shell, so variables like C($HOME) and operations like C("<"), C(">"), C("|"), and C("&") will not work. As such, all paths to commands must be fully qualified options: free_form: description: - the command module takes a free form command to run required: true default: null aliases: [] creates: description: - a filename, when it already exists, this step will B(not) be run. required: no default: null chdir: description: - cd into this directory before running the command version_added: "0.6" required: false default: null examples: - code: command /sbin/shutdown -t now description: "Example from Ansible Playbooks" - code: command /usr/bin/make_database.sh arg1 arg2 creates=/path/to/database description: "I(creates) and I(chdir) can be specified after the command. For instance, if you only want to run a command if a certain file does not exist, use this." notes: - If you want to run a command through the shell (say you are using C(<), C(>), C(|), etc), you actually want the M(shell) module instead. The M(command) module is much more secure as it's not affected by the user's environment. author: Michael DeHaan ''' def main(): # the command module is the one ansible module that does not take key=value args # hence don't copy this one if you are looking to build others! module = CommandModule(argument_spec=dict()) shell = module.params['shell'] chdir = module.params['chdir'] args = module.params['args'] if args.strip() == '': module.fail_json(msg="no command given") if chdir: os.chdir(os.path.expanduser(chdir)) if not shell: args = shlex.split(args) startd = datetime.datetime.now() try: cmd = subprocess.Popen(args, shell=shell, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) out, err = cmd.communicate() except (OSError, IOError), e: module.fail_json(cmd=args, msg=str(e)) except: module.fail_json(msg=traceback.format_exc()) endd = datetime.datetime.now() delta = endd - startd if out is None: out = '' if err is None: err = '' module.exit_json( cmd = args, stdout = out.strip(), stderr = err.strip(), rc = cmd.returncode, start = str(startd), end = str(endd), delta = str(delta), changed = True ) # include magic from lib/ansible/module_common.py #<> # only the command module should ever need to do this # everything else should be simple key=value class CommandModule(AnsibleModule): def _handle_aliases(self): pass def _check_invalid_arguments(self): pass def _load_params(self): ''' read the input and return a dictionary and the arguments string ''' args = MODULE_ARGS params = {} params['chdir'] = None params['shell'] = False if args.find("#USE_SHELL") != -1: args = args.replace("#USE_SHELL", "") params['shell'] = True r = re.compile(r'(^|\s)(creates|removes|chdir)=(?P[\'"])?(.*?)(?(quote)(?