ansible/library/utilities/wait_for
Jeff Geerling 40e5f641e4 Update wait_for documentation - remove extra quote
The timeout is in seconds (int), and the extra quote at the end could throw someone off if they're copying and pasting the example.
2014-01-27 12:09:54 -06:00

201 lines
6.6 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# (c) 2012, Jeroen Hoekx <jeroen@hoekx.be>
#
# 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
import socket
import datetime
import time
import sys
import re
DOCUMENTATION = '''
---
module: wait_for
short_description: Waits for a condition before continuing.
description:
- Waiting for a port to become available is useful for when services
are not immediately available after their init scripts return -
which is true of certain Java application servers. It is also
useful when starting guests with the M(virt) module and
needing to pause until they are ready. This module can
also be used to wait for a file to be available on the filesystem
or with a regex match a string to be present in a file.
version_added: "0.7"
options:
host:
description:
- hostname or IP address to wait for
required: false
default: "127.0.0.1"
aliases: []
timeout:
description:
- maximum number of seconds to wait for
required: false
default: 300
delay:
description:
- number of seconds to wait before starting to poll
required: false
default: 0
port:
description:
- port number to poll
required: false
state:
description:
- either C(present), C(started), or C(stopped)
- When checking a port C(started) will ensure the port is open, C(stopped) will check that it is closed
- When checking for a file or a search string C(present) or C(started) will ensure that the file or string is present before continuing
choices: [ "present", "started", "stopped" ]
default: "started"
path:
version_added: "1.4"
required: false
description:
- path to a file on the filesytem that must exist before continuing
search_regex:
version_added: "1.4"
required: false
description:
- with the path option can be used match a string in the file that must match before continuing. Defaults to a multiline regex.
notes: []
requirements: []
author: Jeroen Hoekx, John Jarvis
'''
EXAMPLES = '''
# wait 300 seconds for port 8000 to become open on the host, don't start checking for 10 seconds
- wait_for: port=8000 delay=10
# wait until the file /tmp/foo is present before continuing
- wait_for: path=/tmp/foo
# wait until the string "completed" is in the file /tmp/foo before continuing
- wait_for: path=/tmp/foo search_regex=completed
'''
def main():
module = AnsibleModule(
argument_spec = dict(
host=dict(default='127.0.0.1'),
timeout=dict(default=300),
connect_timeout=dict(default=5),
delay=dict(default=0),
port=dict(default=None),
path=dict(default=None),
search_regex=dict(default=None),
state=dict(default='started', choices=['started', 'stopped', 'present']),
),
)
params = module.params
host = params['host']
timeout = int(params['timeout'])
connect_timeout = int(params['connect_timeout'])
delay = int(params['delay'])
if params['port']:
port = int(params['port'])
else:
port = None
state = params['state']
path = params['path']
search_regex = params['search_regex']
if port and path:
module.fail_json(msg="port and path parameter can not both be passed to wait_for")
if path and state == 'stopped':
module.fail_json(msg="state=stopped should only be used for checking a port in the wait_for module")
start = datetime.datetime.now()
if delay:
time.sleep(delay)
if state == 'stopped':
### first wait for the stop condition
end = start + datetime.timedelta(seconds=timeout)
while datetime.datetime.now() < end:
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.settimeout(connect_timeout)
try:
s.connect( (host, port) )
s.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
s.close()
time.sleep(1)
except:
break
else:
elapsed = datetime.datetime.now() - start
module.fail_json(msg="Timeout when waiting for %s:%s to stop." % (host, port), elapsed=elapsed.seconds)
elif state in ['started', 'present']:
### wait for start condition
end = start + datetime.timedelta(seconds=timeout)
while datetime.datetime.now() < end:
if path:
try:
f = open(path)
try:
if search_regex:
if re.search(search_regex, f.read(), re.MULTILINE):
break
else:
time.sleep(1)
else:
break
finally:
f.close()
except IOError:
time.sleep(1)
pass
elif port:
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.settimeout(connect_timeout)
try:
s.connect( (host, port) )
s.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
s.close()
break
except:
time.sleep(1)
pass
else:
elapsed = datetime.datetime.now() - start
if port:
module.fail_json(msg="Timeout when waiting for %s:%s" % (host, port), elapsed=elapsed.seconds)
elif path:
if search_regex:
module.fail_json(msg="Timeout when waiting for search string %s in %s" % (search_regex, path), elapsed=elapsed.seconds)
else:
module.fail_json(msg="Timeout when waiting for file %s" % (path), elapsed=elapsed.seconds)
elapsed = datetime.datetime.now() - start
module.exit_json(state=state, port=port, search_regex=search_regex, path=path, elapsed=elapsed.seconds)
# import module snippets
from ansible.module_utils.basic import *
main()