X-Git-Url: https://review.fuel-infra.org/gitweb?a=blobdiff_plain;f=README.md;h=581277bde051039e1a6a8c0f93b843f6920d2e64;hb=6691c2faded01d273672b4db36f5a8651d3a934f;hp=e2271b847f2cf14ed3ba58e780541df3ce32c98d;hpb=ab6f6d31468ae865d1ff8ba7ec108802d5b27625;p=puppet-modules%2Fpuppetlabs-apt.git diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index e2271b8..581277b 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -138,6 +138,45 @@ If you wish to pin a number of packages you may specify the packages as a space delimited string using the `packages` attribute or pass in an array of package names. +### apt::hold + +When you wish to hold a package in Puppet is should be done by passing in +'held' as the ensure attribute to the package resource. However, a lot of +public modules do not take this into account and generally do not work well +with an ensure of 'held'. + +There is an additional issue that when Puppet is told to hold a package, it +will hold it at the current version installed, there is no way to tell it in +one go to install a specific version and then hold that version without using +an exec resource that wraps `dpkg --set-selections` or `apt-mark`. + +At first glance this could also be solved by just passing the version required +to the ensure attribute but that only means that Puppet will install that +version once it processes that package. It does not inform apt that we want +this package to be held. In other words; if another package somehow wants to +upgrade this one (because of a version requirement in a dependency), apt +should not allow it. + +In order to solve this you can use apt::hold. It's implemented by creating +a preferences file with a priority of 1001, meaning that under normal +circumstances this preference will always win. Because the priority is > 1000 +apt will interpret this as 'this should be the version installed and I am +allowed to downgrade the current package if needed'. + +With this you can now set a package's ensure attribute to 'latest' but still +get the version specified by apt::hold. You can do it like this: + + apt::hold { 'vim': + version => '2:7.3.547-7', + } + +Since you might just want to hold Vim at version 7.3 and not care about the +rest you can also pass in a version with a glob: + + apt::hold { 'vim': + version => '2:7.3.*', + } + ### apt::ppa Adds a ppa repository using `add-apt-repository`. @@ -176,6 +215,27 @@ If you would like to configure your system so the source is the Puppet Labs APT key_server => 'pgp.mit.edu', } + +#### Hiera example +
+apt::sources:
+  'debian_unstable':
+      location: 'http://debian.mirror.iweb.ca/debian/'
+      release: 'unstable'
+      repos: 'main contrib non-free'
+      required_packages: 'debian-keyring debian-archive-keyring'
+      key: '55BE302B'
+      key_server: 'subkeys.pgp.net'
+      pin: '-10'
+      include_src: 'true'
+
+  'puppetlabs':
+      location: 'http://apt.puppetlabs.com'
+      repos: 'main'
+      key: '4BD6EC30'
+      key_server: 'pgp.mit.edu'
+
+ ### Testing The APT module is mostly a collection of defined resource types, which provide reusable logic that can be leveraged to manage APT. It does provide smoke tests for testing functionality on a target system, as well as spec tests for checking a compiled catalog against an expected set of resources. @@ -243,6 +303,7 @@ A lot of great people have contributed to this module. A somewhat current list f * Branan Purvine-Riley * Christian G. Warden * Dan Bode +* Daniel Tremblay * Garrett Honeycutt * Jeff Wallace * Ken Barber @@ -257,3 +318,4 @@ A lot of great people have contributed to this module. A somewhat current list f * Spencer Krum * William Van Hevelingen * Zach Leslie +* Daniele Sluijters