Issue #8040 has been updated by Rob Terhaar.
Two years to discuss it, and two weeks to fix it ;) I am really happy this is finally fixed. Thank you everyone! ---------------------------------------- Bug #8040: Classes should be able to contain other classes to provide a self contained module https://projects.puppetlabs.com/issues/8040#change-97372 * Author: Jeff McCune * Status: Merged - Pending Release * Priority: Immediate * Assignee: Patrick Carlisle * Category: compiler * Target version: 3.x * Affected Puppet version: 2.6.0 * Keywords: anchor containment contain graph modules module self-contained dependency reuse usability forge backlog customer * Branch: https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppet/pull/1878 ---------------------------------------- # Overview # As a module author, I want to build collections of classes for end users shipped as a module. As a module end-user, I want to manage resources before and that require the collection of classes as a self contained unit of functionality. For example, the end user wants to use a module I write in the following way: <pre> node default { class { 'java': } -> class { 'activemq': } -> class { 'mcollective: } } </pre> Where java, activemq, and mcollective are all discrete modules with multiple classes each. For example, a each module has a class for the packages, a class for the configuration files, and a class for the running service if there is a service. With Puppet 2.6, when a class declares another class, the classes are not related to each other in any way, containment or dependency. # Expected Behavior # The example illustrates the expectation that all resources in the activemq module are managed after all resources in the java module and before all resources in the mcollective module. # Actual Behavior # Without the Anchor Pattern, when class activemq::service is declared from within class activemq, the resources float away and are not transitively related to java or mcollective. # Suggested Implementation # It has been expressed that it may be a viable solution for module authors to be able to specify containment edges in the graph from within the Puppet DSL. With Puppet 2.6.x and 2.7.x this is not possible. The Anchor Pattern works around this problem by specifying relationship edges to a resource contained within the composite class. # Work Around # The Anchor Pattern is the current work around for Puppet 2.6.x When a class declares other classes, it should contain them using this pattern: <pre> class activemq { anchor { 'activemq::begin': } anchor { 'activemq::end': } class { 'activemq::package': require => Anchor['activemq::begin'], } class { 'activemq::config': require => Class['activemq::config'], notify => Class['activemq::service'], } class { 'activemq::service': before => Anchor['activemq::end'], } } </pre> -- Jeff McCune Puppet Labs @0xEFF -- You have received this notification because you have either subscribed to it, or are involved in it. To change your notification preferences, please click here: http://projects.puppetlabs.com/my/account -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Puppet Bugs" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to puppet-bugs+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to puppet-bugs@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/puppet-bugs. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.