On 23.08.2012, at 07:59, Douglas Garstang wrote:
...
>> Normally this works:
>>
>> define task_one ( $user = 'root' ) {
>> file { '/tmp/one':
>> owner => $user,
>> content => $user,
>> }
>> }
>> define task_two ( $user = 'root' ) {
>> file { '/tmp/two':
>> owner => $user,
>> content => $user,
>> }
>> }
>> task_one { 'foo': }
>> task_two { 'foo': }
>> Task_one['foo'] -> Task_two['foo']
>>
>> You can also place the order inside the define:
>>
>> define task_two ( $user = 'root') {
>> file { '/tmp/two':
>> owner => $name,
>> content => $name,
>> }
>> Task_one["$name"] -> Task_two["$name"]
>> }
>
> This really irks me. Is this documented anywhere? How did Task_one get
> into scope inside Task_two? What is the scope for definitions? Are
> they global?
My testcase run in a single manifest. So all defines are within the same scope.
In case that you use modules you need to give the full scope on ordering.
e.g.
Modue_one::Task_one['foo'] -> Module_two::Task_two['foo']
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