So, I implemented it as you suggested. It works for most of the hosts (35 out
of 42), but it finishes with:
File "/home/cmacnevin/fab/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/fabric/group.py",
line 153, in run
raise GroupException(results)
fabric.exceptions.GroupException
I’d like to be able to try and view the GroupResults.failed to see which hosts
didn’t make it, as with this method,
the output is printed to STDOUT but the hostnames aren’t. So without a
dict(like) object to query and without the
hostname explicitly stated, I don’t know who’s who or who isn’t who 😊
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Jeff Forcier
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2018 11:15 AM
To: Christian MacNevin <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Fab-user] New to fabric 2. Using groups with Connection?
I'd like to bang out another 1 or 2 nice new features before I drop 2.3, but
even if I don't, I'll make sure to push it out by early next week.
On Tue, Jul 24, 2018 at 10:38 AM, Christian MacNevin
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Thanks so much for the epic response So far Fabric 2 seems more sensible in a
lot of ways, and since my old codebase was so integrated into a former
employer’s infrastructure, I’m going to keep trying to operate in the new world.
I’ll work through the workaround for now. When is 2.3 likely to drop?
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On Behalf Of Jeff Forcier
Sent: Monday, July 23, 2018 9:56 PM
To: Christian MacNevin <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Fab-user] New to fabric 2. Using groups with Connection?
Hi Christian,
First, do note you can always fall back to Fabric 1 for a while if Fabric 2
isn't yet up to snuff for your particular use case. We're still feeling out
some of the APIs in terms of ease of use. Unfortunately, Group is one of those
- it's real basic right now.
I just looked and there's no great way to set global connect_kwargs in such an
object, without creating your own Connections to hand to its alternate
constructor 'from_connections()':
```
hosts = ['switch1', 'switch2', 'switch3']
connections = [Connection(host=host, user='user', connect_kwargs={'password':
'pw'}) for host in hosts]
switch_group = group.SerialGroup.from_connections(connections)
@task
def inventory(c):
switch_group.run('show chassis hardware')
```
That's not the end of the world, but it's not ideal, so I just made
https://github.com/fabric/fabric/issues/1831 and then (since I was thinking
about it and it was very easy for once) implemented it. It'll be out in the
next feature release!
The rest of your issues are more high level, so here's a bit of a wall of text
(sorry!):
Version 2 is much less implicit/magic than v1 – all objects need to fit
together in obvious, Pythonic ways (such as being handed to one another in
constructors or method calls). For example, context managers don't change any
object besides the one that they yield, so trying to do things to switch_group
inside a context manager about some other Connection object won't do anything.
(This is as opposed to e.g. 'with settings()' in v1, which I assume you were
thinking of; it, like the rest of that API, is all about magically twiddling
data behind the scenes.)
Connections can't be created without some 'host' argument, which I think is
triggering your TypeError. This ought to be in its __init__ docs, FWIW :) See
the code example above; you either need to make your Group from
explicitly-created Connections, where a host arg is being given, or (after the
next release) you can tell the Group's constructor about connect_kwargs.
Depending on your use case, there's a CLI flag that may replace your getpass
code:
http://docs.fabfile.org/en/2.2/cli.html#cmdoption-prompt-for-login-password
Which brings us to that context argument in the task signature: that's how
`fab` explicitly transmits CLI and config info to your tasks, including the
connection password. However, this introduces some ordering problems with your
code - you need to pass that context's config into your Group or Connections.
Should be easily solved by moving away from module-level code exec (which is
honestly an antipattern anyways). Based on my above snippet:
```
hosts = ['switch1', 'switch2', 'switch3']
def make_group(c):
connections = [
Connection(host=host, user='user', config=c.config)
for host in hosts
]
return group.SerialGroup.from_connections(connections)
@task
def inventory(c):
switch_group = make_group(c)
switch_group.run('show chassis hardware')
```
Or, after 2.3 comes out, you could arguably nix make_group() again, though
hopefully you can see the various opportunities for refactoring, given that
everything is explicit:
```
hosts = ['switch1', 'switch2', 'switch3']
@task
def inventory(c):
switch_group = SerialGroup(*hosts, config=c.config)
switch_group.run('show chassis hardware')
```
Finally: if you're thinking "ok, but it'd be so nice to just plop my switch
hostnames and the fact that I want password prompting all the time, into a
config file and call it done": that sort of thing is definitely in the
pipeline! As I said up top, we're still hashing out a lot of the 'convenience'
angles here, even though the core APIs are mostly in good shape.
Hope that all helps,
Jeff
On Mon, Jul 23, 2018 at 3:45 PM, Christian MacNevin
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi all,
I’m new to Fabric 2, though in the past I’d used 1 a lot. I can find docs on
using SerialGroup, but only with run directly. I’m using interactive mode
authentication, so it seems like I need to gather a password (that’s fine, I’m
doing it via getpass) and also pass kwargs into Connection. I have a large
list of hosts, and also was planning to use @task decorators.
What I have right now is a muddle between the two which obviously won’t work,
but I can’t figure out how to glue the three
concepts of having a defined group, a task which can be specified from the cli,
and an interactive user/pass sequence together.
import getpass
from fabric import Connection, group
from invoke import task
switch_group = group.SerialGroup(switch1', 'switch2', 'switch3')
pw = getpass.getpass("Password for netuser?")
@task
def inventory(c): <-- This is purely here because tasks will error out if a
kwarg ‘Context(..?)’ isn’t specified
with Connection(user = 'user', connect_kwargs = {'password' : pw }) as c:
switch_group.run('show chassis hardware')
It’s failing out with ’TypeError: __init__() takes at least 2 arguments (3
given)’
_______________________________________________
Fab-user mailing list
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fab-user
--
Jeff Forcier
Unix sysadmin; Python engineer
http://bitprophet.org
________________________________
This email message is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may
contain confidential information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or
distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please
contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original
message.
________________________________
--
Jeff Forcier
Unix sysadmin; Python engineer
http://bitprophet.org
_______________________________________________
Fab-user mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fab-user