knife exec
Use the knife exec
subcommand to execute Ruby scripts in the context of a fully configured Chef Infra Client. Use this subcommand to run scripts that will only access Chef Infra Server one time (or otherwise very infrequently) or any time that an operation does not warrant full usage of the knife subcommand library.
Authenticated API Requests
The knife exec
subcommand can be used to make authenticated API requests to the Chef Infra Server using the following methods:
Method | Description |
---|---|
api.delete |
Use to delete an object from the Chef Infra Server. |
api.get |
Use to get the details of an object on the Chef Infra Server. |
api.post |
Use to add an object to the Chef Infra Server. |
api.put |
Use to update an object on the Chef Infra Server. |
These methods are used with the -E
option, which executes that string locally on the workstation using chef-shell. These methods have the following syntax:
knife exec -E 'api.method(/endpoint)'
where:
-
api.method
is the corresponding authentication method —api.delete
,api.get
,api.post
, orapi.put
-
/endpoint
is an endpoint in the Chef Infra Server API
For example, to get the data for a node named “Example_Node”:
knife exec -E 'puts api.get("/nodes/Example_Node")'
and to ensure that the output is visible in the console, add the puts
in front of the API authorization request:
knife exec -E 'puts api.get("/nodes/Example_Node")'
where puts
is the shorter version of the $stdout.puts
predefined variable in Ruby.
The following example shows how to add a client named “IBM305RAMAC” and the /clients
endpoint, and then return the private key for that user in the console:
client_desc = {
"name" => "IBM305RAMAC",
"admin" => false
}
new_client = api.post("/clients", client_desc)
puts new_client["private_key"]
Ruby Scripts
For Ruby scripts that will be run using the exec
subcommand, note the following:
- The Ruby script must be located on the system from which knife is run (and not be located on any of the systems that knife will be managing).
- Shell commands will be run from a management workstation. For example, something like
%x[ls -lash /opt/only-on-a-node]
would give you the directory listing for the “opt/only-on-a-node” directory or a “No such file or directory” error if the file does not already exist locally. - When the chef-shell DSL is available, the Chef Infra Client DSL will not be (unless the management workstation is also a Chef Infra Client). Without the Chef Infra Client DSL, a bash block cannot be used to run bash commands.
Syntax
This subcommand has the following syntax:
knife exec SCRIPT (options)
Options
Note
This subcommand has the following options:
-
-E CODE
,--exec CODE
A string of code to be executed.
-
-p PATH:PATH
,--script-path PATH:PATH
A colon-separated path at which Ruby scripts are located. Use to override the default location for scripts. When this option is not specified, knife will look for scripts located in
chef-repo/.chef/scripts
directory.
Note
Examples
The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:
Run Ruby scripts
There are three ways to use knife exec
to run Ruby script files. For example:
knife exec /path/to/script_file
or:
knife exec -E 'RUBY CODE'
or:
knife exec
RUBY CODE
^D
Chef Knife status
To check the status of knife using a Ruby script named status.rb
(which looks like):
printf "%-5s %-12s %-8s %s\n", "Check In", "Name", "Ruby", "Recipes"
nodes.all do |n|
checkin = Time.at(n['ohai_time']).strftime("%F %R")
rubyver = n['languages']['ruby']['version']
recipes = n.run_list.expand(_default).recipes.join(", ")
printf "%-20s %-12s %-8s %s\n", checkin, n.name, rubyver, recipes
end
and is located in a directory named scripts/
, enter:
knife exec scripts/status.rb
List available free memory
To show the available free memory for all nodes, enter:
knife exec -E 'nodes.all {|n| puts "#{n.name} has #{n.memory.total} free memory"}'
List available search indexes
To list all of the available search indexes, enter:
knife exec -E 'puts api.get("search").keys'
Query for multiple attributes
To query a node for multiple attributes using a Ruby script named search_attributes.rb
(which looks like):
% cat scripts/search_attributes.rb
query = ARGV[2]
attributes = ARGV[3].split(",")
puts "Your query: #{query}"
puts "Your attributes: #{attributes.join(" ")}"
results = {}
search(:node, query) do |n|
results[n.name] = {}
attributes.each {|a| results[n.name][a] = n[a]}
end
puts results
exit 0
enter:
% knife exec scripts/search_attributes.rb "hostname:test_system" ipaddress,fqdn
to return something like:
Your query: hostname:test_system
Your attributes: ipaddress fqdn
{"test_system.example.com"=>{"ipaddress"=>"10.1.1.200", "fqdn"=>"test_system.example.com"}}
Find shadow cookbooks
To find all of the locations in which cookbooks exist that may shadow each other, create a file called shadow-check.rb
that contains the following Ruby code:
config = Chef::Config
cookbook_loader = begin
Chef::Cookbook::FileVendor.on_create { |manifest| Chef::Cookbook::FileSystemFileVendor.new(manifest, config[:cookbook_path]) }
Chef::CookbookLoader.new(config[:cookbook_path])
end
ui = Chef::Knife::UI.new($stdout, $stderr, $stdin, {})
cookbook_loader.load_cookbooks
if cookbook_loader.merged_cookbooks.empty?
ui.msg "cookbooks ok"
else
ui.warn "* " * 40
ui.warn(<<-WARNING)
The cookbooks: #{cookbook_loader.merged_cookbooks.join(', ')} exist in multiple places in your cookbook_path.
A composite version of these cookbooks has been compiled for uploading.
#{ui.color('IMPORTANT:', :red, :bold)} In a future version of Chef, this behavior will be removed and you will no longer
be able to have the same version of a cookbook in multiple places in your cookbook_path.
WARNING
ui.warn "The affected cookbooks are located:"
ui.output ui.format_for_display(cookbook_loader.merged_cookbook_paths)
ui.warn "* " * 40
end
Put this file in the directory of your choice. Run the following command:
knife exec shadow-check.rb
and be sure to edit shadow-check.rb
so that it defines the path to that file correctly.
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https://docs.chef.io/knife_exec/