# Create a dedicated config file from a jinja template # # usage: ynh_add_jinja_config --template="template" --destination="destination" # | arg: -t, --template= - Template config file to use # | arg: -d, --destination= - Destination of the config file # | arg: -i, --ignore_vars= - List separated by space of script variables to ignore and don't pass in the jinja context. # | This could be useful mainly for special share which can't be retried by reference name (like the array). # # examples: # ynh_add_jinja_config --template="app.conf" --destination="$install_dir/app.conf" # ynh_add_jinja_config --template="app-env" --destination="$install_dir/app-env" --ignore_vars="complex_array yolo" # # The template can be by default the name of a file in the conf directory # # The helper will verify the checksum and backup the destination file # if it's different before applying the new template. # # And it will calculate and store the destination file checksum # into the app settings when configuration is done. # ## ## About the variables passed to the template: ## # # All variable defined in the script are available into the template (as string) except someone described below. # If a variable make crash the helper for some reason (by example if the variable is of type array) # or you just want to don't pass a specific variable for some other reason you can add it in the '--ignore_vars=' parameter as described above. # Here are the list of ignored variable and so there won't never be available in the template: # - All system environment variable like (TERM, USER, PATH, LANG, etc). # If you need someone you just need to declare an other variable with the same value. # Note that all Yunohost variable whose name begins by 'YNH_' are available and can be used in the template. # - This following list: # legacy_args args_array template destination ignore_vars template_path python_env_var ignore_var_regex # progress_scale progress_string0 progress_string1 progress_string2 # old changed binds types file_hash formats # ## ## Usage in templates: ## # # For a full documentation of the template you can refer to: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/3.1.x/templates/ # In Yunohost context there are no really some specificity except that all variable passed are of type string. # So here are some example of recommended usage: # # If you need a conditional block # # {% if should_my_block_be_shown == 'true' %} # ... # {% endif %} # # or # # {% if should_my_block_be_shown == '1' %} # ... # {% endif %} # # If you need to iterate with loop: # # {% for yolo in var_with_multiline_value.splitlines() %} # ... # {% endfor %} # # or # # {% for jail in my_var_with_coma.split(',') %} # ... # {% endfor %} # ynh_add_jinja_config() { # Declare an array to define the options of this helper. local legacy_args=tdi local -A args_array=([t]=template= [d]=destination= [i]=ignore_vars= ) local template local destination local ignore_vars # Manage arguments with getopts ynh_handle_getopts_args "$@" local template_path # ## List of all vars ignored and not passed to the template # WARNING Update the list on the helper documentation at the top of the helper, if you change this list # # local vars used in the helper ignore_vars+=" legacy_args args_array template destination ignore_vars template_path python_env_var ignore_var_regex" # yunohost helpers ignore_vars+=" progress_scale progress_string0 progress_string1 progress_string2" # Arrays used in config panel ignore_vars+=" old changed binds types file_hash formats" if [ -f "$YNH_APP_BASEDIR/conf/$template" ]; then template_path="$YNH_APP_BASEDIR/conf/$template" elif [ -f "$template" ]; then template_path=$template else ynh_die --message="The provided template $template doesn't exist" fi ynh_backup_if_checksum_is_different --file="$destination" # Make sure to set the permissions before we copy the file # This is to cover a case where an attacker could have # created a file beforehand to have control over it # (cp won't overwrite ownership / modes by default...) touch "$destination" chown root:root "$destination" chmod 640 "$destination" local python_env_var='' local ignore_var_regex ignore_var_regex="$(echo "$ignore_vars" | sed -E 's@^\s*(.*\w)\s*$@\1@g' | sed -E 's@(\s+)@|@g')" while read -r one_var; do # Blacklist of var to not pass to template if { [[ "$one_var" =~ ^[A-Z0-9_]+$ ]] && [[ "$one_var" != YNH_* ]]; } \ || [[ "$one_var" =~ ^($ignore_var_regex)$ ]]; then continue fi # Well python is very bad for the last character on raw string # https://stackoverflow.com/questions/647769/why-cant-pythons-raw-string-literals-end-with-a-single-backslash # So the solution here is to add one last char '-' so we know what it is # and we are sure that it not \ or ' or something else which will be problematic with python # And then we remove it while we are processing python_env_var+="$one_var=r'''${!one_var}-'''[:-1]," done <<< "$(compgen -v)" _ynh_apply_default_permissions "$destination" ( python3 -c 'import os, sys, jinja2; sys.stdout.write( jinja2.Template(source=sys.stdin.read(), undefined=jinja2.StrictUndefined, ).render('"$python_env_var"'));' <"$template_path" >"$destination" ) ynh_store_file_checksum --file="$destination" } # Check either a package is installed or not # # example: ynh_package_is_installed --package=yunohost && echo "installed" # # usage: ynh_package_is_installed --package=name [--wait_dpkg_free] # | arg: -p, --package= - the package name to check # | arg: -l, --wait_dpkg_free= - wait for dpkg to be free. # | Note that waiting on dpkg free could take about 0.2s on quick platform # | and about 2 seconds on slow platform so in case of multiple call it could be slow # | ret: 0 if the package is installed, 1 else. ynh_package_is_installed() { # Declare an array to define the options of this helper. local legacy_args=pl local -A args_array=([p]=package= [l]=wait_dpkg_free=) local package local wait_dpkg_free # Manage arguments with getopts ynh_handle_getopts_args "$@" wait_dpkg_free="${wait_dpkg_free:-0}" if [ "$wait_dpkg_free" -eq 1 ]; then ynh_wait_dpkg_free fi dpkg-query --show --showformat='${Status}' "$package" 2>/dev/null \ | grep --count "ok installed" &>/dev/null }