No, not a bug at all. Why do you think it might be? There is no reason to be concerned by the multiple notifications, either; Puppet is smart enough to only refresh the service once.
--Paul On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 12:52 PM, joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > This is interesting. What you describe does work, but it appears > there's a bug somewhere. I'm getting 2 reasons to bounce the service > out of the single file definition when checksum is mtime. Here is the > output: > > # puppetd --test > info: Caching catalog at /var/lib/puppet/localconfig.yaml > notice: Starting catalog run > notice: //Node[removed]/dns/File[/opt/management/dns/zones]/checksum: > checksum changed '{mtime}Fri Nov 07 15:46:17 -0500 2008' to > '{mtime}Fri Nov 07 15:47:02 -0500 2008' > notice: //Node[removed]/dns/File[/opt/management/dns/zones/removed- > ext.zone]/checksum: checksum changed '{mtime}Fri Nov 07 15:46:17 -0500 > 2008' to '{mtime}Fri Nov 07 15:47:02 -0500 2008' > info: //Node[removed]/dns/File[/opt/management/dns/zones]: Scheduling > refresh of Service[named] > info: //Node[removed]/dns/File[/opt/management/dns/zones]: Scheduling > refresh of Service[named] > notice: //Node[removed]/dns/Service[named]: Triggering 'refresh' from > 2 dependencies > notice: Finished catalog run in 6.72 seconds > > It appears from this output that puppet should be checksumming files > on recurse => true regardless of the checksumming scheme. Is this a > bug? > > On Nov 7, 3:11 pm, "Paul Lathrop" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Wrong. Set the checksum property to "mtime" on the directory resource. >> When a file in the directory changes, it will change the mtime of the >> directory which will trigger an event on any resources which subscribe >> to the directory. >> >> I have used this method a number of times to great success. >> >> --Paul >> >> On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 6:03 PM, Aj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> > No, there is no way. >> >> > On 7/11/2008, at 1:01 PM, joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> >> I just added the require after subscribe alone didn't work. >> >> >> I thought that if I specified the directory with recurse => true, it >> >> would monitor all the files in the directory as well. >> >> >> Is there a way to have puppet monitor files it isn't sourcing? >> >> >> On Nov 6, 3:41 pm, Aj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>> This notification will only fire if the managed parameters for the >> >>> directory are out of sync, e.g. Owner/group/modes/file type (link, >> >>> file). >> >> >>> Subscribe also implies require, FYI =) >> >> >>> On 7/11/2008, at 8:38 AM, joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> >>>> It's a defined file resource without a source parameter. Here is >> >>>> the >> >>>> syntax: >> >> >>>> file { "/opt/management/dns/zones": >> >>>> owner => "root", >> >>>> group => "root", >> >>>> mode => "644", >> >>>> ensure => directory, >> >>>> recurse => true } >> >> >>>> Then there is a service resource that subscribes to that file: >> >> >>>> service { "named": >> >>>> enable => true, >> >>>> ensure => running, >> >>>> require => File["/etc/named.conf"], >> >>>> require => File["/opt/dns/management/zones"], >> >>>> require => Package["bind"], >> >>>> subscribe => File["/etc/named.conf"], >> >>>> subscribe => File["/opt/management/dns/zones"] } >> >> >>>> But the service never restarts when files in that directory >> >>>> change. I >> >>>> would think it's because I'm not sourcing those files, but I'm not >> >>>> sure. >> >> >>>> On Nov 6, 12:37 pm, "Evan Hisey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>>>> On Wed, Nov 5, 2008 at 6:19 PM, joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> >>>>>> I'm having a similar issue that that wiki entry does not directly >> >>>>>> address. >> >> >>>>>> I'm trying to do a subscribe on a file definition that is a >> >>>>>> directory. >> >> >>>>>> I have ensure => directory and recurse => true. >> >> >>>>>> I do not use puppet to source the files (they are on nfs shared to >> >>>>>> all >> >>>>>> servers that use them). >> >> >>>>>> Puppet will not restart a service subscribed to this file >> >>>>>> definition. >> >>>>>> It does not seem to look at whether the files in the directory >> >>>>>> have >> >>>>>> changed. >> >> >>>>>> How do others make such a scenario work? >> >> >>>>>> Thanks >> >> >>>>> Is puppet actually managing the directory? Unless puppet manages >> >>>>> the >> >>>>> directory it can't know to handle a restart. >> >> >>>>> Evan > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Puppet Users" group. To post to this group, send email to puppet-users@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/puppet-users?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---