facter 2.1.0-universal-darwin → 2.2.0-universal-darwin

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Files changed (139) hide show
  1. data/COMMITTERS.md +25 -34
  2. data/CONTRIBUTING.md +27 -5
  3. data/README.md +32 -0
  4. data/ext/build_defaults.yaml +1 -1
  5. data/ext/debian/control +3 -2
  6. data/ext/osx/file_mapping.yaml +5 -0
  7. data/ext/redhat/facter.spec.erb +4 -1
  8. data/lib/facter/Cfkey.rb +2 -2
  9. data/lib/facter/architecture.rb +2 -2
  10. data/lib/facter/augeasversion.rb +2 -2
  11. data/lib/facter/blockdevices.rb +12 -12
  12. data/lib/facter/dhcp_servers.rb +4 -4
  13. data/lib/facter/domain.rb +4 -4
  14. data/lib/facter/ec2.rb +17 -0
  15. data/lib/facter/ec2/rest.rb +2 -2
  16. data/lib/facter/facterversion.rb +2 -2
  17. data/lib/facter/filesystems.rb +10 -3
  18. data/lib/facter/fqdn.rb +1 -1
  19. data/lib/facter/gid.rb +16 -0
  20. data/lib/facter/hardwareisa.rb +3 -3
  21. data/lib/facter/hardwaremodel.rb +3 -3
  22. data/lib/facter/hostname.rb +1 -1
  23. data/lib/facter/id.rb +4 -4
  24. data/lib/facter/interfaces.rb +3 -0
  25. data/lib/facter/ipaddress6.rb +9 -9
  26. data/lib/facter/kernel.rb +2 -2
  27. data/lib/facter/kernelmajversion.rb +2 -2
  28. data/lib/facter/kernelrelease.rb +4 -4
  29. data/lib/facter/kernelversion.rb +3 -3
  30. data/lib/facter/ldom.rb +11 -0
  31. data/lib/facter/lsbdistcodename.rb +8 -4
  32. data/lib/facter/lsbdistdescription.rb +6 -10
  33. data/lib/facter/lsbdistid.rb +8 -4
  34. data/lib/facter/lsbdistrelease.rb +8 -4
  35. data/lib/facter/lsbmajdistrelease.rb +7 -12
  36. data/lib/facter/lsbminordistrelease.rb +22 -0
  37. data/lib/facter/lsbrelease.rb +8 -4
  38. data/lib/facter/macaddress.rb +1 -0
  39. data/lib/facter/macosx.rb +1 -1
  40. data/lib/facter/manufacturer.rb +3 -3
  41. data/lib/facter/memory.rb +8 -8
  42. data/lib/facter/netmask.rb +2 -1
  43. data/lib/facter/network.rb +3 -3
  44. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem.rb +9 -126
  45. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/base.rb +61 -0
  46. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/cumuluslinux.rb +27 -0
  47. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/implementation.rb +30 -0
  48. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/linux.rb +467 -0
  49. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/sunos.rb +54 -0
  50. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/vmkernel.rb +11 -0
  51. data/lib/facter/operatingsystem/windows.rb +37 -0
  52. data/lib/facter/operatingsystemmajrelease.rb +14 -33
  53. data/lib/facter/operatingsystemrelease.rb +14 -235
  54. data/lib/facter/os.rb +69 -0
  55. data/lib/facter/osfamily.rb +4 -23
  56. data/lib/facter/partitions.rb +4 -3
  57. data/lib/facter/path.rb +2 -2
  58. data/lib/facter/physicalprocessorcount.rb +10 -74
  59. data/lib/facter/processor.rb +13 -129
  60. data/lib/facter/processors.rb +60 -0
  61. data/lib/facter/processors/os.rb +234 -0
  62. data/lib/facter/ps.rb +5 -4
  63. data/lib/facter/puppetversion.rb +1 -1
  64. data/lib/facter/rackspace.rb +34 -0
  65. data/lib/facter/rubysitedir.rb +3 -0
  66. data/lib/facter/rubyversion.rb +2 -2
  67. data/lib/facter/selinux.rb +57 -2
  68. data/lib/facter/ssh.rb +1 -0
  69. data/lib/facter/system_uptime.rb +42 -0
  70. data/lib/facter/timezone.rb +1 -1
  71. data/lib/facter/uptime.rb +5 -23
  72. data/lib/facter/uptime_days.rb +4 -6
  73. data/lib/facter/uptime_hours.rb +4 -6
  74. data/lib/facter/uptime_seconds.rb +5 -9
  75. data/lib/facter/util/formatter.rb +1 -1
  76. data/lib/facter/util/manufacturer.rb +1 -1
  77. data/lib/facter/util/partitions.rb +3 -1
  78. data/lib/facter/util/partitions/linux.rb +1 -1
  79. data/lib/facter/util/partitions/openbsd.rb +35 -0
  80. data/lib/facter/util/uptime.rb +4 -3
  81. data/lib/facter/util/virtual.rb +3 -1
  82. data/lib/facter/util/xendomains.rb +12 -3
  83. data/lib/facter/version.rb +1 -1
  84. data/lib/facter/virtual.rb +24 -23
  85. data/lib/facter/vlans.rb +1 -1
  86. data/lib/facter/xendomains.rb +1 -1
  87. data/lib/facter/zfs_version.rb +6 -2
  88. data/lib/facter/zones.rb +6 -5
  89. data/lib/facter/zpool_version.rb +1 -1
  90. data/spec/fixtures/cpuinfo/amd64dual-grep +2 -0
  91. data/spec/fixtures/cpuinfo/amd64twentyfour-grep +24 -0
  92. data/spec/fixtures/cpuinfo/two_multicore-grep +4 -0
  93. data/spec/fixtures/cpuinfo/two_singlecore-grep +2 -0
  94. data/spec/fixtures/unit/processors/os/darwin-system-profiler +287 -0
  95. data/spec/fixtures/unit/zfs_version/zfs_new +61 -0
  96. data/spec/fixtures/unit/zfs_version/zfs_old +43 -0
  97. data/spec/fixtures/unit/zfs_version/zfsonlinux_0.6.1 +13 -0
  98. data/spec/fixtures/unit/zpool_version/zfsonlinux_0.6.1 +48 -0
  99. data/spec/unit/ec2/rest_spec.rb +6 -6
  100. data/spec/unit/gid_spec.rb +22 -0
  101. data/spec/unit/hardwaremodel_spec.rb +2 -0
  102. data/spec/unit/lsbdistcodename_spec.rb +22 -17
  103. data/spec/unit/lsbdistdescription_spec.rb +22 -17
  104. data/spec/unit/lsbdistid_spec.rb +23 -18
  105. data/spec/unit/lsbdistrelease_spec.rb +22 -17
  106. data/spec/unit/lsbmajdistrelease_spec.rb +23 -6
  107. data/spec/unit/lsbminordistrelease_spec.rb +31 -0
  108. data/spec/unit/lsbrelease_spec.rb +22 -17
  109. data/spec/unit/macaddress_spec.rb +3 -0
  110. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/base_spec.rb +76 -0
  111. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/cumuluslinux_spec.rb +40 -0
  112. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/implementation_spec.rb +49 -0
  113. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/linux_spec.rb +538 -0
  114. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/sunos_spec.rb +144 -0
  115. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/vmkernel_spec.rb +13 -0
  116. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem/windows_spec.rb +68 -0
  117. data/spec/unit/operatingsystem_spec.rb +10 -153
  118. data/spec/unit/operatingsystemmajrelease_spec.rb +14 -31
  119. data/spec/unit/operatingsystemrelease_spec.rb +13 -229
  120. data/spec/unit/os_spec.rb +131 -0
  121. data/spec/unit/osfamily_spec.rb +9 -54
  122. data/spec/unit/partitions_spec.rb +41 -3
  123. data/spec/unit/physicalprocessorcount_spec.rb +6 -78
  124. data/spec/unit/processor_spec.rb +18 -381
  125. data/spec/unit/processors/os_spec.rb +446 -0
  126. data/spec/unit/processors_spec.rb +203 -0
  127. data/spec/unit/rackspace_spec.rb +40 -0
  128. data/spec/unit/system_uptime_spec.rb +80 -0
  129. data/spec/unit/util/formatter_spec.rb +5 -0
  130. data/spec/unit/util/macaddress_spec.rb +2 -0
  131. data/spec/unit/util/processor_spec.rb +120 -0
  132. data/spec/unit/util/uptime_spec.rb +3 -4
  133. data/spec/unit/util/virtual_spec.rb +8 -0
  134. data/spec/unit/util/xendomains_spec.rb +54 -9
  135. data/spec/unit/virtual_spec.rb +8 -1
  136. data/spec/unit/zfs_version_spec.rb +20 -8
  137. data/spec/unit/zpool_version_spec.rb +5 -0
  138. metadata +654 -589
  139. checksums.yaml +0 -7
@@ -1,9 +1,16 @@
1
+ # Fact: filesystems
1
2
  #
2
- # filesystems.rb
3
+ # Purpose:
4
+ # This fact provides an alphabetic list of usable file systems that can
5
+ # be used for block devices like hard drives, media cards, etc.
3
6
  #
4
- # This fact provides an alphabetic list of usable file systems that can
5
- # be used for block devices like hard drives, media cards and so on ...
7
+ # Resolution:
8
+ # Checks `/proc/filesystems`.
6
9
  #
10
+ # Caveats:
11
+ # Only supports Linux.
12
+ #
13
+
7
14
  Facter.add('filesystems') do
8
15
  confine :kernel => :linux
9
16
  setcode do
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  # Fact: fqdn
2
2
  #
3
- # Purpose: Returns the fully qualified domain name of the host.
3
+ # Purpose: Returns the fully-qualified domain name of the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution: Simply joins the hostname fact with the domain name fact.
6
6
  #
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
1
+ # Fact: gid
2
+ #
3
+ # Purpose: Return the GID (group identifier) of the user running puppet.
4
+ #
5
+ # Resolution:
6
+ #
7
+ # Caveats:
8
+ # Not supported in Windows yet.
9
+ #
10
+
11
+ Facter.add(:gid) do
12
+ confine do
13
+ Facter::Core::Execution.which('id')
14
+ end
15
+ setcode { Facter::Core::Execution.exec('id -ng') }
16
+ end
@@ -4,11 +4,11 @@
4
4
  # Returns hardware processor type.
5
5
  #
6
6
  # Resolution:
7
- # On Solaris, AIX, Linux and the BSDs simply uses the output of "uname -p"
8
- # On HP-UX, "uname -m" gives us the same information.
7
+ # On Solaris, AIX, Linux and the BSDs simply uses the output of `uname -p`.
8
+ # On HP-UX, `uname -m` gives us the same information.
9
9
  #
10
10
  # Caveats:
11
- # Some linuxes return unknown to uname -p with relative ease.
11
+ # Some Linuxes return unknown to `uname -p` with relative ease.
12
12
  #
13
13
 
14
14
  Facter.add(:hardwareisa) do
@@ -4,9 +4,9 @@
4
4
  # Returns the hardware model of the system.
5
5
  #
6
6
  # Resolution:
7
- # Uses purely "uname -m" on all platforms other than AIX and Windows.
8
- # On AIX uses the parsed "modelname" output of "lsattr -El sys0 -a modelname".
9
- # On Windows uses the 'host_cpu' pulled out of Ruby's config.
7
+ # Uses purely `uname -m` on all platforms other than AIX and Windows.
8
+ # On AIX uses the parsed `modelname` output of `lsattr -El sys0 -a modelname`.
9
+ # On Windows uses the `host_cpu` pulled out of Ruby's config.
10
10
  #
11
11
  # Caveats:
12
12
  #
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return the system's short hostname.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # On all system bar Darwin, parses the output of the "hostname" system command
6
+ # On all systems but Darwin, parses the output of the `hostname` system command
7
7
  # to everything before the first period.
8
8
  # On Darwin, uses the system configuration util to get the LocalHostName
9
9
  # variable.
@@ -1,12 +1,12 @@
1
1
  # Fact: id
2
2
  #
3
3
  # Purpose: Internal fact used to specity the program to return the currently
4
- # running user id.
4
+ # running user ID.
5
5
  #
6
6
  # Resolution:
7
- # On all Unixes bar Solaris, just returns "whoami".
8
- # On Solaris, parses the output of the "id" command to grab the username, as
9
- # Solaris doesn't have the whoami command.
7
+ # On all Unixes but Solaris, just returns the output from `whoami`.
8
+ # On Solaris, parses the output of the `id` command to grab the username,
9
+ # as Solaris doesn't have the `whoami` command.
10
10
  #
11
11
  # Caveats:
12
12
  #
@@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
1
1
  # Fact: interfaces
2
2
  #
3
3
  # Purpose:
4
+ # Generates the following facts on supported platforms: `<interface>_ipaddress`,
5
+ # `<interface>_ipaddress6`, `<interface>_macaddress`, `<interface>_netmask`,
6
+ # and `<interface>_mtu`.
4
7
  #
5
8
  # Resolution:
6
9
  #
@@ -3,15 +3,15 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Returns the "main" IPv6 IP address of a system.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # OS dependant code that parses the output of various networking
7
- # tools and currently not very intelligent. Returns the first
8
- # non-loopback and non-linklocal address found in the ouput unless
9
- # a default route can be mapped to a routeable interface. Guessing
10
- # an interface is currently only possible with BSD type systems
11
- # to many assumptions have to be made on other platforms to make
12
- # this work with the current code. Most code ported or modeled
13
- # after the ipaddress fact for the sake of similar functionality
14
- # and familiar mechanics.
6
+ # OS-dependent code that parses the output of various networking
7
+ # tools and currently not very intelligent. Returns the first
8
+ # non-loopback and non-linklocal address found in the ouput unless
9
+ # a default route can be mapped to a routable interface. Guessing
10
+ # an interface is currently only possible with BSD-type systems;
11
+ # too many assumptions have to be made on other platforms to make
12
+ # this work with the current code. Most of this code is ported or
13
+ # modeled after the ipaddress fact for the sake of similar
14
+ # functionality and familiar mechanics.
15
15
  #
16
16
  # Caveats:
17
17
  #
@@ -3,8 +3,8 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Returns the operating system's name.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses Ruby's rbconfig to find host_os, if that is a Windows derivative, the
7
- # returns 'windows', otherwise returns "uname -s" verbatim.
6
+ # Uses Ruby's RbConfig to find host_os, if that is a Windows derivative, then
7
+ # returns `windows`, otherwise returns the output of `uname -s` verbatim.
8
8
  #
9
9
  # Caveats:
10
10
  #
@@ -3,8 +3,8 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return the operating system's release number's major value.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Takes the first 2 elements of the kernel version as delimited by periods.
7
- # Takes the first element of the kernel version on FreeBSD
6
+ # Takes the first two elements of the kernel version as delimited by periods.
7
+ # Takes the first element of the kernel version on FreeBSD.
8
8
  #
9
9
  # Caveats:
10
10
  #
@@ -3,10 +3,10 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return the operating system's release number.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # On AIX returns the output from the "oslevel -s" system command.
7
- # On Windows based systems, uses the win32ole gem to query Windows Management
8
- # for the 'Win32_OperatingSystem' value.
9
- # Otherwise uses the output of "uname -r" system command.
6
+ # On AIX, returns the output from the `oslevel -s` system command.
7
+ # On Windows-based systems, uses the win32ole gem to query Windows Management
8
+ # for the `Win32_OperatingSystem` value.
9
+ # Otherwise uses the output of `uname -r` system command.
10
10
  #
11
11
  # Caveats:
12
12
  #
@@ -3,9 +3,9 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return the operating system's kernel version.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # On Solaris and SunOS based machines, returns the output of "uname -v".
7
- # Otherwise returns the 'kernerlversion' fact up to the first '-'. This may be
8
- # the entire 'kernelversion' fact in many cases.
6
+ # On Solaris and SunOS based machines, returns the output of `uname -v`.
7
+ # Otherwise returns the kernerlversion fact up to the first `-`. This may be
8
+ # the entire kernelversion fact in many cases.
9
9
  #
10
10
  # Caveats:
11
11
  #
@@ -1,3 +1,14 @@
1
+ # Fact: ldom
2
+ #
3
+ # Purpose:
4
+ # Returns a list of dynamic facts that describe the attributes of
5
+ # a Solaris logical domain. The facts returned will include: domainrole,
6
+ # domainname, domainuuid, domaincontrol, and domainchassis.
7
+ #
8
+ # Resolution:
9
+ # Uses the output of `virtinfo -ap`.
10
+ #
11
+
1
12
  if Facter.value(:kernel) == 'SunOS' and Facter::Core::Execution.which('virtinfo')
2
13
  virtinfo = Facter::Core::Execution.exec('virtinfo -ap')
3
14
 
@@ -3,14 +3,18 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return Linux Standard Base information for the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses the lsb_release system command
6
+ # Uses the lsbdistcodename key of the os structured fact, which
7
+ # itself uses the `lsb_release` system command.
7
8
  #
8
9
  # Caveats:
9
10
  # Only works on Linux (and the kfreebsd derivative) systems.
10
- # Requires the lsb_release program, which may not be installed by default.
11
+ # Requires the `lsb_release` program, which may not be installed by default.
11
12
  # Also is as only as accurate as that program outputs.
12
13
 
13
14
  Facter.add(:lsbdistcodename) do
14
- confine :kernel => [ :linux, :"gnu/kfreebsd" ]
15
- setcode 'lsb_release -c -s 2>/dev/null'
15
+ confine do
16
+ !Facter.value(:os)["lsb"].nil?
17
+ end
18
+
19
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["distcodename"] }
16
20
  end
@@ -3,23 +3,19 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return Linux Standard Base information for the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses the lsb_release system command
6
+ # Uses the lsbdistdescription key of the os structured fact, which itself
7
+ # uses the `lsb_release` system command.
7
8
  #
8
9
  # Caveats:
9
10
  # Only works on Linux (and the kfreebsd derivative) systems.
10
- # Requires the lsb_release program, which may not be installed by default.
11
+ # Requires the `lsb_release` program, which may not be installed by default.
11
12
  # Also is as only as accurate as that program outputs.
13
+ #
12
14
 
13
15
  Facter.add(:lsbdistdescription) do
14
- confine :kernel => [ :linux, :"gnu/kfreebsd" ]
15
16
  confine do
16
- Facter::Core::Execution.which("lsb_release")
17
+ !Facter.value(:os)["lsb"].nil?
17
18
  end
18
19
 
19
- setcode do
20
- if output = Facter::Core::Execution.exec('lsb_release -d -s 2>/dev/null')
21
- # the output may be quoted (at least it is on gentoo)
22
- output.sub(/^"(.*)"$/,'\1')
23
- end
24
- end
20
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["distdescription"] }
25
21
  end
@@ -3,14 +3,18 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return Linux Standard Base information for the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses the lsb_release system command
6
+ # Uses the lsbdistid key of the os structured fact, which itself
7
+ # uses the `lsb_release` system command.
7
8
  #
8
9
  # Caveats:
9
10
  # Only works on Linux (and the kfreebsd derivative) systems.
10
- # Requires the lsb_release program, which may not be installed by default.
11
+ # Requires the `lsb_release` program, which may not be installed by default.
11
12
  # Also is as only as accurate as that program outputs.
12
13
 
13
14
  Facter.add(:lsbdistid) do
14
- confine :kernel => [ :linux, :"gnu/kfreebsd" ]
15
- setcode 'lsb_release -i -s 2>/dev/null'
15
+ confine do
16
+ !Facter.value(:os)["lsb"].nil?
17
+ end
18
+
19
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["distid"] }
16
20
  end
@@ -3,14 +3,18 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return Linux Standard Base information for the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses the lsb_release system command
6
+ # Uses the lsbdistrelease key of the os structured fact, which itself
7
+ # uses the `lsb_release` system command.
7
8
  #
8
9
  # Caveats:
9
10
  # Only works on Linux (and the kfreebsd derivative) systems.
10
- # Requires the lsb_release program, which may not be installed by default.
11
+ # Requires the `lsb_release` program, which may not be installed by default.
11
12
  # Also is as only as accurate as that program outputs.
12
13
 
13
14
  Facter.add(:lsbdistrelease) do
14
- confine :kernel => [ :linux, :"gnu/kfreebsd" ]
15
- setcode 'lsb_release -r -s 2>/dev/null'
15
+ confine do
16
+ !Facter.value(:os)["lsb"].nil?
17
+ end
18
+
19
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["distrelease"] }
16
20
  end
@@ -4,24 +4,19 @@
4
4
  # from the lsbdistrelease fact.
5
5
  #
6
6
  # Resolution:
7
- # Parses the lsbdistrelease fact for numbers followed by a period and
7
+ # Uses the lsbmajdistrelease key of the os structured fact, which itself
8
+ # parses the lsbdistrelease fact for numbers followed by a period and
8
9
  # returns those, or just the lsbdistrelease fact if none were found.
9
10
  #
10
11
  # Caveats:
11
12
  #
12
13
 
13
- # lsbmajdistrelease.rb
14
- #
15
14
  require 'facter'
16
15
 
17
- Facter.add("lsbmajdistrelease") do
18
- confine :kernel => %w{Linux GNU/kFreeBSD}
19
- setcode do
20
- if /(\d*)\./i =~ Facter.value(:lsbdistrelease)
21
- result=$1
22
- else
23
- result=Facter.value(:lsbdistrelease)
24
- end
25
- result
16
+ Facter.add(:lsbmajdistrelease) do
17
+ confine do
18
+ !Facter.value("os")["lsb"].nil?
26
19
  end
20
+
21
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["majdistrelease"] }
27
22
  end
@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
1
+ # Fact: lsbminordistrelease
2
+ #
3
+ # Purpose: Returns the minor version of the operation system version as gleaned
4
+ # from the lsbdistrelease fact.
5
+ #
6
+ # Resolution:
7
+ # Parses the lsbdistrelease fact for x.y and returns y. If y is not present,
8
+ # the fact is not present.
9
+ #
10
+ # For both values '1.2.3' and '1.2' of lsbdistrelease, lsbminordistrelease
11
+ # would return '2'. For the value '1', no fact would be set for
12
+ # lsbminordistrelease.
13
+ #
14
+ require 'facter'
15
+
16
+ Facter.add('lsbminordistrelease') do
17
+ confine do
18
+ !Facter.value("os")["lsb"].nil?
19
+ end
20
+
21
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["minordistrelease"] }
22
+ end
@@ -3,14 +3,18 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return Linux Standard Base information for the host.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # Uses the lsb_release system command
6
+ # Uses the lsbrelease key of the os structured fact, which itself
7
+ # uses the `lsb_release` system command.
7
8
  #
8
9
  # Caveats:
9
10
  # Only works on Linux (and the kfreebsd derivative) systems.
10
- # Requires the lsb_release program, which may not be installed by default.
11
+ # Requires the `lsb_release` program, which may not be installed by default.
11
12
  # Also is as only as accurate as that program outputs.
12
13
 
13
14
  Facter.add(:lsbrelease) do
14
- confine :kernel => [ :linux, :"gnu/kfreebsd" ]
15
- setcode 'lsb_release -v -s 2>/dev/null'
15
+ confine do
16
+ !Facter.value(:os)["lsb"].nil?
17
+ end
18
+
19
+ setcode { Facter.value("os")["lsb"]["release"] }
16
20
  end
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
1
1
  # Fact: macaddress
2
2
  #
3
3
  # Purpose:
4
+ # Returns the MAC address of the primary network interface.
4
5
  #
5
6
  # Resolution:
6
7
  #
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
6
6
  #
7
7
  # Resolution:
8
8
  # Uses util/macosx.rb to do the fact reconnaissance, then outputs them
9
- # preceded by 'sp_'
9
+ # preceded by `sp_`
10
10
  #
11
11
  # Caveats:
12
12
  #
@@ -3,10 +3,10 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return the hardware manufacturer information about the hardware.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # On OpenBSD, queries sysctl values, via a util class.
7
- # On SunOS Sparc, uses prtdiag via a util class.
6
+ # On OpenBSD, queries `sysctl` values, via a util class.
7
+ # On SunOS Sparc, uses `prtdiag` via a util class.
8
8
  # On Windows, queries the system via a util class.
9
- # Uses the 'util/manufacturer.rb' for fallback parsing.
9
+ # Uses `util/manufacturer.rb` for fallback parsing.
10
10
  #
11
11
  # Caveats:
12
12
  #
@@ -3,15 +3,15 @@
3
3
  # Purpose: Return information about memory and swap usage.
4
4
  #
5
5
  # Resolution:
6
- # On Linuxes, uses Facter::Memory.meminfo_number from
7
- # 'facter/util/memory.rb'
8
- # On AIX, parses "swap -l" for swap values only.
9
- # On OpenBSD, it parses "swapctl -l" for swap values, vmstat via a module for
10
- # free memory, and "sysctl hw.physmem" for maximum memory.
11
- # On FreeBSD, it parses "swapinfo -k" for swap values, and parses sysctl for
6
+ # On Linuxes, uses `Facter::Memory.meminfo_number` from
7
+ # `facter/util/memory.rb`
8
+ # On AIX, parses `swap -l` for swap values only.
9
+ # On OpenBSD, it parses `swapctl -l` for swap values, `vmstat` via a module for
10
+ # free memory, and `sysctl hw.physmem` for maximum memory.
11
+ # On FreeBSD, it parses `swapinfo -k` for swap values, and parses `sysctl` for
12
12
  # maximum memory.
13
- # On Solaris, use "swap -l" for swap values, and parsing prtconf for maximum
14
- # memory, and again, the vmstat module for free memory.
13
+ # On Solaris, use `swap -l` for swap values, and parsing `prtconf` for maximum
14
+ # memory, and again, the `vmstat` module for free memory.
15
15
  #
16
16
  # Caveats:
17
17
  # Some BSD platforms aren't covered at all. AIX is missing memory values.