#!/usr/bin/python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Copyright: (c) 2015, Linus Unnebäck # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt) from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function __metaclass__ = type DOCUMENTATION = r''' --- module: make short_description: Run targets in a Makefile requirements: - make author: Linus Unnebäck (@LinusU) description: - Run targets in a Makefile. options: target: description: - The target to run. - Typically this would be something like C(install),C(test) or C(all)." type: str params: description: - Any extra parameters to pass to make. type: dict chdir: description: - Change to this directory before running make. type: path required: true file: description: - Use a custom Makefile. type: path make: description: - Use a specific make binary. type: path version_added: '0.2.0' jobs: description: - Set the number of make jobs to run concurrently. - Typically if set, this would be the number of processors and/or threads available to the machine. - This is not supported by all make implementations. type: int version_added: 2.0.0 ''' EXAMPLES = r''' - name: Build the default target community.general.make: chdir: /home/ubuntu/cool-project - name: Run 'install' target as root community.general.make: chdir: /home/ubuntu/cool-project target: install become: yes - name: Build 'all' target with extra arguments community.general.make: chdir: /home/ubuntu/cool-project target: all params: NUM_THREADS: 4 BACKEND: lapack - name: Build 'all' target with a custom Makefile community.general.make: chdir: /home/ubuntu/cool-project target: all file: /some-project/Makefile ''' RETURN = r'''# ''' from ansible.module_utils.six import iteritems from ansible.module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule def run_command(command, module, check_rc=True): """ Run a command using the module, return the result code and std{err,out} content. :param command: list of command arguments :param module: Ansible make module instance :return: return code, stdout content, stderr content """ rc, out, err = module.run_command(command, check_rc=check_rc, cwd=module.params['chdir']) return rc, sanitize_output(out), sanitize_output(err) def sanitize_output(output): """ Sanitize the output string before we pass it to module.fail_json. Defaults the string to empty if it is None, else strips trailing newlines. :param output: output to sanitize :return: sanitized output """ if output is None: return '' else: return output.rstrip("\r\n") def main(): module = AnsibleModule( argument_spec=dict( target=dict(type='str'), params=dict(type='dict'), chdir=dict(type='path', required=True), file=dict(type='path'), make=dict(type='path'), jobs=dict(type='int'), ), supports_check_mode=True, ) make_path = module.params['make'] if make_path is None: # Build up the invocation of `make` we are going to use # For non-Linux OSes, prefer gmake (GNU make) over make make_path = module.get_bin_path('gmake', required=False) if not make_path: # Fall back to system make make_path = module.get_bin_path('make', required=True) make_target = module.params['target'] if module.params['params'] is not None: make_parameters = [k + '=' + str(v) for k, v in iteritems(module.params['params'])] else: make_parameters = [] # build command: # handle any make specific arguments included in params base_command = [make_path] if module.params['jobs'] is not None: jobs = str(module.params['jobs']) base_command.extend(["-j", jobs]) if module.params['file'] is not None: base_command.extend(["-f", module.params['file']]) # add make target base_command.append(make_target) # add makefile parameters base_command.extend(make_parameters) # Check if the target is already up to date rc, out, err = run_command(base_command + ['-q'], module, check_rc=False) if module.check_mode: # If we've been asked to do a dry run, we only need # to report whether or not the target is up to date changed = (rc != 0) else: if rc == 0: # The target is up to date, so we don't have to # do anything changed = False else: # The target isn't up to date, so we need to run it rc, out, err = run_command(base_command, module, check_rc=True) changed = True # We don't report the return code, as if this module failed # we would be calling fail_json from run_command, so even if # we had a non-zero return code, we did not fail. However, if # we report a non-zero return code here, we will be marked as # failed regardless of what we signal using the failed= kwarg. module.exit_json( changed=changed, failed=False, stdout=out, stderr=err, target=module.params['target'], params=module.params['params'], chdir=module.params['chdir'], file=module.params['file'], jobs=module.params['jobs'], ) if __name__ == '__main__': main()