Resource default statements
Resource default statements enable you to set default attribute values for a given resource type. Resource declarations within the area of effect that omits those attributes inherit the default values.
Syntax
Exec {
path => '/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin',
environment => 'RUBYLIB=/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/lib/ruby/site_ruby/2.1.0/',
logoutput => true,
timeout => 180,
}
The general form of resource defaults is:-
The capitalized resource type name. If the resource type name has a namespace separator (
::
), every segment must be capitalized, for exampleConcat::Fragment
. -
An opening curly brace.
-
Any number of attribute and value pairs.
-
A closing curly brace.
You can specify defaults for any resource type in Puppet, including defined types.
Behavior
Within the area of effect, each resource type that omits a given attribute uses that attribute’s default value.
Resource defaults are evaluation order dependent. Defaults are assigned to a created resource when a resource expression is evaluated; that is, when it is declared for inclusion in the catalog. Puppet uses the default values that are in effect for the type at evaluation.
Puppet uses dynamic scoping for resource defaults, even
though it no longer uses dynamic variable lookup. This means that when you use a resource
default statement in a class, it could affect any classes or defined types that class
declares. Therefore, they should not be set outside of site.pp
. Use
per-resource default attributes when possible.
Resource defaults declared in the local scope override any defaults received from parent scopes. Overriding of resource defaults is per attribute, not per block of attributes. This means local and parent resource defaults that don’t conflict with each other are merged together.