ansible-later/testenv/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ansible/plugins/lookup/cartesian.py

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2019-04-23 11:04:27 +00:00
# (c) 2013, Bradley Young <young.bradley@gmail.com>
# (c) 2017 Ansible Project
# 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 = """
lookup: cartesian
version_added: "2.1"
short_description: returns the cartesian product of lists
description:
- Takes the input lists and returns a list that represents the product of the input lists.
- It is clearer with an example, it turns [1, 2, 3], [a, b] into [1, a], [1, b], [2, a], [2, b], [3, a], [3, b].
You can see the exact syntax in the examples section.
options:
_raw:
description:
- a set of lists
required: True
"""
EXAMPLES = """
- name: Example of the change in the description
debug: msg="{{ [1,2,3]|lookup('cartesian', [a, b])}}"
- name: loops over the cartesian product of the supplied lists
debug: msg="{{item}}"
with_cartesian:
- "{{list1}}"
- "{{list2}}"
- [1,2,3,4,5,6]
"""
RETURN = """
_list:
description:
- list of lists composed of elements of the input lists
type: lists
"""
from itertools import product
from ansible.errors import AnsibleError
from ansible.plugins.lookup import LookupBase
from ansible.utils.listify import listify_lookup_plugin_terms
class LookupModule(LookupBase):
"""
Create the cartesian product of lists
"""
def _lookup_variables(self, terms):
"""
Turn this:
terms == ["1,2,3", "a,b"]
into this:
terms == [[1,2,3], [a, b]]
"""
results = []
for x in terms:
intermediate = listify_lookup_plugin_terms(x, templar=self._templar, loader=self._loader)
results.append(intermediate)
return results
def run(self, terms, variables=None, **kwargs):
terms = self._lookup_variables(terms)
my_list = terms[:]
if len(my_list) == 0:
raise AnsibleError("with_cartesian requires at least one element in each list")
return [self._flatten(x) for x in product(*my_list)]