ansible-later/env_27/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ansible/module_utils/facts/hardware/openbsd.py
2019-04-11 13:00:36 +02:00

171 lines
6.3 KiB
Python

# This file is part of Ansible
#
# Ansible is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# Ansible is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with Ansible. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
import re
from ansible.module_utils._text import to_text
from ansible.module_utils.facts.hardware.base import Hardware, HardwareCollector
from ansible.module_utils.facts import timeout
from ansible.module_utils.facts.utils import get_file_content, get_mount_size
from ansible.module_utils.facts.sysctl import get_sysctl
class OpenBSDHardware(Hardware):
"""
OpenBSD-specific subclass of Hardware. Defines memory, CPU and device facts:
- memfree_mb
- memtotal_mb
- swapfree_mb
- swaptotal_mb
- processor (a list)
- processor_cores
- processor_count
- processor_speed
In addition, it also defines number of DMI facts and device facts.
"""
platform = 'OpenBSD'
def populate(self, collected_facts=None):
hardware_facts = {}
self.sysctl = get_sysctl(self.module, ['hw'])
# TODO: change name
cpu_facts = self.get_processor_facts()
memory_facts = self.get_memory_facts()
device_facts = self.get_device_facts()
dmi_facts = self.get_dmi_facts()
mount_facts = {}
try:
mount_facts = self.get_mount_facts()
except timeout.TimeoutError:
pass
hardware_facts.update(cpu_facts)
hardware_facts.update(memory_facts)
hardware_facts.update(dmi_facts)
hardware_facts.update(device_facts)
hardware_facts.update(mount_facts)
return hardware_facts
@timeout.timeout()
def get_mount_facts(self):
mount_facts = {}
mount_facts['mounts'] = []
fstab = get_file_content('/etc/fstab')
if fstab:
for line in fstab.splitlines():
if line.startswith('#') or line.strip() == '':
continue
fields = re.sub(r'\s+', ' ', line).split()
if fields[1] == 'none' or fields[3] == 'xx':
continue
mount_statvfs_info = get_mount_size(fields[1])
mount_info = {'mount': fields[1],
'device': fields[0],
'fstype': fields[2],
'options': fields[3]}
mount_info.update(mount_statvfs_info)
mount_facts['mounts'].append(mount_info)
return mount_facts
def get_memory_facts(self):
memory_facts = {}
# Get free memory. vmstat output looks like:
# procs memory page disks traps cpu
# r b w avm fre flt re pi po fr sr wd0 fd0 int sys cs us sy id
# 0 0 0 47512 28160 51 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 116 89 17 0 1 99
rc, out, err = self.module.run_command("/usr/bin/vmstat")
if rc == 0:
memory_facts['memfree_mb'] = int(out.splitlines()[-1].split()[4]) // 1024
memory_facts['memtotal_mb'] = int(self.sysctl['hw.usermem']) // 1024 // 1024
# Get swapctl info. swapctl output looks like:
# total: 69268 1K-blocks allocated, 0 used, 69268 available
# And for older OpenBSD:
# total: 69268k bytes allocated = 0k used, 69268k available
rc, out, err = self.module.run_command("/sbin/swapctl -sk")
if rc == 0:
swaptrans = {ord(u'k'): None,
ord(u'm'): None,
ord(u'g'): None}
data = to_text(out, errors='surrogate_or_strict').split()
memory_facts['swapfree_mb'] = int(data[-2].translate(swaptrans)) // 1024
memory_facts['swaptotal_mb'] = int(data[1].translate(swaptrans)) // 1024
return memory_facts
def get_processor_facts(self):
cpu_facts = {}
processor = []
for i in range(int(self.sysctl['hw.ncpu'])):
processor.append(self.sysctl['hw.model'])
cpu_facts['processor'] = processor
# The following is partly a lie because there is no reliable way to
# determine the number of physical CPUs in the system. We can only
# query the number of logical CPUs, which hides the number of cores.
# On amd64/i386 we could try to inspect the smt/core/package lines in
# dmesg, however even those have proven to be unreliable.
# So take a shortcut and report the logical number of processors in
# 'processor_count' and 'processor_cores' and leave it at that.
cpu_facts['processor_count'] = self.sysctl['hw.ncpu']
cpu_facts['processor_cores'] = self.sysctl['hw.ncpu']
return cpu_facts
def get_device_facts(self):
device_facts = {}
devices = []
devices.extend(self.sysctl['hw.disknames'].split(','))
device_facts['devices'] = devices
return device_facts
def get_dmi_facts(self):
dmi_facts = {}
# We don't use dmidecode(8) here because:
# - it would add dependency on an external package
# - dmidecode(8) can only be ran as root
# So instead we rely on sysctl(8) to provide us the information on a
# best-effort basis. As a bonus we also get facts on non-amd64/i386
# platforms this way.
sysctl_to_dmi = {
'hw.product': 'product_name',
'hw.version': 'product_version',
'hw.uuid': 'product_uuid',
'hw.serialno': 'product_serial',
'hw.vendor': 'system_vendor',
}
for mib in sysctl_to_dmi:
if mib in self.sysctl:
dmi_facts[sysctl_to_dmi[mib]] = self.sysctl[mib]
return dmi_facts
class OpenBSDHardwareCollector(HardwareCollector):
_fact_class = OpenBSDHardware
_platform = 'OpenBSD'