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authorDaniel Watkins <daniel.watkins@canonical.com>2016-06-02 17:32:14 +0100
committerDaniel Watkins <daniel.watkins@canonical.com>2016-06-02 17:32:14 +0100
commit710590d3a32e6b77222b288e5b751e7296abb2b4 (patch)
tree591461ad3ebd24a6f57194af8302f6848f835e17
parent0dbe69aa34948d73d5709a7ddc19389e05e1a268 (diff)
parent75907ec96181599dc0282aac989ce02a88c3b39d (diff)
downloadvyos-cloud-init-710590d3a32e6b77222b288e5b751e7296abb2b4.tar.gz
vyos-cloud-init-710590d3a32e6b77222b288e5b751e7296abb2b4.zip
Improve merging documentation
-rw-r--r--ChangeLog1
-rw-r--r--doc/merging.rst42
-rw-r--r--doc/rtd/topics/merging.rst6
3 files changed, 28 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog
index 8db29e2e..45a9ea8d 100644
--- a/ChangeLog
+++ b/ChangeLog
@@ -112,6 +112,7 @@
- Ec2: do not retry requests for user-data path on 404.
- settings on the kernel command line (cc:) override all local settings
rather than only those in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg (LP: #1582323)
+ - Improve merging documentation [Daniel Watkins]
0.7.6:
- open 0.7.6
diff --git a/doc/merging.rst b/doc/merging.rst
index d4d5cd05..afe1a6dd 100644
--- a/doc/merging.rst
+++ b/doc/merging.rst
@@ -1,15 +1,16 @@
Overview
--------
-This was done because it has been a common feature request that there be a
-way to specify how cloud-config yaml "dictionaries" are merged together when
-there are multiple yamls to merge together (say when performing an #include).
+This was implemented because it has been a common feature request that there be
+a way to specify how cloud-config yaml "dictionaries" provided as user-data are
+merged together when there are multiple yamls to merge together (say when
+performing an #include).
Since previously the merging algorithm was very simple and would only overwrite
and not append lists, or strings, and so on it was decided to create a new and
improved way to merge dictionaries (and there contained objects) together in a
-way that is customizable, thus allowing for users who provide cloud-config data
-to determine exactly how there objects will be merged.
+way that is customizable, thus allowing for users who provide cloud-config
+user-data to determine exactly how there objects will be merged.
For example.
@@ -19,13 +20,13 @@ For example.
run_cmd:
- bash1
- bash2
-
+
#cloud-config (2)
run_cmd:
- bash3
- bash4
-The previous way of merging the following 2 objects would result in a final
+The previous way of merging the following 2 objects would result in a final
cloud-config object that contains the following.
.. code-block:: yaml
@@ -56,7 +57,7 @@ Customizability
Since the above merging algorithm may not always be the desired merging
algorithm (like how the previous merging algorithm was not always the preferred
one) the concept of customizing how merging can be done was introduced through
-a new concept call 'merge classes'.
+a new concept call 'merge classes'.
A merge class is a class defintion which provides functions that can be used
to merge a given type with another given type.
@@ -69,7 +70,7 @@ An example of one of these merging classes is the following:
def __init__(self, merger, opts):
self._merger = merger
self._overwrite = 'overwrite' in opts
-
+
# This merging algorithm will attempt to merge with
# another dictionary, on encountering any other type of object
# it will not merge with said object, but will instead return
@@ -129,12 +130,12 @@ for your own usage.
definition are the following (in order), 'merge_how', 'merge_type'.
String format
-********
+*************
The string format that is expected is the following.
::
-
+
classname1(option1,option2)+classname2(option3,option4)....
The class name there will be connected to class names used when looking for the
@@ -144,11 +145,11 @@ on construction of that class.
For example, the default string that is used when none is provided is the following:
::
-
+
list()+dict()+str()
Dictionary format
-********
+*****************
In cases where a dictionary can be used to specify the same information as the
string format (ie option #2 of above) it can be used, for example.
@@ -171,7 +172,7 @@ for every cloud-config that I provide, what exactly happens?
The answer is that when merging, a stack of 'merging classes' is kept, the
first one on that stack is the default merging classes, this set of mergers
will be used when the first cloud-config is merged with the initial empty
-cloud-config dictionary. If the cloud-config that was just merged provided a
+cloud-config dictionary. If the cloud-config that was just merged provided a
set of merging classes (via the above formats) then those merging classes will
be pushed onto the stack. Now if there is a second cloud-config to be merged then
the merging classes from the cloud-config before the first will be used (not the
@@ -181,8 +182,13 @@ cloud-config dictionary coming after it.
Other uses
----------
-The default merging algorithm for merging 'conf.d' yaml files (which form a initial
-yaml config for cloud-init) was also changed to use this mechanism so its full
+In addition to being used for merging user-data sections, the default merging
+algorithm for merging 'conf.d' yaml files (which form an initial yaml config
+for cloud-init) was also changed to use this mechanism so its full
benefits (and customization) can also be used there as well. Other places that
-used the previous merging are also similar now extensible (metadata merging for
-example).
+used the previous merging are also, similarly, now extensible (metadata
+merging, for example).
+
+Note, however, that merge algorithms are not used *across* types of
+configuration. As was the case before merging was implemented,
+user-data will overwrite conf.d configuration without merging.
diff --git a/doc/rtd/topics/merging.rst b/doc/rtd/topics/merging.rst
index 8a03f3c7..2bd87b16 100644
--- a/doc/rtd/topics/merging.rst
+++ b/doc/rtd/topics/merging.rst
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-=========
-Merging
-=========
+==========================
+Merging User-Data Sections
+==========================
.. include:: ../../merging.rst