inspec/lib/resources/csv.rb

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# encoding: utf-8
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# author: Christoph Hartmann
# author: Dominik Richter
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# Parses a csv document
# This implementation was inspired by a blog post
# @see http://technicalpickles.com/posts/parsing-csv-with-ruby
module Inspec::Resources
class CsvConfig < JsonConfig
name 'csv'
desc 'Use the csv InSpec audit resource to test configuration data in a CSV file.'
example "
describe csv('example.csv') do
its('name') { should eq(['John', 'Alice']) }
end
"
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# override the parse method from JsonConfig
# Assuming a header row of name,col1,col2, it will output an array of hashes like so:
# [
# { 'name' => 'row1', 'col1' => 'value1', 'col2' => 'value2' },
# { 'name' => 'row2', 'col1' => 'value3', 'col2' => 'value4' }
# ]
def parse(content)
require 'csv'
# convert empty field to nil
CSV::Converters[:blank_to_nil] = lambda do |field|
field && field.empty? ? nil : field
end
# implicit conversion of values
csv = CSV.new(content, headers: true, converters: [:all, :blank_to_nil])
# convert to hash
csv.to_a.map(&:to_hash)
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end
# override the value method from JsonConfig
# The format of the CSV hash as created by #parse is very different
# than what the YAML, JSON, and INI resources create, so using the
# #value method from JsonConfig (which uses ObjectTraverser.extract_value)
# doesn't make sense here.
def value(key)
@params.map { |x| x[key.first.to_s] }.compact
end
def to_s
"Csv #{@path}"
end
end
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end