inspec/lib/resources/oneget.rb
Adam Leff 577688a3a0 Placing all resources in the Inspec::Resources namespace
Many of the resources are named as a top-level class with a fairly generic class name, such as "OS". This causes an issue specifically with kitchen-google which depends on a gem which depends on the "os" gem which itself defines an OS class with a different superclass. This prevents users from using TK, Google Compute, and Inspec without this fix.

Some mocked commands had their digest changed as well due to the new indentation, specifically in the User and RegistryKey classes.

I strongly recommend viewing this diff with `git diff --ignore-space-change`
to see the *real* changes. :)
2016-03-08 13:40:16 -05:00

71 lines
2 KiB
Ruby

# encoding: utf-8
# author: Christoph Hartmann
# author: Dominik Richter
# This resource talks with OneGet (https://github.com/OneGet/oneget)
# Its part of Windows Management Framework 5.0 and part of Windows 10
#
# Usage:
# describe oneget('zoomit') do
# it { should be_installed }
# end
module Inspec::Resources
class OneGetPackage < Inspec.resource(1)
name 'oneget'
desc 'Use the oneget InSpec audit resource to test if the named package and/or package version is installed on the system. This resource uses OneGet, which is part of the Windows Management Framework 5.0 and Windows 10. This resource uses the Get-Package cmdlet to return all of the package names in the OneGet repository.'
example "
describe oneget('zoomit') do
it { should be_installed }
end
"
def initialize(package_name)
@package_name = package_name
# verify that this resource is only supported on Windows
return skip_resource 'The `oneget` resource is not supported on your OS.' if inspec.os[:family] != 'windows'
end
def info
return @info if defined?(@info)
@info = {}
@info[:type] = 'oneget'
@info[:installed] = false
cmd = inspec.command("Get-Package -Name '#{@package_name}' | ConvertTo-Json")
# cannot rely on exit code for now, successful command returns exit code 1
# return nil if cmd.exit_status != 0
# try to parse json
begin
pkgs = JSON.parse(cmd.stdout)
@info[:installed] = true
# sometimes we get multiple values
if pkgs.is_a?(Array)
# select the first entry
pkgs = pkgs.first
end
rescue JSON::ParserError => _e
return @info
end
@info[:name] = pkgs['Name'] if pkgs.key?('Name')
@info[:version] = pkgs['Version'] if pkgs.key?('Version')
@info
end
def installed?
info[:installed] == true
end
def version
info[:version]
end
def to_s
"OneGet Package #{@package_name}"
end
end
end