file Resource
This page is generated from the Chef Infra Client source code.To suggest a change, edit the file.rb file and submit a pull request to the Chef Infra Client repository.
Use the file resource to manage files directly on a node.
Note
Use the cookbook_file resource to copy a file from a cookbook’s /files
directory. Use the template resource to create a file based on a template in a cookbook’s /templates
directory. And use the remote_file resource to transfer a file to a node from a remote location.
Syntax
A file resource block manages files that exist on nodes. For example, to write the home page for an Apache website:
file '/var/www/customers/public_html/index.php' do
content '<html>This is a placeholder for the home page.</html>'
mode '0755'
owner 'web_admin'
group 'web_admin'
end
where:
'/var/www/customers/public_html/index.php'
is path to the file and also the filename to be managedcontent
defines the contents of the file
The full syntax for all of the properties that are available to the file resource is:
file 'name' do
atomic_update true, false
backup false, Integer
checksum String
content String
force_unlink true, false
group String, Integer
inherits true, false
manage_symlink_source true, false
mode String, Integer
owner String, Integer
path String # defaults to 'name' if not specified
rights Hash
verify String, Block
action Symbol # defaults to :create if not specified
end
where:
file
is the resource.name
is the name given to the resource block.action
identifies which steps Chef Infra Client will take to bring the node into the desired state.atomic_update
,backup
,checksum
,content
,force_unlink
,group
,inherits
,manage_symlink_source
,mode
,owner
,path
,rights
,sensitive
, andverify
are properties of this resource, with the Ruby type shown. See “Properties” section below for more information about all of the properties that may be used with this resource.
Actions
The file resource has the following actions:
:create
- Default. Create a file. If a file already exists (but does not match), update that file to match.
:create_if_missing
- Create a file only if the file does not exist. When the file exists, nothing happens.
:delete
- Delete a file.
:nothing
- This resource block does not act unless notified by another resource to take action. Once notified, this resource block either runs immediately or is queued up to run at the end of a Chef Infra Client run.
:touch
- Touch a file. This updates the access (atime) and file modification (mtime) times for a file.
Properties
The file resource has the following properties:
atomic_update
- Ruby Type: true, false
Perform atomic file updates on a per-resource basis. Set to
true
for atomic file updates. Set tofalse
for non-atomic file updates. This setting overridesfile_atomic_update
, which is a global setting found in the client.rb file.
backup
- Ruby Type: Integer, false | Default Value:
5
The number of backups to be kept in
/var/chef/backup
(for UNIX- and Linux-based platforms) orC:/chef/backup
(for the Microsoft Windows platform). Set tofalse
to prevent backups from being kept.
checksum
- Ruby Type: String
The SHA-256 checksum of the file. Use to ensure that a specific file is used. If the checksum does not match, the file is not used. Default value: no checksum required.
content
- Ruby Type: String
A string that is written to the file. The contents of this property replace any previous content when this property has something other than the default value. The default behavior will not modify content.
force_unlink
- Ruby Type: true, false | Default Value:
false
How Chef Infra Client handles certain situations when the target file turns out not to be a file. For example, when a target file is actually a symlink. Set to
true
for Chef Infra Client delete the non-file target and replace it with the specified file. Set tofalse
for Chef Infra Client to raise an error.
group
- Ruby Type: Integer, String
A string or ID that identifies the group owner by group name or SID, including fully qualified group names such as
domain\group
orgroup@domain
. If this value is not specified, existing groups remain unchanged and new group assignments use the defaultPOSIX
group (if available).
inherits
- Ruby Type: true, false | Default Value:
true
Microsoft Windows only. Whether a file inherits rights from its parent directory.
manage_symlink_source
- Ruby Type: true, false | Default Value:
true
(with warning)
Change the behavior of the file resource if it is pointed at a symlink. When this value is set to
false
, Chef Infra Client will manage the symlink’s permissions or will replace the symlink with a normal file if the resource has content. When this value is set totrue
, Chef will follow the symlink and will manage the permissions and content of symlink’s target file.The default behavior is
true
but emits a warning that the default value will be changed tofalse
in a future version; setting this explicitly totrue
orfalse
suppresses this warning.
mode
- Ruby Type: Integer, String
A quoted 3-5 character string that defines the octal mode. For example:
'755'
,'0755'
, or00755
. Ifmode
is not specified and if the file already exists, the existing mode on the file is used. Ifmode
is not specified, the file does not exist, and the:create
action is specified, Chef Infra Client assumes a mask value of'0777'
and then applies the umask for the system on which the file is to be created to themask
value. For example, if the umask on a system is'022'
, Chef Infra Client uses the default value of'0755'
.The behavior is different depending on the platform.
UNIX- and Linux-based systems: A quoted 3-5 character string that defines the octal mode that is passed to chmod. For example:
'755'
,'0755'
, or00755
. If the value is specified as a quoted string, it works exactly as if thechmod
command was passed. If the value is specified as an integer, prepend a zero (0
) to the value to ensure that it is interpreted as an octal number. For example, to assign read, write, and execute rights for all users, use'0777'
or'777'
; for the same rights, plus the sticky bit, use01777
or'1777'
.Microsoft Windows: A quoted 3-5 character string that defines the octal mode that is translated into rights for Microsoft Windows security. For example:
'755'
,'0755'
, or00755
. Values up to'0777'
are allowed (no sticky bits) and mean the same in Microsoft Windows as they do in UNIX, where4
equalsGENERIC_READ
,2
equalsGENERIC_WRITE
, and1
equalsGENERIC_EXECUTE
. This property cannot be used to set:full_control
. This property has no effect if not specified, but when it andrights
are both specified, the effects are cumulative.
owner
- Ruby Type: Integer, String
A string or ID that identifies the group owner by user name or SID, including fully qualified user names such as
domain\user
oruser@domain
. If this value is not specified, existing owners remain unchanged and new owner assignments use the current user (when necessary).
path
- Ruby Type: String
The full path to the file, including the file name and its extension. For example:
/files/file.txt
. Default value: thename
of the resource block. See “Syntax” section above for more information.Microsoft Windows: A path that begins with a forward slash (
/
) will point to the root of the current working directory of Chef Infra Client process. This path can vary from system to system. Therefore, using a path that begins with a forward slash (/
) is not recommended.
rights
- Ruby Type: Integer, String
Microsoft Windows only. The permissions for users and groups in a Microsoft Windows environment. For example:
rights <permissions>, <principal>, <options>
where<permissions>
specifies the rights granted to the principal,<principal>
is the group or user name, and<options>
is a Hash with one (or more) advanced rights options.
verify
- Ruby Type: String, Block
Allows verification of a file’s contents before it is created. Creates a temporary file and then allows execution of commands or Ruby code. If this code evaluates to true, the file is created. If the code evaluates to false, an error is raised.
The types for this property are a block or a string. When specified as a block, it returns
true
orfalse
. When specified as a string, it is executed as a system command. It evaluates totrue
if the command returns 0 as its exit status code andfalse
if the command returns a non-zero exit status code.Note
A block is arbitrary Ruby defined within the resource block by using the
verify
property. When a block returnstrue
, Chef Infra Client will continue to update the file as appropriate.For example, this should return
true
:file '/tmp/baz' do verify { 1 == 1 } end
This should also return
true
:file '/etc/nginx.conf' do verify 'nginx -t -c %{path}' end
In this example, the
%{path}
portion of this command is expanded to the temporary location where a copy of the file to be created exists. This will use Nginx’s syntax checking feature to ensure the file is a valid Nginx configuration file before writing the file. An error will be raised if the executed command returns a non-zero exit status code.This should return
true
:file '/tmp/foo' do content "hello" verify do |path| open(path).read.include? "hello" end end
Whereas, this should return
false
:file '/tmp/foo' do content "goodbye" verify do |path| open(path).read.include? "hello" end end
If a string or a block return
false
, the Chef Infra Client run will stop and an error is raised.
Atomic File Updates
Atomic updates are used with file-based resources to help ensure that file updates can be made when updating a binary or if disk space runs out.
Atomic updates are enabled by default. They can be managed globally
using the file_atomic_update
setting in the client.rb file. They can
be managed on a per-resource basis using the atomic_update
property
that is available with the cookbook_file, file,
remote_file, and template resources.
Note
On certain platforms, and after a file has been moved into place, Chef
Infra Client may modify file permissions to support features specific to
those platforms. On platforms with SELinux enabled, Chef Infra Client
will fix up the security contexts after a file has been moved into the
correct location by running the restorecon
command. On the Microsoft
Windows platform, Chef Infra Client will create files so that ACL
inheritance works as expected.
Windows File Security
To support Microsoft Windows security, the template, file, remote_file, cookbook_file, directory, and remote_directory resources support the use of inheritance and access control lists (ACLs) within recipes. Access Control Lists (ACLs)The rights
property can be used in a recipe to manage access control
lists (ACLs), which allow permissions to be given to multiple users and
groups. Use the rights
property can be used as many times as
necessary; Chef Infra Client will apply them to the file or directory as
required. The syntax for the rights
property is as follows:
rights permission, principal, option_type => value
where
permission
Use to specify which rights are granted to the
principal
. The possible values are::read
,:write
,read_execute
,:modify
, and:full_control
.These permissions are cumulative. If
:write
is specified, then it includes:read
. If:full_control
is specified, then it includes both:write
and:read
.(For those who know the Microsoft Windows API:
:read
corresponds toGENERIC_READ
;:write
corresponds toGENERIC_WRITE
;:read_execute
corresponds toGENERIC_READ
andGENERIC_EXECUTE
;:modify
corresponds toGENERIC_WRITE
,GENERIC_READ
,GENERIC_EXECUTE
, andDELETE
;:full_control
corresponds toGENERIC_ALL
, which allows a user to change the owner and other metadata about a file.)principal
Use to specify a group or user. The principal can be specified by either name or SID. When using name, this is identical to what is entered in the login box for Microsoft Windows, such as
user_name
,domain\user_name
, oruser_name@fully_qualified_domain_name
. When using a SID, you may use either the standard string representation of a SID (S-R-I-S-S) or one of the SDDL string constants. Chef Infra Client does not need to know if a principal is a user or a group.option_type
A hash that contains advanced rights options. For example, the rights to a directory that only applies to the first level of children might look something like:
rights :write, 'domain\group_name', :one_level_deep => true
. Possible option types:Option Type Description :applies_to_children
Specify how permissions are applied to children. Possible values: true
to inherit both child directories and files;false
to not inherit any child directories or files;:containers_only
to inherit only child directories (and not files);:objects_only
to recursively inherit files (and not child directories).:applies_to_self
Indicates whether a permission is applied to the parent directory. Possible values: true
to apply to the parent directory or file and its children;false
to not apply only to child directories and files.:one_level_deep
Indicates the depth to which permissions will be applied. Possible values: true
to apply only to the first level of children;false
to apply to all children.
For example:
resource 'x.txt' do
rights :read, 'S-1-1-0'
rights :write, 'domain\group'
rights :full_control, 'group_name_or_user_name'
rights :full_control, 'user_name', applies_to_children: true
end
or:
rights :read, %w(Administrators Everyone)
rights :full_control, 'Users', applies_to_children: true
rights :write, 'Sally', applies_to_children: :containers_only, applies_to_self: false, one_level_deep: true
Some other important things to know when using the rights
attribute:
- Only inherited rights remain. All existing explicit rights on the object are removed and replaced.
- If rights are not specified, nothing will be changed. Chef Infra Client does not clear out the rights on a file or directory if rights are not specified.
- Changing inherited rights can be expensive. Microsoft Windows will propagate rights to all children recursively due to inheritance. This is a normal aspect of Microsoft Windows, so consider the frequency with which this type of action is necessary and take steps to control this type of action if performance is the primary consideration.
Use the deny_rights
property to deny specific rights to specific
users. The ordering is independent of using the rights
property. For
example, it doesn’t matter if rights are granted to everyone is placed
before or after deny_rights :read, ['Julian', 'Lewis']
, both Julian
and Lewis will be unable to read the document. For example:
resource 'x.txt' do
rights :read, 'Everyone'
rights :write, 'domain\group'
rights :full_control, 'group_name_or_user_name'
rights :full_control, 'user_name', applies_to_children: true
deny_rights :read, %w(Julian Lewis)
end
or:
deny_rights :full_control, ['Sally']
By default, a file or directory inherits rights from its parent
directory. Most of the time this is the preferred behavior, but
sometimes it may be necessary to take steps to more specifically control
rights. The inherits
property can be used to specifically tell Chef
Infra Client to apply (or not apply) inherited rights from its parent
directory.
For example, the following example specifies the rights for a directory:
directory 'C:\mordor' do
rights :read, 'MORDOR\Minions'
rights :full_control, 'MORDOR\Sauron'
end
and then the following example specifies how to use inheritance to deny access to the child directory:
directory 'C:\mordor\mount_doom' do
rights :full_control, 'MORDOR\Sauron'
inherits false # Sauron is the only person who should have any sort of access
end
If the deny_rights
permission were to be used instead, something could
slip through unless all users and groups were denied.
Another example also shows how to specify rights for a directory:
directory 'C:\mordor' do
rights :read, 'MORDOR\Minions'
rights :full_control, 'MORDOR\Sauron'
rights :write, 'SHIRE\Frodo' # Who put that there I didn't put that there
end
but then not use the inherits
property to deny those rights on a child
directory:
directory 'C:\mordor\mount_doom' do
deny_rights :read, 'MORDOR\Minions' # Oops, not specific enough
end
Because the inherits
property is not specified, Chef Infra Client will
default it to true
, which will ensure that security settings for
existing files remain unchanged.
Common Resource Functionality
Chef resources include common properties, notifications, and resource guards.
Common Properties
The following properties are common to every resource:
compile_time
Ruby Type: true, false | Default Value:
false
Control the phase during which the resource is run on the node. Set to true to run while the resource collection is being built (the
compile phase
). Set to false to run while Chef Infra Client is configuring the node (theconverge phase
).ignore_failure
Ruby Type: true, false, :quiet | Default Value:
false
Continue running a recipe if a resource fails for any reason.
:quiet
will not display the full stack trace and the recipe will continue to run if a resource fails.retries
Ruby Type: Integer | Default Value:
0
The number of attempts to catch exceptions and retry the resource.
retry_delay
Ruby Type: Integer | Default Value:
2
The retry delay (in seconds).
sensitive
Ruby Type: true, false | Default Value:
false
Ensure that sensitive resource data is not logged by Chef InfraClient.
Notifications
notifies
Ruby Type: Symbol, 'Chef::Resource[String]'
A resource may notify another resource to take action when its state changes. Specify a
'resource[name]'
, the:action
that resource should take, and then the:timer
for that action. A resource may notify more than one resource; use anotifies
statement for each resource to be notified.If the referenced resource does not exist, an error is raised. In contrast,
subscribes
will not fail if the source resource is not found.
A timer specifies the point during a Chef Infra Client run at which a notification is run. The following timers are available:
:before
Specifies that the action on a notified resource should be run before processing the resource block in which the notification is located.
:delayed
Default. Specifies that a notification should be queued up, and then executed at the end of a Chef Infra Client run.
:immediate
,:immediately
Specifies that a notification should be run immediately, per resource notified.
The syntax for notifies
is:
notifies :action, 'resource[name]', :timer
subscribes
Ruby Type: Symbol, 'Chef::Resource[String]'
A resource may listen to another resource, and then take action if the
state of the resource being listened to changes. Specify a
'resource[name]'
, the :action
to be taken, and then the :timer
for
that action.
Note that subscribes
does not apply the specified action to the
resource that it listens to - for example:
file '/etc/nginx/ssl/example.crt' do
mode '0600'
owner 'root'
end
service 'nginx' do
subscribes :reload, 'file[/etc/nginx/ssl/example.crt]', :immediately
end
In this case the subscribes
property reloads the nginx
service
whenever its certificate file, located under
/etc/nginx/ssl/example.crt
, is updated. subscribes
does not make any
changes to the certificate file itself, it merely listens for a change
to the file, and executes the :reload
action for its resource (in this
example nginx
) when a change is detected.
If the other resource does not exist, the subscription will not raise an
error. Contrast this with the stricter semantics of notifies
, which
will raise an error if the other resource does not exist.
A timer specifies the point during a Chef Infra Client run at which a notification is run. The following timers are available:
:before
Specifies that the action on a notified resource should be run before processing the resource block in which the notification is located.
:delayed
Default. Specifies that a notification should be queued up, and then executed at the end of a Chef Infra Client run.
:immediate
,:immediately
Specifies that a notification should be run immediately, per resource notified.
The syntax for subscribes
is:
subscribes :action, 'resource[name]', :timer
Guards
A guard property can be used to evaluate the state of a node during the execution phase of a Chef Infra Client run. Based on the results of this evaluation, a guard property is then used to tell Chef Infra Client if it should continue executing a resource. A guard property accepts either a string value or a Ruby block value:
- A string is executed as a shell command. If the command returns
0
, the guard is applied. If the command returns any other value, then the guard property is not applied. String guards in a powershell_script run Windows PowerShell commands and may returntrue
in addition to0
. - A block is executed as Ruby code that must return either
true
orfalse
. If the block returnstrue
, the guard property is applied. If the block returnsfalse
, the guard property is not applied.
A guard property is useful for ensuring that a resource is idempotent by allowing that resource to test for the desired state as it is being executed, and then if the desired state is present, for Chef Infra Client to do nothing.
PropertiesThe following properties can be used to define a guard that is evaluated during the execution phase of a Chef Infra Client run:
not_if
Prevent a resource from executing when the condition returns
true
.only_if
Allow a resource to execute only if the condition returns
true
.
Examples
The following examples demonstrate various approaches for using the file resource in recipes:
Create a file
file '/tmp/something' do
owner 'root'
group 'root'
mode '0755'
action :create
end
Create a file in Microsoft Windows
To create a file in Microsoft Windows, be sure to add an escape
character—\
—before the backslashes in the paths:
file 'C:\\tmp\\something.txt' do
rights :read, 'Everyone'
rights :full_control, 'DOMAIN\\User'
action :create
end
Remove a file
file '/tmp/something' do
action :delete
end
Set file modes
file '/tmp/something' do
mode '0755'
end
Delete a repository using yum to scrub the cache
# the following code sample thanks to gaffneyc @ https://gist.github.com/918711
execute 'clean-yum-cache' do
command 'yum clean all'
action :nothing
end
file '/etc/yum.repos.d/bad.repo' do
action :delete
notifies :run, 'execute[clean-yum-cache]', :immediately
notifies :create, 'ruby_block[reload-internal-yum-cache]', :immediately
end
Add the value of a data bag item to a file
The following example shows how to get the contents of a data bag item
named impossible_things
, create a .pem file located at
some/directory/path/
, and then use the content
attribute to update
the contents of that file with the value of the impossible_things
data
bag item:
private_key = data_bag_item('impossible_things', private_key_name)['private_key']
file "some/directory/path/#{private_key_name}.pem" do
content private_key
owner 'root'
group 'group'
mode '0755'
end
Write a YAML file
The following example shows how to use the content
property to write a
YAML file:
file "#{app['deploy_to']}/shared/config/settings.yml" do
owner "app['owner']"
group "app['group']"
mode '0755'
content app.to_yaml
end
Write a string to a file
The following example specifies a directory, and then uses the content
property to add a string to the file created in that directory:
status_file = '/path/to/file/status_file'
file status_file do
owner 'root'
group 'root'
mode '0755'
content 'My favourite foremost coastal Antarctic shelf, oh Larsen B!'
end
Create a file from a copy
The following example shows how to copy a file from one directory to another, locally on a node:
file '/root/1.txt' do
content IO.read('/tmp/1.txt')
action :create
end
where the content
attribute uses the Ruby IO.read
method to get the
contents of the /tmp/1.txt
file.
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