Provided by: puppet-agent_8.10.0-2ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       puppet-lookup - Interactive Hiera lookup

SYNOPSIS

       Does Hiera lookups from the command line.

       Since this command needs access to your Hiera data, make sure to run it on a node that has a copy of that
       data. This usually means logging into a Puppet Server node and running 'puppet lookup' with sudo.

       The most common version of this command is:

       'puppet lookup KEY --node NAME --environment ENV --explain'

USAGE

       puppet   lookup   [--help]   [--type  TYPESTRING]  [--merge  first|unique|hash|deep]  [--knock-out-prefix
       PREFIX-STRING] [--sort-merged-arrays] [--merge-hash-arrays] [--explain]  [--environment  ENV]  [--default
       VALUE] [--node NODE-NAME] [--facts FILE] [--compile] [--render-as s|json|yaml|binary|msgpack] keys

DESCRIPTION

       The  lookup  command is a CLI for Puppet's 'lookup()' function. It searches your Hiera data and returns a
       value for the requested lookup key, so you can test and explore your data. It is a modern replacement for
       the 'hiera' command. Lookup uses the  setting  for  global  hiera.yaml  from  puppet's  config,  and  the
       environment  to  find  the  environment  level  hiera.yaml  as  well  as the resulting modulepath for the
       environment (for hiera.yaml files in modules). Hiera usually relies on  a  node's  facts  to  locate  the
       relevant  data  sources. By default, 'puppet lookup' uses facts from the node you run the command on, but
       you can get data for any other node with the '--node NAME' option. If possible, the lookup  command  will
       use  the  requested  node's  real stored facts from PuppetDB; if PuppetDB isn't configured or you want to
       provide arbitrary fact values, you can pass alternate facts as a JSON or YAML file with '--facts FILE'.

       If you're debugging your Hiera data and want to see where values are coming  from,  use  the  '--explain'
       option.

       If  '--explain'  isn't  specified,  lookup  exits  with  0  if  a  value  was found and 1 otherwise. With
       '--explain', lookup always exits with 0 unless there is a major error.

       You can provide multiple lookup keys to this command, but it only returns a value  for  the  first  found
       key, omitting the rest.

       For     more     details     about     how     Hiera     works,     see    the    Hiera    documentation:
       https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/hiera_intro.html

OPTIONS

       •   --help: Print this help message.

       •   --explain Explain the details of how the lookup was performed and where the final value came from (or
           the reason no value was found).

       •   --node NODE-NAME Specify which node to look up data for; defaults to the node where  the  command  is
           run. Since Hiera's purpose is to provide different values for different nodes (usually based on their
           facts), you'll usually want to use some specific node's facts to explore your data. If the node where
           you're  running  this  command  is configured to talk to PuppetDB, the command will use the requested
           node's most recent facts. Otherwise, you can override facts with the '--facts' option.

       •   --facts FILE Specify a .json or .yaml file of key => value mappings to override the  facts  for  this
           lookup. Any facts not specified in this file maintain their original value.

       •   --environment ENV Like with most Puppet commands, you can specify an environment on the command line.
           This  is  important  for  lookup  because  different environments can have different Hiera data. This
           environment will be always be the one used regardless of any other factors.

       •   --merge first|unique|hash|deep: Specify the merge behavior, overriding any merge  behavior  from  the
           data's  lookup_options.  'first'  returns  the  first  value  found. 'unique' appends everything to a
           merged, deduplicated array. 'hash' performs a simple hash merge by overwriting keys of  lower  lookup
           priority. 'deep' performs a deep merge on values of Array and Hash type. There are additional options
           that can be used with 'deep'.

       •   --knock-out-prefix  PREFIX-STRING  Can  be used with the 'deep' merge strategy. Specifies a prefix to
           indicate a value should be removed from the final result.

       •   --sort-merged-arrays Can be used with the 'deep' merge strategy. When this flag is used,  all  merged
           arrays are sorted.

       •   --merge-hash-arrays Can be used with the 'deep' merge strategy. When this flag is used, hashes WITHIN
           arrays are deep-merged with their counterparts by position.

       •   --explain-options  Explain  whether  a lookup_options hash affects this lookup, and how that hash was
           assembled. (lookup_options is how Hiera configures merge behavior in data.)

       •   --default VALUE A value to return if Hiera can't find a value in data. For  emulating  calls  to  the
           'lookup()' function that include a default.

       •   --type  TYPESTRING:  Assert  that  the  value  has  the  specified  type.  For emulating calls to the
           'lookup()' function that include a data type.

       •   --compile Perform a full catalog compilation prior to the lookup. If your hierarchy and data only use
           the $facts, $trusted, and $server_facts variables, you don't need this option; however, if your Hiera
           configuration uses arbitrary variables set by a Puppet manifest, you might need this  option  to  get
           accurate data. No catalog compilation takes place unless this flag is given.

       •   --render-as  s|json|yaml|binary|msgpack  Specify  the  output  format of the results; "s" means plain
           text. The default when producing a value is yaml and the default when producing an explanation is s.

EXAMPLE

       To look up 'key_name' using the Puppet Server node's facts: $ puppet lookup key_name

       To look up 'key_name' using the Puppet Server node's arbitrary variables from a  manifest,  and  classify
       the node if applicable: $ puppet lookup key_name --compile

       To look up 'key_name' using the Puppet Server node's facts, overridden by facts given in a file: $ puppet
       lookup key_name --facts fact_file.yaml

       To look up 'key_name' with agent.local's facts: $ puppet lookup --node agent.local key_name

       To get the first value found for 'key_name_one' and 'key_name_two' with agent.local's facts while merging
       values  and  knocking out the prefix 'foo' while merging: $ puppet lookup --node agent.local --merge deep
       --knock-out-prefix foo key_name_one key_name_two

       To lookup 'key_name' with agent.local's facts, and return a default value of 'bar' if nothing was  found:
       $ puppet lookup --node agent.local --default bar key_name

       To see an explanation of how the value for 'key_name' would be found, using agent.local's facts: $ puppet
       lookup --node agent.local --explain key_name

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2015 Puppet Inc., LLC Licensed under the Apache 2.0 License

Puppet, Inc.                                      November 2024                                 PUPPET-LOOKUP(8)