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shef(1) [debian man page]

SHEF(1) 							    Chef Manual 							   SHEF(1)

NAME
shef - Interactive Chef Console SYNOPSIS
shef [named configuration] (options) -S, --server CHEF_SERVER_URL The chef server URL -z, --client chef-client mode -c, --config CONFIG The configuration file to use -j, --json-attributes JSON_ATTRIBS Load attributes from a JSON file or URL -l, --log-level LOG_LEVEL Set the logging level -s, --solo chef-solo shef session -a, --standalone standalone shef session -v, --version Show chef version -h, --help Show command options When no --config option is specified, shef attempts to load a default configuration file: o If a named configuration is given, shef will load ~/.chef/named configuration/shef.rb o If no named configuration is given shef will load ~/.chef/shef.rb if it exists o Shef falls back to loading /etc/chef/client.rb or /etc/chef/solo.rb if -z or -s options are given and no shef.rb can be found. o The --config option takes precedence over implicit configuration paths. DESCRIPTION
shef is an irb(1) (interactive ruby) session customized for Chef. shef serves two primary functions: it provides a means to interact with a Chef Server interactively using a convenient DSL; it allows you to define and run Chef recipes interactively. SYNTAX
Shef uses irb's subsession feature to provide multiple modes of interaction. In addition to the primary mode which is entered on start, recipe and attributes modes are available. PRIMARY MODE
The following commands are available in the primary session: help Prints a list of available commands version Prints the Chef version recipe Switches to recipe mode attributes Switches to attributes mode run_chef Initiates a chef run reset reinitializes shef echo :on|:off Turns irb's echo function on or off. Echo is on by default. tracing :on|:off Turns irb's function tracing feature on or off. Tracing is extremely verbose and expected to be of interest primarily to developers. node Returns the node object for the current host. See knife-node(1) for more information about nodes. ohai Prints the attributes of node In addition to these commands, shef provides a DSL for accessing data on the Chef Server. When working with remote data in shef, you chain method calls in the form object type.operation, where object type is in plural form. The following object types are available: o nodes o roles o data_bags o clients o cookbooks For each object type the following operations are available: object type.all(&block) Loads all items from the server. If the optional code block is given, each item will be passed to the block and the results returned, similar to ruby's Enumerable#map method. object type.show(object name) Aliased as object type.load Loads the singular item identified by object name. object type.search(query, &block) Aliased as object type.find Runs a search against the server and returns the matching items. If the optional code block is given each item will be passed to the block and the results returned. The query may be a Solr/Lucene format query given as a String, or a Hash of conditions. If a Hash is given, the options will be ANDed together. To join conditions with OR, use negative queries, or any advanced search syntax, you must provide give the query in String form. object type.transform(:all|query, &block) Aliased as object type.bulk_edit Bulk edit objects by processing them with the (required) code block. You can edit all objects of the given type by passing the Sym- bol :all as the argument, or only a subset by passing a query as the argument. The query is evaluated in the same way as with search. The return value of the code block is used to alter the behavior of transform. If the value returned from the block is nil or false, the object will not be saved. Otherwise, the object is saved after being passed to the block. This behavior can be exploited to cre- ate a dry run to test a data transformation. RECIPE MODE
Recipe mode implements Chef's recipe DSL. Exhaustively documenting this DSL is outside the scope of this document. See the following pages in the Chef documentation for more information: o http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Resources o http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Recipes Once you have defined resources in the recipe, you can trigger a convergence run via run_chef EXAMPLES
o A "Hello World" interactive recipe chef > recipe chef:recipe > echo :off chef:recipe > file "/tmp/hello_world" chef:recipe > run_chef [Sat, 09 Apr 2011 08:56:56 -0700] INFO: Processing file[/tmp/hello_world] action create ((irb#1) line 2) [Sat, 09 Apr 2011 08:56:56 -0700] INFO: file[/tmp/hello_world] created file /tmp/hello_world chef:recipe > pp ls '/tmp' [".", "..", "hello_world"] o Search for nodes by role, and print their IP addresses chef > nodes.find(:roles => 'monitoring-server') {|n| n[:ipaddress] } => ["10.254.199.5"] o Remove the role obsolete from every node in the system chef > nodes.transform(:all) {|n| n.run_list.delete('role[obsolete]') } => [node[chef098b2.opschef.com], node[ree-woot], node[graphite-dev], node[fluke.localdomain], node[ghost.local], node[kallistec]] BUGS
The name shef is clever in print but is confusing when spoken aloud. Pronouncing shef as chef console is an imperfect workaround. shef often does not perfectly replicate the context in which chef-client(8) configures a host, which may lead to discrepancies in observed behavior. shef has to duplicate much code from chef-client's internal libraries and may become out of sync with the behavior of those libraries. SEE ALSO
chef-client(8) knife(1) http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Shef AUTHOR
Chef was written by Adam Jacob adam@opscode.com with many contributions from the community. Shef was written by Daniel DeLeo. DOCUMENTATION
This manual page was written by Daniel DeLeo dan@opscode.com. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and / or modify this document under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License. CHEF
Shef is distributed with Chef. http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Home Chef 10.12.0 June 2012 SHEF(1)
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