Check bcfg2 specification for validity, common mistakes, and style
bcfg2-lint [options] [plugin [plugin...]]
bcfg2-lint checks the Bcfg2 specification for schema validity, common mistakes, and other criteria. It can be quite helpful in finding typos or malformed data.
bcfg2-lint exits with a return value of 2 if errors were found, and 3 if warnings (but no errors) were found. Any other non-0 exit value denotes some failure in the script itself.
bcfg2-lint is a rewrite of the older bcfg2-repo-validate tool.
-Cconfigfile
Specify alternate bcfg2.conf location.
-Qpath
Specify the path to the server repository.
-v
Be verbose.
--lint-config
Specify path to bcfg2-lint.conf (default /etc/bcfg2-lint.conf).
--stdin
Rather than operating on all files in the Bcfg2 specification, only validate a list of files supplied on stdin. This mode is particularly useful in pre-commit hooks.
This makes a few assumptions:
Metadata files will only be checked if a valid chain of XIncludes can be followed all the way from clients.xml or groups.xml. Since there are multiple formats of metadata stored in Metadata/ (i.e., clients and groups), there is no way to determine which sort of data a file contains unless there is a valid chain of XIncludes. It may be useful to always specify all metadata files should be checked, even if not all of them have changed.
Property files will only be validated if both the property file itself and its matching schema are included on stdin.
In addition to the plugins listed below, Bcfg2 server plugins may have their own bcfg2-lint functionality, which is enabled automatically when the server plugin is enabled. See bcfg2-lint.conf(5) for more information on lint plugin configuration.
Comments
Check the specification for VCS keywords and any comments that are required. By default, this only checks that the $Id$ keyword is included and expanded in all files. You may specify VCS keywords to check and comments to be required in the config file. (For instance, you might require that every file have a "Maintainer" comment.)
In XML files, only comments are checked for the keywords and comments required.
Genshi
Ensure that all Genshi templates are valid and compile properly.
GroupNames
Ensure that all groups called by name in Metadata, Rules, Bundler, GroupPatterns, and Cfg are valid.
InfoXML
Check that certain attributes are specified in info.xml files. By default, requires that owner, group, and mode are specified. Can also require that an info.xml exists for all Cfg files, and that paranoid mode be enabled for all files.
MergeFiles
Suggest that similar probes and config files be merged into single probes or TGenshi templates.
RequiredAttrs
Check that all entries have the appropriate required attributes, and that the attributes are in a valid format. This goes above and beyond the validation offered by an XML schema.
Validate
Validate the Bcfg2 specification against the XML schemas.
Property files are freeform XML, but if a .xsd file with a matching filename is provided, then schema validation will be performed on property files individually as well. For instance, if you have a property file named ntp.xml then by placing a schema for that file in ntp.xsd schema validation will be performed on ntp.xml.
bcfg2-lint may not handle some deprecated plugins as well as it handles newer ones. For instance, there may be some places where it expects all of your configuration files to be handled by Cfg rather than by a mix of Cfg and TGenshi or TCheetah.