Running plans from the command line
Run a plan using the puppet plan run
command.
puppet plan run
with the following
information included:
- The full name of the plan, formatted as
<MODULE>::<PLAN>
. - Any plan parameters.Note: To find out what parameters can be included in a plan, view the plan metadata by running the command
puppet plan show <PLAN NAME>
on the command line. For more information, see Inspecting plans - Credentials, if required, formatted with the
--user
and--password
flags.
For example, if a plan defined in mymodule/plans/myplan.pp
accepts a load_balancer
parameter, run:
puppet plan run mymodule::myplan load_balancer=lb.myorg.com
You can pass a comma-separated list of node names, wildcard patterns, or
group IDs to a plan parameter that is passed to a run function or that the
plan resolves using get_targets
.
If you need to stop an in-progress plan, click Stop Plan on the plan's run details page in the console or use the POST /command/stop_plan endpoint. This prevents new events from starting and allows in-progress events to finish. If you need to force stop an in-progress task from a stopped plan, refer to Stop a task in progress.
Plan command options
The following are common options you can use with the
plan
action. For a complete list of global
options run puppet plan --help
.
Option | Definition |
---|---|
--params |
A string value used to specify either a JSON object that includes the parameters
or the path to a JSON file containing the parameters, prefaced with @ . For example, @/path/to/file.json . Do not use this flag if specifying inline
parameter-value pairs. |
--environment or -e
|
The name of the environment where the plan is installed. |
--description |
A flag used to provide a description for the job to be shown on the job list and
job details pages and returned with the puppet job show command. It
defaults to empty. |
-
Inline, using the
<PARAMETER>=<VALUE>
syntax. -
With the
--params
option, as a JSON object or reference to a JSON file.
plan example::test_params(Targetspec $nodes, String $command){
run_command($command, $nodes)
}
-
puppet plan run example::test_params nodes=my-node.company.com command=whoami
-
puppet plan run example::test_params --params ‘{“nodes”:”my-node.company.com”, “command”:”whoami”}’
You can't combine these two ways of passing in parameters. Choose either
inline or --params
.
If you use the inline way, parameter types other than string, integer,
double, and Boolean will be interpreted as strings. Use the --params
method if you want them read as their original type.