Module metadata
When you author a module, it must contain certain metadata in a metadata.json
file, which contains important information that Puppet, the Forge, and your module's
users rely on.
The metadata.json
file is located in the module's main
directory, outside any subdirectories. If you created your module with Puppet Development Kit (PDK), the metadata.json
file is already created and contains the information you provided
during the module creation interview. If you skipped the interview, the module metadata is
populated with PDK default values. You can manually edit the
values in the metadata.json
file as needed.
The Forge requires modules to contain the metadata.json
file. The Forge uses
the metadata to create the module's information page and to provide important information to
users installing the module. The metadata.json
file uses
standard JSON syntax and contains a single JSON object, mapping keys to values.
metadata.json
example
{
"name": "puppetlabs-ntp",
"version": "10.1.0",
"author": "puppetlabs",
"summary": "Installs, configures, and manages the NTP service.",
"license": "Apache-2.0",
"source": "https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-ntp",
"project_page": "https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-ntp",
"issues_url": "https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-ntp/issues",
"dependencies": [
{
"name": "puppetlabs/stdlib",
"version_requirement": ">= 4.13.1 < 10.0.0"
}
],
"operatingsystem_support": [
{
"operatingsystem": "RedHat",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"7"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "CentOS",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"7"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "OracleLinux",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"7"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "Scientific",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"7"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "SLES",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"12",
"15"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "Debian",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"10",
"11"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "Ubuntu",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"18.04",
"20.04",
"22.04"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "Solaris",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"11"
]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "AIX",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"7.1"
]
}
],
"requirements": [
{
"name": "puppet",
"version_requirement": ">= 7.0.0 < 9.0.0"
}
],
"description": "NTP Module for Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, RHEL, OEL, Fedora, FreeBSD, ArchLinux, Amazon Linux and Gentoo.",
"template-url": "https://github.com/puppetlabs/pdk-templates.git#main",
"template-ref": "heads/main-0-g4fb29e7",
"pdk-version": "3.0.0"
}
Specifying dependencies
If your module depends on functionality from
another module, specify this in the "dependencies"
key of the metadata.json
file. The "dependencies"
key accepts an array of hashes. This key is required, but if your
module has no dependencies, you can pass an empty array.
Dependencies are not added to the metadata during module creation, so you must edit your
metadata.json
file to
include dependency information. For information about how to format dependency versions, see
the related topic about version specifiers in module metadata.
"name"
and "version_requirement"
keys. For example:
"dependencies": [
{ "name": "puppetlabs/stdlib", "version_requirement": ">= 3.2.0 < 5.0.0" },
{ "name": "puppetlabs/firewall", "version_requirement": ">= 0.0.4" },
{ "name": "puppetlabs/apt", "version_requirement": ">= 1.1.0 < 2.0.0" },
{ "name": "puppetlabs/concat", "version_requirement": ">= 1.0.0 < 2.0.0" }
]
When installing modules with the puppet module install
command,
Puppet installs any missing dependencies. When installing
modules with Code Manager and the Puppetfile, dependencies are not automatically installed, so
they must be explicitly specified in the Puppetfile.
Specifying Puppet version requirements
The requirements
key specifies external requirements for the
module, particularly the Puppet version required. Although
you can express any requirement here, the Forge module pages
and search function support only the "puppet"
value, which
specifies the Puppet version.
"requirements"
key accepts an array of hashes with the
following keys: -
"name"
: The name of the requirement. -
"version_requirement"
: A semantic version range, including lower and upper version bounds.
"requirements": [
{"name": "puppet”, “version_requirement”: ">= 5.5.0 < 6.0.0"}
]
< 6.0.0
.Specifying operating system compatibility
Specify the operating system your module is compatible with in the operatingsystem_support
key. This key accepts an array of hashes, where each
hash contains operatingsystem
and operatingsystemrelease
keys. The Forge uses these
keys for search filtering and to display versions on module pages.
The
operatingsystem
key accepts a string. The Forge uses this value for search filters.The
operatingsystemrelease
accepts an array of strings. The Forge displays these versions on module pages, and you can format them in whatever way makes sense for the operating system in question.
"operatingsystem_support": [
{
"operatingsystem":"RedHat",
"operatingsystemrelease":[ "5.0", "6.0" ]
},
{
"operatingsystem": "Ubuntu",
"operatingsystemrelease": [
"12.04",
"10.04"
]
}
]
Specifying versions
Your module metadata specifies your own module's version as well as the versions for your module's dependencies and requirements. Version your module semantically; for details about semantic versioning (also known as SemVer), see the Semantic Versioning specification. This helps others know what to expect from your module when you make changes.
When you specify versions for a module dependencies or requirements, you can specify multiple versions.
If your module is compatible with only one major or minor version, use the semantic major and minor version shorthand, such as 1.x or 1.2.1. If your module is compatible with multiple major versions, you can set a supported version range.
For example, 1.x indicates that your module is compatible with any minor update of version 1, but is not compatible with version 2 or larger. Specifying a version range such as >= 1.0.0 < 3.0.0 indicates the the module is compatible with any version that greater than or equal to 1.0.0 and less than 3.0.0.
Always set an upper version boundary in your version range. If your module is compatible with the most recent released versions of a dependencies, set the upper bound to exclude the next, unreleased major version. Without this upper bound, users might run into compatibility issues across major version boundaries, where incompatible changes occur.
For example, to accept minor
updates to a dependency but avoid breaking changes, specify a major version. This example
accepts any minor version of puppetlabs-stdlib
version
4:
"dependencies": [
{ "name": "puppetlabs/stdlib", "version_requirement": "4.x" },
]
In the example below, the current version of puppetlabs-stdlib
is 4.8.0, and version 5.0.0 is not
yet released. Because 5.0.0 might have breaking changes, the upper bound of the version
dependency is set to that major
version.
"dependencies": [
{ "name": "puppetlabs/stdlib", "version_requirement": ">= 3.2.0 < 5.0.0" }
]
Format | Description |
---|---|
1.2.3 | A specific version. |
1.x | A semantic major version. This example includes 1.0.1 but not 2.0.1. |
1.2.x | A semantic major and minor version. This example includes 1.2.3 but not 1.3.0. |
> 1.2.3 | Greater than the specified version. |
< 1.2.3 | Less than the specified version. |
>= 1.2.3 | Greater than or equal to the specified version. |
<= 1.2.3 | Less than or equal to the specified version. |
>= 1.0.0 < 2.0.0 | Range of versions; both conditions must be satisfied. This example includes version 1.0.1 but not version 2.0.1. |
">= 3.2.x <
4.x"
Adding tags
Optionally, you can add tags to your metadata to help users find your module in Forge searches. Generally, include four to six tags for any given module.
Pass tags as an array, like ["msyql", "database",
"monitoring"]
.Tags cannot contain whitespace. Certain tags are prohibited, such as
profanity or tags resembling the $::operatingsystem
fact
(such as "redhat"
, "rhel"
,
"debian"
, "
windows"
, or "osx"
). Use of
prohibited tags lowers your module's quality score on the Forge.
Available metadata.json
keys
Required and optional metadata.json
keys specify metadata for your module.
Key | Required? | Value | Example |
---|---|---|---|
|
Required. | The full name of your module, including your Forge username, in the format username-module . |
"
|
"version"
|
Required. | The current version of your module. This must follow semantic versioning. For details, see the Semantic Versioning specification. |
"1.2.1 " |
"author"
|
Required. | The person who gets credit for creating the module. If absent, this key defaults to the username portion of the name key. |
"puppetlabs " |
"license"
|
Required. | The license under which your module is made available. License metadata must match an identifier provided by SPDX. For a complete list, see the SPDX license list. | "Apache-2.0 " |
"summary"
|
Required. | A one-line description of your module. |
"Standard library of
resources for Puppet modules."
|
"source"
|
Required. | The source repository for your module. |
"https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-stdlib"
|
"dependencies"
|
Required. | An array of other modules that your module depends on to function. If the module has no dependencies, pass an empty array. See the related topic about specifying dependencies for more details. |
|
"requirements"
|
Optional. | A list of external requirements for your module, given as an array of hashes. |
|
|
Optional. | A link to your module's website, to be included on the module's Forge page. |
"https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-stdlib"
|
|
Optional. | A link to your module's issue tracker. |
"https://tickets.puppetlabs.com/browse/MODULES"
|
|
Optional. | An array of hashes listing the operating systems that your module is compatible with. See the topic about specifying operating compatibility for details. |
|
|
Optional. | An array of four to six key words to help people find your module. |
["msyql", "database",
"monitoring", "reporting"]
|