Defining cookbook dependencies
Quite often, you might want to use features of other cookbooks in your own cookbooks. For example, if you want to make sure that all packages required for compiling software written in C are installed, you might want to include the build-essential
cookbook, which does just that. The Chef server needs to know about such dependencies in your cookbooks. You declare them in a cookbook's metadata.
Getting ready
Make sure you have a cookbook named my_cookbook
, and the run_list
of your node includes my_cookbook
, as described in the Creating and using cookbooks recipe in this chapter.
How to do it…
Edit the metadata of your cookbook in the file cookbooks/my_cookbook/metadata.rb
to add a dependency to the build-essential
cookbook:
mma@laptop:~/chef-repo $ subl cookbooks/my_cookbook/metadata.rb ... depends 'build-essential', '>= 7.0.3'
How it works…
If you want to use a feature of another cookbook inside your cookbook, you will need to include the other cookbook in your recipe using the include_recipe
directive:
include_recipe 'build-essential'
To tell the Chef server that your cookbook requires the build-essential
cookbook, you need to declare that dependency in the metadata.rb
file. If you uploaded all the dependencies to your Chef server either using knife cookbook upload
my_cookbook --include-dependencies
or berks install
and berks upload
, as described in the Managing cookbook dependencies with Berkshelf recipe in this chapter, the Chef server will then send all the required cookbooks to the node.
The depends
function call tells the Chef server that your cookbook depends on a version greater than or equal to 7.0.3 of the build-essential
cookbook.
You may use any of these version constraints with depends
calls:
- < (less than)
- <= (less than or equal to)
- = (equal to)
- >= (greater than or equal to)
- ~> (approximately greater than)
- > (greater than)
There's more…
If you include another recipe inside your recipe, without declaring the cookbook dependency in your metadata.rb
file, Foodcritic
will warn you:
mma@laptop:~/chef-repo $ foodcritic cookbooks/my_cookbook FC007: Ensure recipe dependencies are reflected in cookbook metadata: cookbooks/my_cookbook/recipes/default.rb:9
Tip
Foodcritic
will just return an empty line, if it doesn't find any issues.
Additionally, you can declare conflicting cookbooks through the conflicts
call:
conflicts "nginx"
Of course, you can use version constraints exactly the same way you did with depends
.
See also
- Read more on how you can find out what is uploaded on your Chef server in the Inspecting files on your Chef server with knife recipe in this chapter
- Find out how to use
foodcritic
in the Flagging problems in your Chef cookbooks recipe in Chapter 2, Evaluating and Troubleshooting Cookbooks and Chef Runs