- Description
- Setup - The basics of getting started with powershellmodule
- Usage
- Reference
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
This module allows PowerShell repositories to be registered as package sources and PowerShell modules to be installed using the Puppet Package type.
The module supports Windows PowerShell (PowerShell 5) and PowerShell Core (PowerShell 6)
For Windows PowerShell the PowerShellGet PowerShell module must be installed as well as the NuGet package provider. PowerShellGet is included with WMF5 or can be installed for earlier versions here http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=746217&clcid=0x409
PowerShellGet is included in PowerShell Core so no additional setup is necessary.
You can install PackageProviders for PowerShelLGet using the pspackageprovider
type.
pspackageprovider {'ExampleProvider':
ensure => 'present',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
}
In order to use this module to to get packages from a PSRepository like the PSGallery
, you will have to ensure the Nuget
provider is installed:
pspackageprovider {'Nuget':
ensure => 'present',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
}
You can optionally specify the version of a PackageProvider using the version
parameter.
pspackageprovider {'Nuget':
ensure => 'present',
version => '2.8.5.208',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
}
psrepository { 'my-internal-repo':
ensure => present,
source_location => 'http://myrepo.corp.com/api/nuget/powershell',
installation_policy => 'trusted',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
}
Manifests can then refer to that repository using the package
resource.
package { 'nameOfInternallyDevelopedModule':
ensure => '1.0.5',
source => 'my-internal-repo',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
}
*Windows users should remember that package names in Puppet are case sensitive.
You can install modules from the PowerShell Gallery by default once the setup instructions have been followed. You do not need to specify the PSGallery
with the psrepository
type.
package { 'Pester':
ensure => '4.0.3',
source => 'PSGallery',
provider => 'powershellcore',
}
On Windows, PowerShell Core is installed along side Windows PowerShell and maintains its
modules separately. To install the same module for both versions then use a unique resource
title and specify the name
property.
package { 'PSExcel-wps':
ensure => latest,
name => 'PSExcel',
provider => 'windowspowershell',
source => 'PSGallery',
}
package { 'PSExcel-psc':
ensure => latest,
name => 'PSExcel',
provider => 'powershellcore',
source => 'PSGallery',
}
The provider to use will either be windowspowershell
or powershellcore
. Nodes using powershell.exe
will use windowspowershell
, and nodes that have PowerShell core (pwsh.exe
) will use the powershellcore
provider with both the psrepository
and package
types.
This complete example shows how to bootstrap the system with the Nuget package provider, ensure the PowerShell Gallery repository is configured and trusted, and install two modules (one using the WindowsPowerShell provider and one using the PowerShellCore provider).
pspackageprovider {'Nuget':
ensure => 'present'
}
psrepository { 'PSGallery':
ensure => present,
source_location => 'https://www.powershellgallery.com/api/v2/',
installation_policy => 'trusted',
}
package { 'xPSDesiredStateConfiguration':
ensure => latest,
provider => 'windowspowershell',
source => 'PSGallery',
install_options => [ '-AllowClobber' ]
}
package { 'Pester':
ensure => latest,
provider => 'powershellcore',
source => 'PSGallery',
}
Note that PowerShell modules can be installed side by side so installing a newer version of a module will not remove any previous versions.
- As detailed in OneGet/oneget#308, installing PackageProviders from a offline location instead of online is currently not working. A workaround is to use the Puppet file resource to ensure the prescence of the file before attempting to use the NuGet PackageProvider.
The following is an incompelete example that copies the NuGet provider dll to the directory that PowerShellGet expects. You would have to modify this declaration to complete the permissions for the target and the location of the source file.
file{"C:\Program Files\PackageManagement\ProviderAssemblies\nuget\2.8.5.208\Microsoft.PackageManagement.NuGetProvider.dll":
ensure => 'file',
source => "$source\nuget\2.8.5.208\Microsoft.PackageManagement.NuGetProvider.dll"
}
puppet-powershellmodule
implements a package type with a resource provider, which is built into Puppet.
The implementation supports the install_options attribute which can be used to pass additional options to the PowerShell Install-Modules command, e.g.:
package { 'xPSDesiredStateConfiguration':
ensure => latest,
provider => 'windowspowershell',
source => 'PSGallery',
install_options => [ '-AllowClobber',
{ '-proxy' => 'http://proxy.local.domain' } ]
}
Specifies what state the PowerShellGet provider should be in. Valid options: present
and absent
. Default: present
.
Specifies the name of the PowerShellGet provider to install.
Specifies the version of the PowerShellGet provider to install
Allows you to specify and configure a repository. The type expects a valid OneGet package provider source over an HTTP or HTTPS url.
The name of the gallery to register on the computer. Must be unique. Cannot use PSGallery
as the value for this property.
The url to the repository that you would like to register. Must be a valid HTTP or HTTPS url. This url will be used for the underlying SourceLocation
property and will be used as the base url for PublishLocation
, ScriptSourceLocation
, ScriptPublishLocation
. Cannot use the same url as the default gallery, PSGallery.
Manages the installation policy used for the PSRepository. Valid values are trusted
or untrusted
The provider for systems that have powershell.exe
(PowerShell versions less than 6).
The provider for systems that use PowerShell core via pwsh.exe
.
https://github.com/hbuckle/puppet-powershellmodule