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This repository holds the documentation of the provs framework.

Design principles

For usage examples it is recommended to have a look at provs-scripts or provs-ubuntu-extensions.

"Implarative"

Configuration management tools are usually classified as either imperative or declarative. Imperative means that you define the steps which are necessary to achieve the goal. Declarative means that you just define the state which you want to achieve, and the tooling figures out itself how this goal is achieved.

The provs framework is aimed to offer the best of both worlds. Based on the imperative paradigm it offers advantages as: full control of execution order, clear control flow, all kinds of looping and conditional constructs, easy debugging. Furthermore, you are not limited by a DSL, you can make use of the full power of shell commands.

On the other hand, the built-in functions of the provs framework also provide important advantages of the declarative paradigm, as for example idempotence resp. quasi-idempotence.

Idempotence vs quasi-idempotence

Idempotence means that you can run the same function once or several times without problems, you'll always get the same result.
However, there are cases where you don't want strict idempotence. E.g. if you are installing a program or cloning a git repo a second time, you might want to get just the latest version, even if an older version has already been installed earlier. This behavior is also known as quasi-idempotence. The provs framework uses quasi-idempotence where "real" idempotence is not possible or does not make sense.

In the following document we describe how we implement idempotence:

https://gitlab.com/domaindrivenarchitecture/overview/-/blob/master/adr-provs/quasi-idempotence.md

Architecture

Multiple architectural layers provide different levels of functionality:

provs layers

Module structure

For the modules we use domain-drive design according to:

https://gitlab.com/domaindrivenarchitecture/overview/-/blob/master/adr-provs/ddd-structure.md

Module dependencies

resources/prov-module-dependencies-5b.png

Explanation:

Modules:

  1. Common module: has both a domain layer and an infrastructure layer
  2. Module with only domain layer: e.g. for very simple logic where no infrastructure layer is needed
  3. Module with only infrastructure layer: these are often _utility modules_, which provide a collection of utility functions

Dependencies:

  1. Domain layer calls (a function in) the infrastructure layer of the same module
    • Common practice of dependencies within a module
  2. Domain layer calls (a function in) the domain layer another module
    • Common practice of dependencies between modules
  3. Base layer calls domain layer
    • Usually not recommended!
  4. Domain layer calls infrastructure layer in another module
    • This sometimes can make sense, e.g. if module B just needs some low-level function of module D instead of full provisioning. However, in most cases it is recommended to call the domain layer of module D whenever possible
  5. Domain layer calls infrastructure layer in another module, which only has infrastructure layer
    • Common practice for calling utility modules, which don't have a domain layer.