How to make Augeas script with conditions - conditional-statements

Ok, I learned how to make a script in augeas but as stated in the answer, the simple file creates a new entry in the file.
I need some conditions (if - else) or at least if (condition) not true do...
I was searching on the internet and found only examples in Puppet. But I dont want to install puppet. Is there a way to tell Augeas only to add node if conditions are (not) met?

There's no logic operators in the Augeas language (yet). See this thread for more info on the status of adding it (possibly embedding lua in the C bindings).
If you need such logic, I'd recommend you currently use bindings (Ruby, Python, PHP, Perl, etc. You choose ;))

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How to configure karate-config to only run block of code if certain conditions are met

I am completely new to Karate and had a question regarding the karate-config.js file.
I understand it is the first to run as "config" for all the scripts- sort of global settings.
What I have written are a few test cases that require different "setup" steps that cannot be done in the Background (what I understand runs after karate-config.js) for each test scenario.
I have two Feature files with scenarios in them. One of the feature file requires this setup from the karate-config.js. The other Feature file doesn't. Right now the setup is running for both Feature files when I only want it to run for the first one.
I was thinking I could tag each Feature file with a unique tag and use an If statement in karate-config.js to only run if this tag is present. However, that likely won't work since the Feature files don't get accessed until after karate-config.js is traversed right?
Is there a way to get this done?
Sorry if the description is long.
I think you are overcomplicating things. If something is not to be used in all features, please don't put it in karate-config.js.
Just go with the strategy of having 2 re-usable features and call them in the Background where needed. This is what is done in normal programming languages, and Karate in that regard is no different.
You seem to be trying to save one line of code being repeated in multiple files. My advice: don't.

lua embeded in html with apache

Apache has mod_lua. Is there a way to have it process an html page with a like tag similar to php?
If not is there some other method? (I've seen mod_plua but it doesn't seem to have much work towards it).
I haven't tried it actually, but Haserl is something what you might need.
It was reported to be working in the lua-users mailing list.
Haserl is a small cgi wrapper that allows "PHP" style cgi programming, but uses a UNIX bash-like shell or Lua as the programming language. It is very small, so it can be used in embedded environments, or where something like PHP is too big.
P.S.
I haven't worked with it, so I'm not eaxctly sure if it works.
For php-style Lua programming, you could definitely use mod_pLua.
Contrary to what your initial statement says, it does have a lot of work put into it, just look at the extra features supported by it.
Whether or not mod_lua will support this kind of programming in the future...who knows :)
You need to update your config. In your Apache config, add the following lines of code:
AddHandler lua-script .lua
AddHandler lua-script .htm .html
That should set the handler for html files to mod_lua (not tested as I don't use this mod).

Key binding to interactively execute commands from Python interpreter history in order?

I sometimes test Python modules as I develop them by running a Python interactive prompt in a terminal, importing my new module and testing out the functionality. Of course, since my code is in development there are bugs, and frequent restarts of the interpreter are required. This isn't too painful when I've only executed a couple of interpreter lines before restarting: my key sequence when the interpreter restart looks like Up Up Enter Up Up Enter... but extrapolate it to 5 or more statements to be repeated and it gets seriously painful!
Of course I could put my test code into a script which I execute with python -i, but this is such a scratch activity that it doesn't seem quite "above threshold" for opening a text editor :) What I'm really pining for is the Ctrl-r behaviour from the bash shell: executing a sequence of 10 commands in sequence in bash involves finding the command in history (repeated Up or Ctrl-r for a search -- both work in the Python interpreter shell) and then just pressing Ctrl-o ten times. One of my favourite bash shell features.
The problem is that while lots of other readline binding functionality like Ctrl-a, Ctrl-e, Ctrl-r, and Ctrl-s work in the Python interpreter, Ctrl-o does not. I've not been able to find any references to this online, although perhaps the readline module can be used to add this functionality to the python prompt. Any suggestions?
Edit: Yes, I know that using the interactive interpreter is not a development methodology that scales beyond a few lines! But it is convenient for small tests, and IMO the interactiveness can help to work out whether a developing API is natural and convenient, or too heavy. So please confine the answers to the technical question of whether readline history-stepping can be made to work in python, rather than the side-opinion of whether one should or shouldn't choose to (sometimes) work this way!
Edit: Since posting I realised that I am already using the readline module to make some Python interpreter history functions work. But the Ctrl-o binding to the operate-and-get-next readline command doesn't seem to be supported, even if I put readline.parse_and_bind("Control-o: operate-and-get-next") in my PYTHONSTARTUP file.
I often test Python modules as I develop them by running a Python interactive prompt in a terminal, importing my new module and testing out the functionality.
Stop using this pattern and start writing your test code in a file and your life will be much easier.
No matter what, running that file will be less trouble.
If you make the checks automatic rather than reading the results, it will be quicker and less error-prone to check your code.
You can save that file when you're done and run it whenever you change your code or environment.
You can perform metrics on the tests, like making sure you don't have parts of your code you didn't test.
Are you familiar with the unittest module?
Answering my own question, after some discussion on the python-ideas list: despite contradictory information in some readline documentation it seems that the operate-and-get-next function is in fact defined as a bash extension to readline, not by core readline.
So that's why Ctrl-o neither behaves as hoped by default when importing the readline module in a Python interpreter session, nor when attempting to manually force this binding: the function doesn't exist in the readline library to be bound.
A Google search reveals https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/382638, on which the GNU readline maintainer gives reasons for not adding this functionality to core readline and says that it should be implemented by the calling application. He also says "its implementation is not complicated", although it's not obvious to me how (or whether it's even possible) to do this as a pure Python extension to the readline module behaviour.
So no, this is not possible at the moment, unless the operate-and-get-next function from bash is explicitly implemented in the Python readline module or in the interpreter itself.
This isn't exactly an answer to your question, but if that is your development style you might want to look at DreamPie. It is a GUI wrapper for the Python terminal that provides various handy shortcuts. One of these is the ability to drag-select across the interpreter display and copy only the code (not the output). You can then paste this code in and run it again. I find this handy for the type of workflow you describe.
Your best bet will be to check that project : http://ipython.org
This is an example with a history search with Ctrl+R :
EDIT
If you are running debian or derivated :
sudo apt-get install ipython

Existing solutions to test a NSIS script

Does anyone know of an existing solution to help write tests for a NSIS script?
The motivation is the benefit of knowing whether modifying an existing installation script breaks it or has undesired side effects.
Unfortunately, I think the answer to your question depends at least partially on what you need to verify.
If all you are worried about is that the installation copies the right file(s) to the right places, sets the correct registry information etc., then almost any unit testing tool would probably meet your needs. I'd probably use something like RSpec2, or Cucumber, but that's because I am somewhat familiar with Ruby and like the fact that it would be an xcopy deployment if the scripts needed to be run on another machine. I also like the idea of using a BDD-based solution because the use of a domain-specific language that is very close to readable text would mean that others could more easily understand, and if necessary modify, the test specification when necessary.
If, however you are concerned about the user experience (what progress messages are shown, etc.) then I'm not sure that the tests you would need could be as easily expressed... or at least not without a certain level of pain.
Good Luck! Don't forget to let other people here know when/if you find a solution you like.
Check out Pavonis.
With Pavonis you can compile your NSIS script and get the output of any errors and warnings.
Another solution would be AutoIT.
You can compile your install using Jenkins and the NSIS command line compiler, set up an AutoIT test script and have Jenkins run the test.

Where can I browse the sourcecode for libc online (like doxygen)

Sometimes I want to look up the implementations of functions in the stdlib, I've downloaded the sourcecode, but it's quite messy.
Just greping is not really suitable because of the many hits.
Does anyone know a webpage doxygen style that has the documentation.
The same goes for the linux kernel.
Thanks
You should check if your distribution is using the vanilla GLIBC or the EGLIBC fork (Debian and Ubuntu have switched to EGLIBC EDIT: they switched back around 2014).
Anyway, the repository browser for GLIBC is at http://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git
http://code.woboq.org/userspace/glibc/, posted by #guruz below, is a good alternative.
The source is a bit complicated by the presence of multiple versions of the same files.
How about this for libc documentation? And perhaps this for the kernel? There is also Google Code search; here is an example search.
More on Google Code Search You can enter search queries like this: package:linux-2.6 malloc for any references to malloc in the linux-2.6 kernel.
Edit: Google Code search is now shut down. But you can access the git repo at http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git and it has search as well.
You can try http://code.woboq.org/userspace/glibc/
It has nice navigation/hilighting similar to an IDE.
To help navigate the source to glibc, perhaps try something like ctags or cscope?
Note: I get dumber every time I look at the glibc source, so please be careful! :)
If you are using GNU C (glibc), the functions (beyond the GNU extensions) follow the POSIX standard as far as their arguments, implementation, failure and return values. If you want to peek under the hood of static members, you'll have to look at the code.
Every push (that I can remember) to try and adopt something like Doxygen for glibc was rejected for the following reasons:
Redundant, POSIX already documents almost everything thats exposed, as well as man and info pages.
Too much work initially
More work for maintainers
As far as the kernel goes, Linux does use a system very similar to Doxygen called Kerneldoc.
You can also get actual Doxygen-generated docs from http://fossies.org/dox/glibc.