Provided by: puppet-agent_8.4.0-1_all bug

NAME

       puppet-apply - Apply Puppet manifests locally

SYNOPSIS

       Applies a standalone Puppet manifest to the local system.

USAGE

       puppet apply [-h|--help] [-V|--version] [-d|--debug] [-v|--verbose] [-e|--execute] [--detailed-exitcodes]
       [-L|--loadclasses]  [-l|--logdest  syslog|eventlog|ABS  FILEPATH|console]  [--noop]  [--catalog  catalog]
       [--write-catalog-summary] file

DESCRIPTION

       This is the standalone puppet execution tool; use it to apply individual manifests.

       When provided with a modulepath, via command line or config file, puppet apply can effectively mimic  the
       catalog  that  would  be served by puppet master with access to the same modules, although there are some
       subtle differences. When combined with scheduling and an automated system for pushing manifests, this can
       be used to implement a serverless Puppet site.

       Most users should use ´puppet agent´ and ´puppet master´ for site-wide manifests.

OPTIONS

       Any setting that´s valid in the configuration file is  a  valid  long  argument  for  puppet  apply.  For
       example, ´tags´ is a valid setting, so you can specify ´--tags class,tag´ as an argument.

       See  the configuration file documentation at https://puppet.com/docs/puppet/latest/configuration.html for
       the full list of acceptable parameters. You can generate a commented list of all configuration options by
       running puppet with ´--genconfig´.

       •   --debug: Enable full debugging.

       •   --detailed-exitcodes: Provide extra information about the run via exit  codes.  If  enabled,  ´puppet
           apply´ will use the following exit codes:

           0: The run succeeded with no changes or failures; the system was already in the desired state.

           1: The run failed.

           2: The run succeeded, and some resources were changed.

           4: The run succeeded, and some resources failed.

           6: The run succeeded, and included both changes and failures.

       •   --help: Print this help message

       •   --loadclasses:  Load  any  stored  classes.  ´puppet  agent´  caches  configured  classes (usually at
           /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/classes.txt), and setting this option causes all of those classes to be set in
           your puppet manifest.

       •   --logdest: Where to send log messages. Choose between ´syslog´ (the POSIX syslog service), ´eventlog´
           (the Windows Event Log), ´console´, or the path to  a  log  file.  Defaults  to  ´console´.  Multiple
           destinations can be set using a comma separated list (eg: /path/file1,console,/path/file2)"

           A  path ending with ´.json´ will receive structured output in JSON format. The log file will not have
           an ending ´]´ automatically written to it due to the appending nature of logging. It must be appended
           manually to make the content valid JSON.

           A path ending with ´.jsonl´ will receive structured output in JSON Lines format.

       •   --noop: Use ´noop´ mode where Puppet runs in a no-op or dry-run mode. This is useful for seeing  what
           changes Puppet will make without actually executing the changes.

       •   --execute: Execute a specific piece of Puppet code

       •   --test:  Enable  the  most common options used for testing. These are ´verbose´, ´detailed-exitcodes´
           and ´show_diff´.

       •   --verbose: Print extra information.

       •   --catalog: Apply a JSON catalog (such as one generated  with  ´puppet  master  --compile´).  You  can
           either specify a JSON file or pipe in JSON from standard input.

       •   --write-catalog-summary  After  compiling the catalog saves the resource list and classes list to the
           node in the state directory named classes.txt and resources.txt

EXAMPLE

       $ puppet apply -l /tmp/manifest.log manifest.pp
       $ puppet apply --modulepath=/root/dev/modules -e "include ntpd::server"
       $ puppet apply --catalog catalog.json

AUTHOR

       Luke Kanies

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2011 Puppet Inc., LLC Licensed under the Apache 2.0 License

Puppet, Inc.                                      December 2023                                  PUPPET-APPLY(8)