use boldface for modules name
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@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ documentation. The ``remote_user`` is just the name of the user account::
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.. note::
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The ``remote_user`` parameter was formerly called just ``user``. It was renamed in Ansible 1.4 to make it more distinguishable from the `user` module (used to create users on remote systems).
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The ``remote_user`` parameter was formerly called just ``user``. It was renamed in Ansible 1.4 to make it more distinguishable from the **user** module (used to create users on remote systems).
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Remote users can also be defined per task::
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@ -253,7 +253,7 @@ system to the desired state. This makes it very safe to rerun
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the same playbook multiple times. They won't change things
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unless they have to change things.
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The `command` and `shell` modules will typically rerun the same command again,
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The **command** and **shell** modules will typically rerun the same command again,
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which is totally ok if the command is something like
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``chmod`` or ``setsebool``, etc. Though there is a ``creates`` flag available which can
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be used to make these modules also idempotent.
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@ -276,7 +276,7 @@ the service module takes ``key=value`` arguments::
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- name: make sure apache is running
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service: name=httpd state=running
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The `command` and `shell` modules are the only modules that just take a list
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The **command** and **shell** modules are the only modules that just take a list
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of arguments and don't use the ``key=value`` form. This makes
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them work as simply as you would expect::
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@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ them work as simply as you would expect::
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- name: disable selinux
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command: /sbin/setenforce 0
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The command and shell module care about return codes, so if you have a command
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The **command** and **shell** module care about return codes, so if you have a command
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whose successful exit code is not zero, you may wish to do this::
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tasks:
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