These are all the code changes from Brian's review:
* change #! line
* rename "host" to "name" [keep as alias]
* make documentation clearer
* imports 1 per line
* use get_bin_path to find ssh-keygen
* key not actually required when removing host
The known_hosts module lets you add or remove a host from the
known_hosts file. This is useful if you're going to want to use the
git module over ssh, for example. If you have a very large number of
host keys to manage, you will find the template module more useful.
This was pull request 7840 from the old ansible repo, which was
accepted-in-principle but not yet merged. The mailing list thread
reading it is:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/ansible-devel/_e7H_VT6UJE/discussion
Analyze the given token and use the old webhook format if the token
is old style and use the new format if the token is new style. Make
domain optional with new-style tokens.
Fixes#157
Fix `changed` status that always returns False with composer.
This [previous PR](https://github.com/ansible/ansible-modules-extras/pull/61) had fixed the issue but because of a [Composer recent change](cb336a5416) stderr is now used for reporting information meant for humans while stdout is more for the output of the command.
This PR would definilty solve this issue.
The previous version of this code was supporting only locales using the
format "<language>_<territory>.<charset>". But all the locales that
doesn't have this format were not installable (such as "fr_FR" or
"fr_FR@euro").
Also, if an invalid locales was provided, the module kept sending a
"changed" status.
Now :
* if the user provides an invalid locales, the module failed. Locales
are verified using /etc/locale.gen or /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED if
Ubuntu
* Every types of valid locales are now supported.
* The locale module was not working on Archlinux, as there's no space
between the "#" and the locale. This is now supported. Credits goes
to danderson189, this is his code.
This module was tested on debian jessie, ubuntu 14 LTS and last
Archlinux.
The volume create methods were making an assumption on the unit
sizes being presented by the `vgdisplay` and the `lvdisplay`
commands. To correct the assumption the commands will now enforce
a unit size of "g" which will alway convert sives to gigabytes.
This was an issue brought up by @hughsaunders.
The new module will allow users to control LXC containers from ansible.
The module was built for use in LXC >= 1.0 or greater and implements most
of what can be done using the various lxc clients with regards to running
containers. This first module is geared only at managing lxc containers.
The module provides:
build containers
destroy containers
archive containers
info from a single container
start / stop / restart containers
run commands within containers
add/modify lxc config for a container
supports backends including LVM
Some packages attempt to prompt the user for certain settings during
installation. Thus, this parameter sets the environment variable
$BATCH to 'yes', which forces package installation scripts to accept
default values for these interactive prompts. This should work for all
prompts that have a default value and aren't implemented through a
custom script (as this variable is built into the ports/package system).
FIXME: Package install should fail if it prompts and batch isn't set;
currently, the install hangs indefinitely.
TODO: Allow user to specify the answers to certain prompts.
I (github.com/mwpher) have NOT tested this with any packages besides
bsdstats. It's a small improvement, but not a complete answer to all
the complexities of package installation.
The function normalizes checks for UTF-8, but the same issue exists for
other locales as well. This fix adds normalization for EUC-JP, a Japanese
locale.
In case of release repositories or other special cases you might not
need the autorefreshing of the repos. This patch adds a configure
option instead of hard enabling this.
Signed-off-by: Justin Lecher <jlec@gentoo.org>
Currently, either you apply the change in the configuration
of firewalld ( without permanent=True ), or you apply it live.
I most of the time want to do the 2 at the same time, ie open the
port ( so I can use the service ) and make sure it stay open on reboot.