If the requirements contains a repos url it will always report 'Successfully
installed'; there is no difference in the output to tell apart if
anything new was pulled. Use freeze to detect if the environment changed
in any way.
Should fixansible/ansible#1705
added mysql 5.7 user password modification support with backwards compatibility
resolved mysql server version check and differences in user authentication management
explicitly state support for mysql_native_password type and no others. fixed some failing logic and updated samples
updated comment to actually match logic.
simplified conditionals and a little refactor
Since use_unsafe_shell is suspicious from a security point
of view (or it wouldn't be unsafe), the less we have, the less
code we have to toroughly inspect for a security audit.
Warning catches typos in the filename. Since the playbook is saying
"make sure this user doesn't have an entry" it makes more sense to warn
than to error.
Fixes#2619
The parameters 'diff_peek' and 'validate' are not expected to be used
by users. They are internal. To make it clear, this change adds the
comments 'Internal use only' to each of those definitions to make
it clear that they are actually used, just not by end-users.
The 'diff_peek' option isn't documented at all, and provides a
rudimentary check that the content isn't binary. Documentation is
added to explain the option.
The 'validate' option has a declaration, but isn't implemented.
Therefore it may as well be removed from the module.
Previously, the `promote` command in the `rds` module would always return OK and never actually promote an instance. This was because `promote_db_instance()` had its conditions backwards: if the instance had the `replication_source` attribute indicating that it **was** a replica, it would set `changed = False` and do nothing. If the instance **wasn't** a replica, it would attempt to run `boto.rds.promote_read_replica()`, which would always fail.
'exact_count' and 'state' are mutually exclusive options they should not be in the following examples:
- # Enforce that 5 running instances named "database" with a "dbtype" of "postgres" example and
- # Enforce that 5 instances with a tag "foo" are running
The yum module allows the 'name' parameter to be given as 'pkg', in
a similar way to some of the other package managers. This change
documents this alias.
The module's 'state' parameter has two other aliases, in line with
the 'apt' action; the 'state' parameter can take 'installed' as an
alias for 'present', and 'removed' as an alias for 'absent'. These
aliases are documented.