* DOCS: updates intersphinx references for docs links
* TESTS: Raise the number of bytes scanned to determine if a file is binary. The newest ansible-2.10.inv file has its first null byte at position 2261. 4096 is still a cheap chunksize to read so it still makes sense to raise this.
Co-authored-by: Alicia Cozine <acozine@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Toshio Kuratomi <a.badger@gmail.com>
There are links from the scenario guides to collections but collections
docs aren't built in testing or locally when we're on the devel branch.
Due to that we need to make sure those references resolve to the
production docsite. We can use intersphinx to make sure that happens.
* The test for binary files wasn't reading enough of the file.
Checking for null bytes in the first 1024 bytes failed to diagnose the
ansible_2_10.inv file as binary
* Add a script to update the intersphinx inventory files
* We're about to add intersphinx inventories for separate ansible docs
so we need an easy way to update them. Also, we should be updating
these cache files for other upstreams occassionally as well. With a
script, we can add updating them to a release process.
* Now that we don't know what the version of the cache is, change the
filenames to not contain versions.
* Update the intersphinx cache files with the latest upstream versions
Results of running:
hacking/build-ansible.py update-intersphinx-cache -o docs/docsite -c docs/docsite/rst/conf.py
* Add a comment to the configuration file which says how to structure the intersphinx mapping and why.
* Update docs/docsite/rst/conf.py
Co-Authored-By: Sandra McCann <samccann@redhat.com>
Co-authored-by: Sandra McCann <samccann@redhat.com>