* test/: PEP8 compliancy
- Make PEP8 compliant
* Python3 chokes on casting int to bytes (#24952)
But if we tell the formatter that the var is a number, it works
* Fix vault reading from stdin (avoid realpath() on non-links)
os.path.realpath() is used to find the target of file paths that
are symlinks so vault operations happen directly on the target.
However, in addition to resolving symlinks, realpath() also returns
a full path. when reading from stdin, vault cli uses '-' as a special
file path so VaultEditor() will replace with stdin.
realpath() was expanding '-' with the CWD to something like
'/home/user/playbooks/-' causing errors like:
ERROR! [Errno 2] No such file or directory: u'/home/user/ansible/-'
Fix is to specialcase '-' to not use realpath()
Fixes#23567
* to_text decrypt output when writing to stdout
* Update module_utils.six to latest
We've been held back on the version of six we could use on the module
side to 1.4.x because of python-2.4 compatibility. Now that our minimum
is Python-2.6, we can update to the latest version of six in
module_utils and get rid of the second copy in lib/ansible/compat.
Since vault edit attempts to unlink
edited files before creating a new file
with the same name and writing to it, if
the file was a symlink, the symlink would
be replaced with a regular file.
VaultEditor file ops now check if files
it is changing are symlinks and instead
works directly on the target, so that
os.rename() and shutils do the right thing.
Add unit tests cases for this case and
assorted VaultEditor test cases.
Fixes#20264
* Make is_encrypted_file handle both files opened in text and binary mode
On python3, by default files are opened in text mode. Since we know
the encoding of vault files (and especially the header which is the
first set of bytes) we can decide whether the file is an encrypted
vault file in either case.
* Fix is_encrypted_file not resetting the file position
* Update is_encrypted_file to check that all the data in the file is ascii
* For is_encrypted_file(), add start_pos and count parameters
This allows callers to specify reading vaulttext from the middle of
a file if necessary.
* Combine VaultLib.encrypt() and VaultLib.encrypt_bytestring()
* Change vault's is_encrypted() to take either text or byte strings and to return False if any part of the data is non-ascii.
* Remove unnecessary use of six.b
* Vault Cipher: mark a few methods as private.
* VaultAES256._is_equal throws a TypeError if given non byte strings
* Make VaultAES256 methods that don't need self staticmethods and classmethods
* Mark VaultAES and is_encrypted as deprecated
* Get rid of VaultFile (unused and feature implemented in a different way)
* Normalize variable and parameter names on plaintext, ciphertext, vaulttext
* Normalize variable and parameter names on "b_" prefix when dealing with bytes
* Test changes:
* Remove redundant tests( both checking the same byte string)
* Fix use of format string without format operator
* Enable vault editor tests on python3
* Initialize the vault_cipher for VaultAES256 testing in setUp()
* Make assertTrue and assertFalse take the actual method calls for
better error messages.
* Test that non-ascii byte strings compare correctly.
* Test that unicode strings and ints raise TypeError
* Test-specific:
* Removed test_methods_exist(). We only have one VaultLib so the
implementation is the assurance that the methods exist. (Can use an abc for
this if it changes).
* Add tests for both byte string and text string input where the API takes either.
* Convert "assert" to unittest assert functions or add a custom message where
that will make failures easier to debug.
* Move instantiating the VaultLib into setUp().
We couldn't copy to_unicode, to_bytes, to_str into module_utils because
of licensing. So once created it we had two sets of functions that did
the same things but had different implementations. To remedy that, this
change removes the ansible.utils.unicode versions of those functions.
Make some python3 fixes to make the unittests pass:
* galaxy imports
* dictionary iteration in role requirements
* swap_stdout helper for unittests
* Normalize to text string in a facts.py function
Make !vault-encrypted create a AnsibleVaultUnicode
yaml object that can be used as a regular string object.
This allows a playbook to include a encrypted vault
blob for the value of a yaml variable. A 'secret_password'
variable can have it's value encrypted instead of having
to vault encrypt an entire vars file.
Add __ENCRYPTED__ to the vault yaml types so
template.Template can treat it similar
to __UNSAFE__ flags.
vault.VaultLib api changes:
- Split VaultLib.encrypt to encrypt and encrypt_bytestring
- VaultLib.encrypt() previously accepted the plaintext data
as either a byte string or a unicode string.
Doing the right thing based on the input type would fail
on py3 if given a arg of type 'bytes'. To simplify the
API, vaultlib.encrypt() now assumes input plaintext is a
py2 unicode or py3 str. It will encode to utf-8 then call
the new encrypt_bytestring(). The new methods are less
ambiguous.
- moved VaultLib.is_encrypted logic to vault module scope
and split to is_encrypted() and is_encrypted_file().
Add a test/unit/mock/yaml_helper.py
It has some helpers for testing parsing/yaml
Integration tests added as roles test_vault and test_vault_embedded
Note that this test was broken in devel because it was really just
duplicating the AES256 test because setting v.cipher_name to 'AES'
no longer selected AES after it was de-write-whitelisted.
Now that we've removed the VaultAES encryption code, we embed static
output from an earlier version and test that we can decrypt it.