* Add a representer for AnsibleUnsafeBytes
* changelog
* Add unit tests
Remove native string test until we have time to evaluate how this the function should work
Add non-ASCII characters to test cases
* Compare to the string on Python 2
Add a comment in the test about this behavior
* Move ansible.compat.tests to test/units/compat/.
* Fix unit test references to ansible.compat.tests.
* Move builtins compat to separate file.
* Fix classification of test/units/compat/ dir.
Fixes#13243
** Add --vault-id to name/identify multiple vault passwords
Use --vault-id to indicate id and path/type
--vault-id=prompt # prompt for default vault id password
--vault-id=myorg@prompt # prompt for a vault_id named 'myorg'
--vault-id=a_password_file # load ./a_password_file for default id
--vault-id=myorg@a_password_file # load file for 'myorg' vault id
vault_id's are created implicitly for existing --vault-password-file
and --ask-vault-pass options.
Vault ids are just for UX purposes and bookkeeping. Only the vault
payload and the password bytestring is needed to decrypt a
vault blob.
Replace passing password around everywhere with
a VaultSecrets object.
If we specify a vault_id, mention that in password prompts
Specifying multiple -vault-password-files will
now try each until one works
** Rev vault format in a backwards compatible way
The 1.2 vault format adds the vault_id to the header line
of the vault text. This is backwards compatible with older
versions of ansible. Old versions will just ignore it and
treat it as the default (and only) vault id.
Note: only 2.4+ supports multiple vault passwords, so while
earlier ansible versions can read the vault-1.2 format, it
does not make them magically support multiple vault passwords.
use 1.1 format for 'default' vault_id
Vaulted items that need to include a vault_id will be
written in 1.2 format.
If we set a new DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY, then the default will
use version 1.2
vault will only use a vault_id if one is specified. So if none
is specified and C.DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY is 'default'
we use the old format.
** Changes/refactors needed to implement multiple vault passwords
raise exceptions on decrypt fail, check vault id early
split out parsing the vault plaintext envelope (with the
sha/original plaintext) to _split_plaintext_envelope()
some cli fixups for specifying multiple paths in
the unfrack_paths optparse callback
fix py3 dict.keys() 'dict_keys object is not indexable' error
pluralize cli.options.vault_password_file -> vault_password_files
pluralize cli.options.new_vault_password_file -> new_vault_password_files
pluralize cli.options.vault_id -> cli.options.vault_ids
** Add a config option (vault_id_match) to force vault id matching.
With 'vault_id_match=True' and an ansible
vault that provides a vault_id, then decryption will require
that a matching vault_id is required. (via
--vault-id=my_vault_id@password_file, for ex).
In other words, if the config option is true, then only
the vault secrets with matching vault ids are candidates for
decrypting a vault. If option is false (the default), then
all of the provided vault secrets will be selected.
If a user doesn't want all vault secrets to be tried to
decrypt any vault content, they can enable this option.
Note: The vault id used for the match is not encrypted or
cryptographically signed. It is just a label/id/nickname used
for referencing a specific vault secret.
* 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
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