"UnboundLocalError: local variable 'branch' referenced before assignment" is
raised in git, line 282, in switch_version.
Exception is raised when version is not branch and version checkout fails.
E.g. when version is nonexistant commit.
Treat errno 13 (permission denied) as one of the special cases in
atomic_move.
This type of error can occur because of sudo'ing to non-root user.
Fixes#3705
This enables sending messages to partychat-like services (e.g. im.partych.at).
This commit also fixes handling of 'to' argument for non-chatroom recipients.
The timeout parameter of glance-image was not being parsed into a
numeric type, causing the following error when specifying timeout:
msg: Error in creating image: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'float' and 'str'
The apt-key command takes an optional --keyring parameter representing
the path to a specific GPG keyring to operate on. If it's not given,
the command operates on all keyring files, i.e., /etc/apt/trusted.gpg
and /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/*.gpg.
This change adds a 'keyring' parameter to the apt_key module and
propagates it down to the apt-key command line. The main use case this
supports is organizing keys for third-party repos into individual
keyrings in /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d, rather than putting them all in
the default keyring.
Since ansible 1.2, it became possible to place a host_vars
directory in the same directory as a playbook, making it possible
to keep host_vars local to that playbook there. However, due to
python's os.path.dirname, a action such as:
$ ansible-playbook pb.yml
..would not pick up the host_vars as os.path.dirname("pb.yml")
returns "", unlike the unix command dirname that would return
".". Substituting "pb.yml" on the command line with "./pb.yml"
would do the trick, but is not always intuitive. This patch
solves the problem until python solves issue18547 [1].
[1] http://bugs.python.org/issue18547
When revoking privileges from a user, the GRANT OPTION is always
revoked, even if the user doesn't have it. If the user exists, this
doesn't give an error, but if the user doesn't exist, it does:
mysql> GRANT ALL ON test.* TO 'test'@'localhost';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> REVOKE GRANT OPTION ON test.* FROM 'test'@'localhost';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> REVOKE GRANT OPTION ON test.* FROM 'test'@'localhost';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> REVOKE ALL ON test.* FROM 'test'@'localhost';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> REVOKE GRANT OPTION ON test.* FROM 'test'@'localhost';
ERROR 1141 (42000): There is no such grant defined for user 'test' on
host 'localhost'
Additionally, in MySQL 5.6 this breaks replication because of
http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68892.
Rather than revoking the GRANT OPTION and catching the error, check if
the user actually has it and only revoke it when he does.