In MySQL 5.6, the root account created by default during MySQL
installation has the PROXY ... WITH GRANT OPTION privilege for ''@'',
that is, for all users.
The mysql_user module tries to revoke this privilege, but this fails:
_mysql_exceptions.ProgrammingError: (1064, "You have an error in your
SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server
version for the right syntax to use near '''@'' FROM 'root'@'localhost''
at line 1")
Quick fix: don't revoke privilege if user is root and the privilege to
revoke contains PROXY.
* Clarified the meaning of 'user'
* Changed 'sshdir' to 'path' in the example
* 'sshdir' is used internally in the module, but the argument is 'path'
* Made the capitalization consistent in the descriptions
rhnreg_ks command allows users to manage registration to a Red Hat
Network (RHN) (e.g. rhn.redhat.com) server. The moduel will also
interact with the specified RHN system via XMLRPC as needed.
Before proceeding with registration, the rhnreg_ks module will enable
the system to receive updates from RHN. This involves enabling the
appropriate RHN yum plugin, as well as disabling an active
subscription-manager yum plugin.
Once enabled, the module will support the following operations:
* configure
* register
* subscribe to custom child channels (see `rhn-channel` command)
* unregister
The subscription_manager module acts as a wrapper to the command
'subscription-manager'. The subscription-manager utility allows users
to manage RHN registration, subscription and yum repositories from the
Red Hat Entitlement platform.
Currently, this module supports the following sub-commands:
* config
* [un]register
* subscribe
When invoking dmidecode, first use module.get_bin_path() and secondly
use module.run_command.
Remove sub function execute() from get_dmi_facts().
Simplify get_dmi_facts() by only using two mechanisms to determine dmi
facts: first try /sys/devices/virtual/dmi and if not available, use
dmidecode executable.
When running inside a chroot userspace architecture might not
match that of the actual host.
This patch provides userspace_bits as reported by python's
platform.architecture(). Also provides userspace_architecture fact
if host is an x86 machine.
Also consolidated duplicate groups code into one get_groups_set() method.
Removed unused call to user_group_membership.
Removed sorting operations on set functions cause sets are inherently unordered.
Minor style improvements to match the rest of the code.
The new function will make the order of group names passed to the system command less determistic.
Which was already the case for modify_user_usermod() but not for other methods.
It will also strip out duplicate group names automatically which was not always the case previously.
This commit fixes a bug where the authorized_key module causes
the ~user/.ssh directory to be owned by root instead of the user,
when the manage_dir argument is not specified.
If the manage_dir argument was not specified, the module behaved as if
manage_dir was set to false, even though it's supposed to default to
true.
This module assumed that an optional argument, with no default
specified, will not be present in the module.params dictionary.
What actually seems to happen is that the argument does appear in
the module.params dictionary with a value of None.
The upside is that this line was evaluating to None instead of
true:
manage_dir = params.get("manage_dir", True)
I fixed the problem in this particular module by explicitly specifying
the default value for the manage_dir arugment. But if this bug
occurred because of a change in behavior in AnsibleModule, then other
modules may be broken as well.