The `command` module does not return stdout & sterr when calling
a non existing executable or an unknown exception arises. This fix
lets the module return empty byte strings in those cases.
Change:
- Add Ubuntu 20.04 to CI now that venv is default instead of virtualenv in ansible-test.
Test Plan:
- CI
Tickets:
- Fixes#69203
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
The init script for the test container writes additional lines to
the .bashrc of the user. This was done via a `cat` multiline
instruction, which is implemented internally by writing a
temporary file to TMPDIR (/tmp in this case) first. Docker fails
to provide /tmp just after creation, which results in a race
condition that rarely makes the init fail. Changed the `cat`
statement to multiple `echo`s.
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
* Consolidate filters/tests handling into JinjaPluginIntercept
ci_complete
* Postpone loading all ansible plugins
* Do we need to create an overlay?
ci_complete
* Typo
ci_complete
* Add FIXME
* conditional.py: use public Environment.parse() method
* Remove remaining occurrences of shared_loader_obj being passed to Templar
* __UNROLLED__ not needed with this change anymore
* Incorrect rebase at some point?
##### SUMMARY
One of the parameters to the slaac filter was unquoted causing a crash:
```
template error while templating string: expected token 'end of print statement', got ':'. String: {{ fdcf:1894:23b5:d38c:0000:0000:0000:0000 | slaac('c2:31:b3:83:bf:2b') }}
```
This adds the missing quotes.
##### ISSUE TYPE
- Docs Pull Request
+label: docsite_pr
When calling compile(), the filename argument should be either a real file
name or a string. According to Python docs, suggested one is '<string>'.
Keep the current behaviour (encapsulate the actual expression),
but enclose it into angle brackets.
Signed-off-by: Oldřich Jedlička <oldium.pro@gmail.com>
* Fix YAML error message when error is at the end of the file
If a YAML file fails to load due to a syntax error in a file, or there is an error in the last line of a
file, PyYAML reports the last line number of the file as the index where the error occurred.
When reading the file lines, we use that index to the get the relevant line. If the index value is out
of range, the relevant line is lost for error reporting.
Subtract one from the index value to avoid the IndexError in this specific scenario. It is possible
to still get an IndexError, which will be handled as it is currently.
* Update existing tests and add new tests
##### SUMMARY
Added `[Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls12` to the Powershell scripts that use a file download. If not specified the script won't be allowed to download data from the mentioned URL's.
##### ISSUE TYPE
- Docs Pull Request
+label: docsite_pr
* Allow restricting config values to enumerated list
* dont document internal entries
* also ignore private defs for ansible-config
* remove invalid value from tests
* added porting entry
##### SUMMARY
<!--- Your description here -->
single_list must be transformed to a list of pairs before feeding it into dict()
##### ISSUE TYPE
- Docs Pull Request
+label: docsite_pr
When the pause module is run in the background and seconds parameter is provided,
do not warn.
* Add tests
* Fix existing tests
The test wasn't failing when it should have.
Change:
- On CentOS Stream, make distribution_release be "Stream"
- On CentOS Core, it continues to be "Core"
- Implement custom distribution file parser for CentOS, so we can look
for "CentOS Linux" and "CentOS Stream"
- Two new fixtures introduced (CentOS Linux 8.1 and CentOS Stream 8)
- Removed two dicts from `Distribution` class that were seemingly not
used anywhere.
Test Plan:
- ci_complete
- New test fixtures
Tickets:
- Fixes#73027
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
The test currently only expects the literal `ansible` followed
by a semver in the first output line of `ansible --version`.
When running from within a git checkout, additional information
like the currently checkout branch are attached, which lets
the test fail. This commit allows arbitrary information to
follow the semver.
`test_prepare_multipart` fails in non Debian environments since
Debian installations map the file ending `.key` to the MIME type
`application/pgp-keys`, which is not IANA conformant. This commit
explicitly sets the corresponding file type to
`application/octet-stream` and adjusts the expected serialized
result.
* Remove unused code in ansible-test.
* Remove obsolete endpoint logic from ansible-test.
* Remove obsolete region selection in ansible-test.
* Remove obsolete port logic in ansible-test.
* Clean up ansible-test remote providers.
Do the right thing on Linux when password lock and a password hash are provided by writing
out the password hash prepended by the appropriate lock string rather than using -U and -L.
This is the correct way to set and lock the account in one command.
On BSD, run separate commands as appropriate since locking and setting the password cannot
be done in a single action.
FreeBSD requires running several commands to get the account in the desired state. As a result,
the rc, output, and error from all commands need to be combined and evaluated so an accurate
and complete summary can be given at the end of module execution.
* Improve integration tests to cover this scenario.
* Break up user integration tests into smaller files
* Properly lock account when creating a new account and password is supplied
* Simplify rc collection in FreeBSD class
Since the _handle_lock() method was added, the rc would be set to None, which could make
task change reporting incorrect. My first attempt to solve this used a set and was a bit too
complicated. Simplify it my comparing the rc from _handle_lock() and the current value of rc.
* Improve the Linux password hash and locking behavior
If password lock and hash are provided, set the hash and lock the account by using a password
hash since -L cannot be used with -p.
* Ensure -U and -L are not combined with -p since they are mutually exclusive to usermod.
* Clarify password_lock behavior.
Adds a note pointing to the datetime documentation as to_datetime does not use the time library but instead uses datetime.
Co-authored-by: Alicia Cozine <879121+acozine@users.noreply.github.com>
Tests should use the Python built-in ``venv`` module on Python 3 instead of the standalone ``virtualenv`` module.
On Python 2 the ``virtualenv`` module continues to be the only option.
The version installed is either the OS packaged version or the last release to support Python 2, which is version 16.7.10.
The old example failed with:
fatal: [localhost]: FAILED! => {"msg": "to count backwards make stride negative"}
I fixed this and placed a start parameter to consolidate with the rest of the examples provided.
Co-authored-by: Jorge Rua <jorua@redhat.com>