Previously postgresql_user quoted user supplied identifers to create
grant statements that look like this:
GRANT SELECT on "tablename" to "user";
Which only works if the tablename is not in a namespace. If you supply
a namespaced tabelname like "report.revenue" then it creates this
incorrect statement:
GRANT SELECT on "report.revenue" to "user";
Which will not find the "revenue" table in the "report" namespace, but
will rather look for a table named "report.revenue" in the current
(default public) namespace. The correct form is:
GRANT SELECT on "report"."revenue" to "user";
This approach could have the unfortunate effect that code that
previously relied on the other behavior to grant privileges on tables
with periods in their names may now break. PostgreSQL users
typically shouldn't name tables as such, and users can still access the
old behavior and use tablenames with periods in the if they must by
supplying their own quoting.
The password is passed on a command line for dump and import and needs
quoting.
Ideally, this would not be passed on a command line at all - any ideas?
Or at least have a stronger form of quoting so that embedded single
quotes will be escaped.
The example for the fail module doesn't work:
http://www.ansibleworks.com/docs/modules.html#fail
The current text shows:
- fail: msg="The system may not be provisioned according to the CMDB status."
when: "{{ cmdb_status }} != 'to-be-staged'"
The "when" documentation indicates that the argument is already a Jinja2
expression:
http://www.ansibleworks.com/docs/playbooks_conditionals.html#the-when-statement
Thus, the following is
when: cmdb_status != "to-be-staged"
is preferred even though the following could work but generates a
deprecation warning:
when: {{cmdb_status != "to-be-staged"}}
Updated main description to state that the yum module will handle package groups. Added descriptions for each example, as it is unclear to (some) users that @Name implies a group install.
Add the ability to create snapshots and restore from them
Make instance creation, deletion, restore, and snapshotting idempotent
(really helps testing a playbook if you can run it multiple times)