This means we will have to unarchive the complete archive if a single change is found.
Unfortunately we cannot fix this for `unzip`, the only hope is a pure-python reimplementation.
This fixes problems reported in the comments of #3810
os.getlogin() returns the user logged in on the controlling terminal. However
'crontab' only looks for the login name of the process' real user id which
pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[0] does provide.
While in most cases there is no difference, the former might fail under certain
circumstances (e.g. a lxc container connected by attachment without login),
throwing the error 'OSError: [Errno 25] Inappropriate ioctl for device'.
* 'before' and 'after' are now only applied to 'lines'
* remove update argument
* update doc strings
* add path argument when performing config difference
* removes update argument
* adds `config` option to replace argument
* moves session management into shared module
* cleans up doc strings
* `before` and `after` args now only apply to lines
If you apply `wait=yes` and use `instance_tags` as your filter for
stopping/starting EC2 instances, this stack trace happens:
```
An exception occurred during task execution. The full traceback is: │~
Traceback (most recent call last): │~
File "/tmp/ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py", line 1540, in <module> │~
main() │~
File "/tmp/ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py", line 1514, in main │~
(changed, instance_dict_array, new_instance_ids) = startstop_instances(module, ec2, instance_ids, state, instance_tags) │~
File "/tmp/ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py", line 1343, in startstop_instances │~
if len(matched_instances) < len(instance_ids): │~
TypeError: object of type 'NoneType' has no len() │~
│~
fatal: [localhost -> localhost]: FAILED! => {"changed": false, "failed": true, "invocation": {"module_name": "ec2"}, "module_stderr": "Traceb│~
ack (most recent call last):\n File \"/tmp/ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py\", line 1540, in <module>\n main()\n File \"/tmp/│~
ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py\", line 1514, in main\n (changed, instance_dict_array, new_instance_ids) = startstop_instances│~
(module, ec2, instance_ids, state, instance_tags)\n File \"/tmp/ryansb/ansible_FwE8VR/ansible_module_ec2.py\", line 1343, in startstop_insta│~
nces\n if len(matched_instances) < len(instance_ids):\nTypeError: object of type 'NoneType' has no len()\n", "module_stdout": "", "msg": "│~
MODULE FAILURE", "parsed": false}
```
That's because the `instance_ids` variable is None if not supplied
in the task. That means the instances that result from the instance_tags
query aren't going to be included in the wait loop. To fix this, a list
needs to be kept of instances with matching tags and that list needs to
be added to `instance_ids` before the wait loop.
* Ensure unicode characters in zip-compressed filenames work correctly
Another corner-case we are fixing hoping it doesn't break anything else.
This fixes:
- The correct encoding of unicode paths internally (so the filenames we scrape from the output and is returned by zipfile match)
- Disable LANG=C for the unzip command (because it breaks the unicode output, unlike on gtar)
* Fix for python3 and other suggestions from @abadger
Before this, all spot instance requests would fail because the code
_always_ called module.fail_json when the parameter was set (which it
always was, because the module parameter's default was set to 'stop').
As the comment said, this parameter doesn't make sense for spot
instances at all, so the error message was also misleading.
* fixes issue where configuration was not being loaded (#4704)
* fixes issue where defaults were not included when argument was set to True
tested on EOS 4.15.4F
When the configuration is compared and the results deserialized, the
dumps() function returns a string. This cohereces the return to a list
in case before and/or after needs to be applied
fixes 4707