1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/ansible-collections/community.general.git synced 2024-09-14 20:13:21 +02:00

Merge pull request #5567 from risaacson/doc_corrections

A few documentation corrections
This commit is contained in:
Michael DeHaan 2014-01-10 14:52:41 -08:00
commit b0940f0c68
4 changed files with 9 additions and 9 deletions

View file

@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ The example usage we are trying to achieve to set the time is::
If no time parameter is set, we'll just leave the time as is and return the current time.
.. note:
.. note::
This is obviously an unrealistic idea for a module. You'd most likely just
use the shell module. However, it probably makes a decent tutorial.

View file

@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ as push updates to all of the servers::
- base-apache
- nagios
.. note:
.. note::
If you're not familiar with terms like playbooks and plays, you should review :doc:`playbooks`.

View file

@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ documentation. The `remote_user` is just the name of the user account::
- hosts: webservers
remote_user: root
.. Note::
.. note::
The `remote_user` parameter was formerly called just `user`. It was renamed in Ansible 1.4 to make it more distinguishable from the `user` module (used to create users on remote systems).
@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ Remote users can also be defined per task::
ping:
remote_user: yourname
.. Note::
.. note::
The `remote_user` parameter for tasks was added in 1.4.
@ -203,9 +203,9 @@ the service module takes key=value arguments::
- name: make sure apache is running
service: name=httpd state=running
The `command` and `shell` modules are the one modules that just takes a list
of arguments, and don't use the key=value form. This makes
them work just like you would expect. Simple::
The `command` and `shell` modules are the only modules that just take a list
of arguments and don't use the key=value form. This makes
them work as simply as you would expect::
tasks:
- name: disable selinux

View file

@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ it's more than that -- you can also read variables about other hosts. We'll sho
Jinja2 Filters
``````````````
.. note: These are infrequently utilized features. Use them if they fit a use case you have, but this is optional knowledge.
.. note:: These are infrequently utilized features. Use them if they fit a use case you have, but this is optional knowledge.
Filters in Jinja2 are a way of transforming template expressions from one kind of data into another. Jinja2
ships with many of these as documented on the official Jinja2 template documentation.
@ -737,7 +737,7 @@ or in a file as above.
Conditional Imports
```````````````````
.. note: this behavior is infrequently used in Ansible. You may wish to skip this section. The 'group_by' module as described in the module documentation is a better way to achieve this behavior in most cases.
.. note:: This behavior is infrequently used in Ansible. You may wish to skip this section. The 'group_by' module as described in the module documentation is a better way to achieve this behavior in most cases.
Sometimes you will want to do certain things differently in a playbook based on certain criteria.
Having one playbook that works on multiple platforms and OS versions is a good example.