* Add tests for `get_fqdn_and_port` method.
Currently tests verify original behavior - returning default `ssh-keyscan` port
Add test around `add_host_key` to verify underlying command arguments
Add some new expectations for `get_fqdn_and_port`
Test that non-standard port is passed to `ssh-keyscan` command
* Ensure ssh hostkey checks respect server port
ssh-keyscan will default to getting the host key for port 22.
If the ssh service is running on a different port, ssh-keyscan
will need to know this.
Tidy up minor flake8 issues
* Update known_hosts tests for port being None
Ensure that git urls don't try and set port when a path
is specified
Update known_hosts tests to meet flake8
* Fix stdin swap context for test_known_hosts
Move test_known_hosts from under basic, as it is its own library.
Remove module_utils.known_hosts from pep8 legacy files list
* updates eos modules to use persistent connection socket
* removes split eos shared module and combines into one
* adds singular eos doc frag (eos_local to be removed after module updates)
* updates unit test cases
* Unittests for some of module_common.py
* Port test_run_command to use pytest-mock
The use of addCleanup(patch.stopall) from the unittest idiom was
conflicting with the pytest-mock idiom of closing all patches
automatically. Switching to pytest-mock ensures that the patches are
closed and removing the stopall stops the conflict.
* eos module now uses network_cli connection plugin
* adds unit tests for eos module
* eapi support now provided by eapi module
* updates doc fragment for eapi common properties
* Google Cloud Pubsub Module
The Google Cloud Pubsub module allows the Ansible user to:
* Create/Delete Topics
* Create/Delete Subscriptions
* Change subscription from pull to push (and configure endpoint)
* Publish messages to a topic
* Pull messages from a Subscription
An accessory module, gcpubsub_facts, has been added to list topics and subscriptions.
* Added docs for state field to DOCUMENTATION and RETURN blocks.
- Replace nose usage with pytest.
- Remove legacy Shippable integration.sh.
- Update Makefile to use pytest and ansible-test.
- Convert most yield unit tests to pytest parametrize.
Support for the Google API and GCloud-Python Clients have been added.
The three libraries:
* GCloud-Python: A new function, get_google_cloud_credentials, should be used. The credentials-object returned can be passed to any gcloud-python client. Using this client library requires in the installation of gcloud-python. This is preferred library for new modules.
* Google API: A new function, gcp_api_auth, should be used to take advantage of services requiring this client. This client library should be used if the desired functionality is not available in GCloud-Python. Using this library requires the installation of google-api-python-client.
* libcloud: Existing function, gcp_connect, should be used. The interface and return values have not changed and existing modules (such as gce, gce_pd and gce_net) should work without modification. Note that the credentials-fetching code has been refactored out of gcp_connect so that can be reused by all connection functions. To use this function, apache-libcloud must be installed.
Import guards have been added and will only be trigger if a user tries to use a function that is missing dependencies.
Credential-specifying mechanisms (i.e, ansible module params, env vars and libcloud secrets.py) have not changed. They have been refactored and unit tests have been added to allow for changes going forward. We are deprecating (and removing in a subsequent release) the ability to specify credentials via the libcloud secrets file. Also, we have deprecated (and also plan to remove in a subsequent release) the ability to use a p12 pem file for a key - the JSON format is strongly preferred. Deprecation warnings have been added for both of these issues (see the Ansible docs on how to disable deprecation warnings).
As neon is derived from Ubuntu, ansible_os_family should have the value
"Debian" instead of "Neon". Add a test case for KDE neon and set
os_family correctly for it.
On openSUSE Tumbleweed, lsb-release -a currently reports
the distributor ID as "openSUSE Tumbleweed". On openSUSE
Leap, the distributor ID is "SUSE LINUX".
Add them to the OS_FAMILY dict as Suse family systems.
Also add an entry to TESTSETS in test_distribution_version.py
for openSUSE Tumbleweed.
Python2 seems to allow any integer. Python3.5 on Linux seems to allow
a 32 bit unsigned int. Python3.5 on El Capitan seems to limit it to
a smaller size... perhaps a 16 bit int.
This adds some test data to test_facts.py that
includes mnt points that have a single quote in
the path.
Ala, https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/16855
The bug was already fixed via other changes, but this is
for regression testing.
A parameter of type int should accept int and string, but not float.
A parameter of type float should accept float, int, and string.
Also reset the arguments in another test so that it runs cleanly. This
agrees with what all the other tests are doing.
As suggested in feedback on
https://github.com/ansible/ansible/pull/17575, add
os_family to test_distribution_version. Add the
correct os_family to the existing testcase data
entries.
Also add os_family to the output of
gen_distribution_version_testcase.py so any new
generated entries will contain this data.
* Added aws_retry decorator function with unit tests
* Restructured the code to be used with a base class.
This base class CloudRetry can be reused by any other cloud provider.
This decorator should be used in situations, where you need to implement
a backoff algorithm and want to retry based on the status code from the
exception.
* updated documentation
* fixed tabs
* added botocore and boto3 to requirements.txt
* removed cloud.py from py24 tests, as it depends on boto3
* fix relative imports
* updated test to be 2.6 compat
* updated method name from retry to backoff
* readded lxd
* Updated default backoff from 2 seconds to 1.1s.
This will be about a total of 48 seconds in 10 tries. This is
configurable.
* Port set_*_if_different functions to python3
* Add surrogate_or_strict and surrogate_or_replace error handlers for
to_text, to_bytes, to_native
* Set default error handler to surrogate_or_replace
* Make use of the new error handlers in the already ported code
* Move the unittests for module_utils._text as they aren't in basic.py
* Cleanup around SEQUENCETYPE. On python2.6+ SEQUENCETYPE includes
strings so make sure code omits those explicitly if necessary
* Allow arg_spec aliases to be other sequence types
* Fix to_native call in selinux_context and selinux_default_context to
use the error handler correctly.
* Port set_mode_if_different to work on python3
* Port atomic_move to work on python3
* Fix check_password_prompt variable which wasn't renamed properly
tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile keeps a file handle causing os.rename() to fail with windows based vboxfs: [Errno 26] Text file busy.
Changed NamedTemporaryFile to mkstemp() and added a finally block to unlink the temp file in each and every case.
Make some python3 fixes to make the unittests pass:
* galaxy imports
* dictionary iteration in role requirements
* swap_stdout helper for unittests
* Normalize to text string in a facts.py function
* Give native strings to selinux library functions.
SELinux takes pathnames as native strings. That means we need to
convert to bytes on python2 and convert to text on python3.
Fixes#17155
* Read kitchen documentation, make module_utils params more like kitchen API
* Remove none nonstring strategy and add strict
* Raise TypeError on invalid nonstring strategy
* Document to_native()
* Make unittests for testing module_utils.text
Fixes#10779
Refactor some of the block device, mount point, and
mtab/fstab facts collection for linux for better
performance on systems with lots of block devices.
Instead of invoking 'lsblk' for every entry in mtab,
invoke it once, then map the results to mtab entries.
Change the args used for invoking 'findmnt' since the
previous combination of args conflicts, so this would
always fail on some systems depending on version.
Add test cases for facts Hardware()/Network()/Virtual() classes
__new__ method and verify they create the proper subclass based
on the platform.system() results.
Split out all the 'invoke some command and grab it's output'
bits related to linux mount paths into their own methods so
it is easier to mock them in unit tests.
Fix the DragonFly* classes that did not defined a 'platform'
class attribute. This caused FreeBSD systems to potentially
get the DragonFly* subclasses incorrectly. In practice it
didnt matter much since the DragonFly* subclasses duplicated
the FreeBSD ones. Actual DragonFly systems would end up with
the generic Hardware() etc instead of the DragonFly* classes.
Fix Hardware.__new__() on PY3, passing args to __new__
would cause "object() takes no parameters" errors. So
check for PY3 and just call __new__ without the args
See
https://hg.python.org/cpython/file/44ed0cd3dc6d/Objects/typeobject.c#l2818
for some explaination.
A little unittest refactoring
* Add a class decorator to generate tests when using a unittest.TestCase base class
* Add a TestCase subclass with setUp() and tearDown() that sets up
module parameter parsing
* Move test_safe_eval to use the class decorator and ModuleTestCase base
class
* Move testing of set_mode_if_different into its own file and separate
some test methods out so we get better errors and more coverage in
case of errors.
* Naming convention for test cases doesn't need to duplicate information
that's already in the file path.
* Port urls.py to python3
Fixes (largely normalizing byte vs text strings) for python3
* Rework what we do with attributes that aren't set already.
* Comments
* add tests for centos6, rhel6 and rhel7
* gen_distribution_version_testcase with python2.6
* remove unused imports
* fix redhat/vmware/... parsing
* add centos7 test case
Updated python module wrapper explode method to drop 'args' file next to module.
Both execute() and excommunicate() debug methods now pass the module args via file to enable debuggers that are picky about stdin.
Updated unit tests to use a context manager for masking/restoring default streams and argv.
* Ziploader proof of concept (jimi-c)
* Cleanups to proof of concept ziploader branch:
* python3 compatible base64 encoding
* zipfile compression (still need to enable toggling this off for
systems without zlib support in python)
* Allow non-wildcard imports (still need to make this recusrsive so that
we can have module_utils code that imports other module_utils code.)
* Better tracebacks: module filename is kept and module_utils directory
is kept so that tracebacks show the real filenames that the errors
appear in.
* Make sure we import modules that are used into the module_utils files that they are used in.
* Set ansible version in a more pythonic way for ziploader than we were doing in module replacer
* Make it possible to set the module compression as an inventory var
This may be necessary on systems where python has been compiled without
zlib compression.
* Refactoring of module_common code:
* module replacer only replaces values that make sense for that type of
file (example: don't attempt to replace python imports if we're in
a powershell module).
* Implement configurable shebang support for ziploader wrapper
* Implement client-side constants (for SELINUX_SPECIAL_FS and SYSLOG)
via environment variable.
* Remove strip_comments param as we're never going to use it (ruins line
numbering)
* Don't repeat ourselves about detecting REPLACER
* Add an easy way to debug
* Port test-module to the ziploader-aware modify_module()
* strip comments and blank lines from the wrapper so we send less over the wire.
* Comments cleanup
* Remember to output write the module line itself in powershell modules
* for line in lines strips the newlines so we have to add them back in
This reverts commit 073f10a52a and instead
disables the failing test.
We're focusing on Python 3 support on the controller first; modules will
come later.
This caused an ImportError in a test module and showed up as one test
failure. Now the test module can get imported and many more tests fail
(on Python 3). Such is life. ;-)