Since passlib algo sometime takes a bytes, and sometime
not, depending on a internal variable, we have to convert
bnased on it, or it fail with "TypeError: salt must be bytes,
not str" (or unicode instead of bytes)
However, that's not great to use internal structure for that.
Currently (pre-repomerge) we aren't running sanity.sh from
ansible/ansible, after the merge we will. Therefore I've added the
requirements here, rather than in ansible-modules-*/test/utils/shippable
* Remove unicode-escape which is not present on python3
Alternative fix for #17305
* Enable the assemble test on python3
* Fix other problems with assemble on python3
* Turn mount test back on
* Mount tests need PRIVILEGED so turn that back on
Revert "Revert "Set PRIVILEGED=true for non_destructive tests. (#17733)" (#17738)"
This reverts commit dc0fb1c212.
* Add a needs_privileged tag so that we can skip mount tests on centos6
Some containers timeout on shippable tests when run with privileged.
Unfortunately, some tests require that in order to run. Tagging those
allows us to skip those tests on the platforms that timeout when we get
ready to run the integration test in shippable.
* Centos6 times out with PRIVILEGED set so remove that (will disable the mount tests on centos6)
* Remove false start
* 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.
* Enable more integration tests for python 3.
* Split out python 3 integration tests.
Now that we're running more integration tests on python 3, the
tests are taking long enough that they warrant splitting out in
the same way the python 2 tests are split.
The test_async test target was updated to accommodate changes in
output buffering behavior in python 3. This change in behavior
may need to be addressed in the future.
* Fix paramiko's exec_command() to return bytes on python3
* Run test_connection for python3 now too
* Fix atomic_move for problem in shippable's testing
* Python-2.4 needs to use b()
* run_command needed a bit of tweaking to its string handling of
arguments.
* The run_command change fixes the last bit of lineinfile so we can
enable its tests
- Fix octal formatting of file mode in module response on py3.
- Convert file path to unicode in copy action.
- Enable file and copy module tests for py3 now that they pass.
* Query lookup plugin
* Add license and docstrings
* Add python3-ish imports
* Change query plugin type from lookup to filter
* Switch from dq to jsonpath_rw
* Add integration test for query filter
* Rename query filter to json_query
* Add jsonpath-rw
* Rename query filter to json_query
* Switch query implementation from jsonpath-rw to jmespath
Run setfacl/chown/chmod on each temp dir and file.
This fixes temp file permissions handling on platforms such as FreeBSD
which always return success when using find -exec. This is done by
eliminating the use of find when setting up temp files and directories.
Additionally, tests that now pass on FreeBSD have been enabled for CI.
This is a refactoring of the existing GCE utility module to support other projects on Google Cloud Platform.
The previous gce.py module was hard-coded specifically for GCE, and attempting to use it with other projects in GCP failed.
See https://github.com/ansible/ansible/pull/15918#issuecomment-220165913 for more detail.
This has also been an issue for others in the past, although they've handled it by simply
duplicating some of the logic of gce.py in their own modules.
- The existing gce.py module was renamed to gcp.py, and modified to remove any
imports or other code that refers to libcloud.compute or GCE (the GCE_* params were
retained for compatibility). I also renamed the gce_connect function to gcp_connect,
and modified the function signature to make supplying a provider, driver, and agent
information mandatory.
- A new gce.py module was created to handle connectivity to GCE. It imports the
appropriate libcloud.compute providers and drivers, and then passes them on
to gcp_connect in gcp.py. The constants and function signatures are the same
as the old gce.py, so compatibility with existing modules is retained.
- A new gcdns.py module was created to support PR ansible/ansible-modules-extras#2252
for two new Google Cloud DNS modules, and to demonstrate support for a non-GCE
Google Cloud service. It follows the same basic structure as the new gce.py module,
but imports from libcloud.dns instead.