Taking a page out of the ec2 config, make sure that all of the
OpenStack modules handle the inbound auth config in the same way.
The one outlier is keystone wrt auth_url.
The OpenStack client utilities consume a set of input environment
variables for things like username and auth_url, so it's very
common for OpenStack users to have such settings set in their
environment. Indeed, things like devstack also output a shell file
to be sourced to set them. Although in a playbook it's entirely
expected that variables should be used to pass in system settings
like api passwords, for ad-hoc command line usage, needing to pass
in five parameters which are almost certainly in the environment
already reduces the utility.
Grab the environment variables and inject them as default. Special care
is taken to ensure that in the case where the values are not found, the
behavior of which parameters are required is not altered.
Several azure fixes/improvements, including:
* Improve failure message when python-azure is not installed
* Improve required argument handling
* Fixes a traceback on instance termination when the variable
'deployment' was not set.
* Fixes a traceback (#8298) when creating instances using the newer SDK
otherwise the module will return the info about the instance that it got prior to the action taken
So if you had a task to start an instance:
ec2:
instance_ids: ...
state: running
register: ec2_info
the registered data would have empty public_dns_name, public_ip, private_dns_name, private_ip
The current (hard-coded) retry interval of 500 seconds can cause ansible to have excessive run-times in the case of many domains. `retry_interval` provides a way to customize the wait between retries of calls to route53.
Some environments that utilize an SSL terminator with a self-signed
certificate can use the publicURL without getting certificate
verify errors. This allows using the internalURL with in my case
is HTTP and not HTTPS.
Closes issue: #8057
The following patch adds a missing 'msg=' syntax. An exception is raised
in ansible if this block is reached during the execution of the module
TypeError: fail_json() takes exactly 1 argument (2 given)
With the 'msg=' added, you get a more informative error. For example
msg: No settings provided to update_domain().