It's possible to compress packages using several different compression
methods, or not compressed at all. Previously, the pacman module only
supported files compressed using xz. This update ensures that all
compression types currently supported by pacman are supported by the
ansible pacman module.
The list of supported compression methods at the time of writing can be
found here:
https://git.archlinux.org/pacman.git/tree/scripts/makepkg.sh.in#n747
Print out the data that fails to validate when doing
schema checking on modules
This allows easier interpretation of error messages.
From:
```
ERROR: DOCUMENTATION.notes.2: expected basestring
```
To:
```
ERROR: DOCUMENTATION.notes.2: expected basestring @ data['notes'][2].
Got {"As with C(include) this task can be static or dynamic, If static
it implies that it won't need templating nor loops nor conditionals and
will show included tasks in the --list options. Ansible will try to
autodetect what is needed, but you can set `static": 'yes|no` at task
level to control this.'}
```
This fix ensures that if there are specific module errors (in our case
the python interpreter was not found) then command and shell returns a
proper error.
It also fixes a few other imperfections that we noticed during
troubleshooting:
- Return the real RC if it were available
- Improve a dictionary evaluation using .get()
- Return an RC of -1 if it is unknown (instead of returning 0)
This fixes#18846
This fix ensures a proper error is shown when a group_vars files cannot
be parsed correctly. Without this patch you get:
```
[dag@moria ansible.testing]$ ansible-playbook test132.yml
ERROR! Unexpected Exception: dictionary update sequence element #0 has length 1; 2 is required
to see the full traceback, use -vvv
```
With this patch you get:
```
[dag@moria ansible.testing]$ ansible-playbook test132.yml
ERROR! Problem parsing file '/home/dag/home-made/ansible.testing/group_vars/test135': line 1, column 1
```
This fixes#18843
Sudoers is a great example to show how you can prevent shutting yourself
out. But SSHd is at least as important to avoid syntax errors causing a
lot of grieve. So I think it deserves a spot in this list :-)
Currently this function directs to the standard NetworkModule,
whose run_commands function takes no arguments (other than self).
This directs the call to the connection's cli method to run the command
directly on the device.
Connection plugin can define default action plugin to use by providing
action_handler instance variable. This will override the default
action plugin normal
* adds new error AnsibleModuleExit to handle module returns
* adds new action plugin network for attaching connection to network modules
* adds new shared module local to receive connection
* splits out function to update task_args with common updates
This commit provides a mechansim for running local modules that require
a connection object for interative commands tyically implemented for
network devices. It provides a way to locally import modules (post fork)
and run them using exception handling to exit.
* Fix bug #5328 apache module loading
Currently, the apache2_module module parses apache configs
for correctness when enabling or disabling apache2 modules.
This behavior introduced a conflict condition when transitioning
between mpm modules, such as mpm_worker and mpm_event.
This change accounts for the specific error condition raised
by ``apachectl -M``:
``AH00534: apache2: Configuration error: No MPM loaded.``
When loading or unloading a module with a name that contains 'mpm_',
apache2_module will ignore the error raised by apachectl if stderr
contains 'AH00534'.
Fixes#5328
* Add AH00534 warning
* Added changes from PR #5629
* Modified ignore_configcheck behavior
* Code smell test for iteritems and itervalues
* Change the keydict object in authorized_keys so it doesn't throw a false postive
keydict is a bad data structure anyway. We don't use the iteritems and
itervalues methods so just disable them so that the code-smell tests do
not trigger on it.
* Change release templates so they work with py3