* [GCE] Caching support for inventory script.
The GCE inventory script now supports reading from a cache rather than making the request each time. The format of the list and host output have not changed.
On script execution, the cache is checked to see if it older than 'cache_max_age', and if so, it is rebuilt (it can also be explicity rebuilt).
To support this functionality, the following have been added.
* Config file (gce.ini) changes: A new 'cache' section has been added to the config file, with 'cache_path' and 'cache_max_age' options to allow for configuration. There are intelligent defaults in place if that section and options are not found in the configuration file.
* Command line argument: A new --refresh-cache argument has been added to force the cache to be rebuild.
* A CloudInventoryCache class, contained in the same file has been added. As a seperate class, it allowed for testing (unit tests not included in this PR) and hopefully could be re-used in the future (it contains borrowed code from other inventory scripts)
* load_inventory_from_cache and do_api_calls_and_update_cache methods (, which were largely lifted from other inventory scripts, in a hope to promote consistency in the future) to determine if the cache is fresh and rebuild if necessary.
* A 'main' check, to support the script being imported and testable.
A new dictionary has been added to the list output, located at ['_meta']['stats'] that informs if the cache was used and how long it took to load the inventory (in 'cache_used' and 'inventory_load_time', respectively).
* fixed default value error; change cache time to 300
- When there is no file at the destination yet, we have no modification time for the `If-Modified-Since`-Header. In this case trust the cache to make the right decision to either serve a cached version or to refresh from origin. This should help with mass-deployment scenarios where you want to use a local cache to relieve your uplink.
- If you don't trust the cache to make the right decision you can still force it to refresh by providing the `force: yes` option.
* Remove old egg-info files before creating new ones
Currently, setup.py generates egg files then they are deleted. This change
fixes this behavior and matches that in env-setup.
* Do not try to move ansible*egg-info to lib/
setup.py creates the ansible.egg-info in lib/ so this step is unnecessary. Matches env-setup behavior.
* Better test for number of arguments in argv
This prevents an erronous error message from being thrown since set -q returns an error code with the number of variables not defined, resulting in a non-zero exit if no arguments are passed.
Indent case statement within switch statement.
Since ifconfig/ip are not present on the system, and there is no /proc
to be parsed, the only way to get information is by looking at the
argument of the pfinet translator, the process in charge of network.
In turn, this is done with fsysopts on the appropriate path, who return
something like this:
# fsysopts -L /servers/socket/inet
/hurd/pfinet --interface=/dev/eth0 --address=192.168.122.130
--netmask=255.255.255.0 --gateway=192.168.122.1 --address6=fe80::5254:12:ced/10
--address6=fe80::5054:ff:fe12:ced/10 --gateway6=::
So to get the IP addresses, one has to parse that string and fill the appropriate
structure.
More information on the system and on limitation can be found on
- https://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/hurd/translator/pfinet.html
- https://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/hurd/translator/pfinet/implementation.html
- https://www.debian.org/ports/hurd/hurd-install
* Fallback to /proc/mounts if /etc/mtab do not exist
On modern system, the file is just a compatibility symlink, and
some system (like GNU Hurd) do not have it, but provides /proc/mounts
* Add support for uptime, memory and mount facts on GNU Hurd
Nothing seems to use this now.
Was added originally added in2d11cfab92f9d26448461b4bc81f466d1910a15e
but the code that used it was removed in
e02b98274b
This fixes the use of public IPs in the discovered hosts by
ensuring that the use_private_network check doesn't always evaluate
to False if the associated .ini file specifies this option.
Currently the machine_type will not work if the instance type is set in ovirt. In that case, inst.get_instance_type will be an object and will fails while converting to json. This only work if the instance type is not set in ovirt where inst.get_instance_type is a Null value. The current change make sure that correct "instance type" is passed when instance is set in ovirt and Null when it's not set in ovirt.
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.
If hashtype for the password_hash filter is 'blowfish' and passlib is
available, hashing fails as the hash function for this is named 'bcrypt'
(and not 'blowfish_crypt'). Special case this so that the correct
function is called.
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.