When trying to perform enabled=yes followed by enabled=no
against FreeBSD the module would die with the following error:
TypeError: sub() takes at most 4 arguments (5 given)
The target FreeBSD client (8.2) is running python 2.6.6. It seems the
extra 'flags' argument was added to re.sub() in 2.7.
In fixing this issue I have attempted to create a general atomic method
for modifying a rc.conf file. Hopefully this will make it easier to add
other rc based platorms. The strip/split magic was inspired by the user
module.
* Basically the moving parts from the original service module arranged in
subclasses.
* General structure and helper methods comes from the user module.
* Less forgiving to unsupported platforms: it requires a subclass per platform.
(This makes it easier to work on one platform without having to think about.
what other platform might be affected in unexpected ways).
* Now has basic OpenBSD support.
* Solaris support needs to be added.
Thanks to @dhozac for general advice and Linux testing.
Thanks to @bcoca for clearing up some FreeBSD questions.
In some cases (see issue #1067) with state=restarted, a failure to stop
the service (which wasn't running) would appear to the module to be a
failure to restart the service even though it successfully started the
service. This changes the behavior of the service module to focus
on the return code of the start command. If the rc of stop is not
0 and the rc of start does equal 0, it considers the service
successfully restarted. It then ignores the rc, stdout, and stderr
from the unsuccessful stop command.
* Migraed easy_install, pip, service, setup, and user.
* Updated fail_json message in apt_repository
* Fixed easy_install to not hardcode location of virtualenv in
/usr/local/bin/.
* Made handling of virtualenv more consistent between easy_install and
pip.
Most of it worked already, except for the enable parameter, because it
tried to use chkconfig which only sees SysV services. First look for
systemctl and use that if it exists.
Allow use of service module with just enable parameter, per issue #755.
Also fixed two other issues:
- fixed parameter to be 'enabled' per docs, not 'enable'.
- fixed if block that checks whether to run _do_enable() to check
whether the parameter is set, not the value of the enable value which
may be None or False. If enabled=no, the service would never be
disabled.
The service module was printing stuff to stderr, returning two
JSON dicts, not using consistent 'failed' values, had dead code
and unused variables. Added detection for the case when service
status returns 'xxx is dead and pid file exists' and made the
code a bit easier to read.
- Added Upstart support
- Added an initial unknown state
- Prevented state changes when the current state is not recognized
- Changed the keyword recognition to a safer method
The ohai and facter modules use /usr/bin/logger to log the fact that
they have been invoked. I added 'import os' to the ping module
so that it could have the same syslog statements as the other modules.
I separated the condensed:
shlex.split(open(argfile, 'r').read())
into two separate statements similar to the other modules.
Checks if update-rc.d (Ubuntu) or chkconfig (RHEL) should be used.
Adds basic bin path search for those binaries
Adds 'enable' and 'disable' options for 'enable' command since it's the
arguments that update-rc.d uses (this might be somewhat confusing to
have a command line with 'enable=enable', but probably mkes sense for
Ubuntu users).
Allows use of mixed case for 'list' and 'state' commands.
When running the service module via sudo, `$PATH` didn't contain `/sbin`,
so the service binary couldn't be found. This just runs `/sbin/service`
directly. Output is spewed to stderr on error.
Added `list=status` to include the output of `service <cmd> status`.