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@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ also need:
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Ansible) are not
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switching over yet. However, some Linux distributions (Gentoo, Arch) may not have a
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Python 2.X interpreter installed by default. On those systems, you should install one, and set
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the 'ansible_python_interpreter' variable in inventory to point at your 2.X python. Distributions
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the 'ansible_python_interpreter' variable in inventory (see :doc:`patterns`) to point at your 2.X python. Distributions
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like Red Hat Enterprise Linux, CentOS, Fedora, and Ubuntu all have a 2.X interpreter installed
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by default and this does not apply to those distributions. This is also true of nearly all
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Unix systems. If you need to bootstrap these remote systems by installing Python 2.X,
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@ -236,7 +236,7 @@ If you have python3 installed on Arch, you probably want to symlink python to py
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$ sudo ln -sf /usr/bin/python2 /usr/bin/python
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You should also set a 'ansible_python_interpreter' inventory variable for hosts that have python
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You should also set a 'ansible_python_interpreter' inventory variable (see :doc:`patterns`) for hosts that have python
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pointing to python3, so the right python can be found on the managed nodes.
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Tagged Releases
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