[yum] report upgraded multiarch packages (#73548)

Change:
- Previously when the same package name was installed twice under
  different architectures, we only reported it once in changes.updated.
- This was the result of using a dict internally and keying on package
  name alone.
- This change still keys on package name but turns the values into lists
  which can contain multiple packages per name.

Test Plan:
- Added a lot of tests around multi-arch support
- Added some tests around virtual provides as well

Tickets:
- Fixes #73284

Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
pull/74221/head
Rick Elrod 4 years ago committed by GitHub
parent 8c413749fc
commit 3504f4c45f
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
bugfixes:
- yum - When upgrading, every architecture of a package is now included in the module results, instead of just one (https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/73284).

@ -1257,12 +1257,20 @@ class YumModule(YumDnf):
pkg, version, repo = line[0], line[1], line[2] pkg, version, repo = line[0], line[1], line[2]
name, dist = pkg.rsplit('.', 1) name, dist = pkg.rsplit('.', 1)
updates.update({name: {'version': version, 'dist': dist, 'repo': repo}})
if name not in updates:
updates[name] = []
updates[name].append({'version': version, 'dist': dist, 'repo': repo})
if len(line) == 6: if len(line) == 6:
obsolete_pkg, obsolete_version, obsolete_repo = line[3], line[4], line[5] obsolete_pkg, obsolete_version, obsolete_repo = line[3], line[4], line[5]
obsolete_name, obsolete_dist = obsolete_pkg.rsplit('.', 1) obsolete_name, obsolete_dist = obsolete_pkg.rsplit('.', 1)
obsoletes.update({obsolete_name: {'version': obsolete_version, 'dist': obsolete_dist, 'repo': obsolete_repo}})
if obsolete_name not in obsoletes:
obsoletes[obsolete_name] = []
obsoletes[obsolete_name].append({'version': obsolete_version, 'dist': obsolete_dist, 'repo': obsolete_repo})
return updates, obsoletes return updates, obsoletes
@ -1403,22 +1411,64 @@ class YumModule(YumDnf):
to_update = [] to_update = []
for w in will_update: for w in will_update:
if w.startswith('@'): if w.startswith('@'):
# yum groups
to_update.append((w, None)) to_update.append((w, None))
elif w not in updates: elif w not in updates:
# There are (at least, probably more) 2 ways we can get here:
#
# * A virtual provides (our user specifies "webserver", but
# "httpd" is the key in 'updates').
#
# * A wildcard. emac* will get us here if there's a package
# called 'emacs' in the pending updates list. 'updates' will
# of course key on 'emacs' in that case.
other_pkg = will_update_from_other_package[w] other_pkg = will_update_from_other_package[w]
# We are guaranteed that: other_pkg in updates
# ...based on the logic above. But we only want to show one
# update in this case (given the wording of "at least") below.
# As an example, consider a package installed twice:
# foobar.x86_64, foobar.i686
# We want to avoid having both:
# ('foo*', 'because of (at least) foobar-1.x86_64 from repo')
# ('foo*', 'because of (at least) foobar-1.i686 from repo')
# We just pick the first one.
#
# TODO: This is something that might be nice to change, but it
# would be a module UI change. But without it, we're
# dropping potentially important information about what
# was updated. Instead of (given_spec, random_matching_package)
# it'd be nice if we appended (given_spec, [all_matching_packages])
#
# ... But then, we also drop information if multiple
# different (distinct) packages match the given spec and
# we should probably fix that too.
pkg = updates[other_pkg][0]
to_update.append( to_update.append(
( (
w, w,
'because of (at least) %s-%s.%s from %s' % ( 'because of (at least) %s-%s.%s from %s' % (
other_pkg, other_pkg,
updates[other_pkg]['version'], pkg['version'],
updates[other_pkg]['dist'], pkg['dist'],
updates[other_pkg]['repo'] pkg['repo']
) )
) )
) )
else: else:
to_update.append((w, '%s.%s from %s' % (updates[w]['version'], updates[w]['dist'], updates[w]['repo']))) # Otherwise the spec is an exact match
for pkg in updates[w]:
to_update.append(
(
w,
'%s.%s from %s' % (
pkg['version'],
pkg['dist'],
pkg['repo']
)
)
)
if self.update_only: if self.update_only:
res['changes'] = dict(installed=[], updated=to_update) res['changes'] = dict(installed=[], updated=to_update)

@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
from ansible.errors import AnsibleError, AnsibleFilterError
def filter_list_of_tuples_by_first_param(lst, search, startswith=False):
out = []
for element in lst:
if startswith:
if element[0].startswith(search):
out.append(element)
else:
if search in element[0]:
out.append(element)
return out
class FilterModule(object):
''' filter '''
def filters(self):
return {
'filter_list_of_tuples_by_first_param': filter_list_of_tuples_by_first_param,
}

@ -69,3 +69,10 @@
- import_tasks: lock.yml - import_tasks: lock.yml
when: when:
- ansible_distribution in ['RedHat', 'CentOS', 'ScientificLinux'] - ansible_distribution in ['RedHat', 'CentOS', 'ScientificLinux']
- import_tasks: multiarch.yml
when:
- ansible_distribution in ['RedHat', 'CentOS', 'ScientificLinux']
- ansible_architecture == 'x86_64'
# Our output parsing expects us to be on yum, not dnf
- ansible_distribution_major_version is version('7', '<=')

@ -0,0 +1,154 @@
- block:
- name: Set up test yum repo
yum_repository:
name: multiarch-test-repo
description: ansible-test multiarch test repo
baseurl: "{{ multiarch_repo_baseurl }}"
gpgcheck: no
repo_gpgcheck: no
- name: Install two out of date packages from the repo
yum:
name:
- multiarch-a-1.0
- multiarch-b-1.0
register: outdated
- name: See what we installed
command: rpm -q multiarch-a multiarch-b
register: rpm_q
# Here we assume we're running on x86_64 (and limit to this in main.yml)
# (avoid comparing ansible_architecture because we only have test RPMs
# for i686 and x86_64 and ansible_architecture could be other things.)
- name: Assert that we got the right architecture
assert:
that:
- outdated is changed
- outdated.changes.installed | length == 2
- rpm_q.stdout_lines | length == 2
- rpm_q.stdout_lines[0].endswith('x86_64')
- rpm_q.stdout_lines[1].endswith('x86_64')
- name: Install the same versions, but i686 instead
yum:
name:
- multiarch-a-1.0*.i686
- multiarch-b-1.0*.i686
register: outdated_i686
- name: See what we installed
command: rpm -q multiarch-a multiarch-b
register: rpm_q
- name: Assert that all four are installed
assert:
that:
- outdated_i686 is changed
- outdated.changes.installed | length == 2
- rpm_q.stdout_lines | length == 4
- name: Update them all to 2.0
yum:
name: multiarch-*
state: latest
update_only: true
register: yum_latest
- name: Assert that all were updated and shown in results
assert:
that:
- yum_latest is changed
# This is just testing UI stability. The behavior is arguably not
# correct, because multiple packages are being updated. But the
# "because of (at least)..." wording kinda locks us in to only
# showing one update in this case. :(
- yum_latest.changes.updated | length == 1
- name: Downgrade them so we can upgrade them a different way
yum:
name:
- multiarch-a-1.0*
- multiarch-b-1.0*
allow_downgrade: true
register: downgrade
- name: See what we installed
command: rpm -q multiarch-a multiarch-b --queryformat '%{name}-%{version}.%{arch}\n'
register: rpm_q
- name: Ensure downgrade worked
assert:
that:
- downgrade is changed
- rpm_q.stdout_lines | sort == ['multiarch-a-1.0.i686', 'multiarch-a-1.0.x86_64', 'multiarch-b-1.0.i686', 'multiarch-b-1.0.x86_64']
# This triggers a different branch of logic that the partial wildcard
# above, but we're limited to check_mode here since it's '*'.
- name: Upgrade with full wildcard
yum:
name: '*'
state: latest
update_only: true
update_cache: true
check_mode: true
register: full_wildcard
# https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/73284
- name: Ensure we report things correctly (both arches)
assert:
that:
- full_wildcard is changed
- full_wildcard.changes.updated | filter_list_of_tuples_by_first_param('multiarch', startswith=True) | length == 4
- name: Downgrade them so we can upgrade them a different way
yum:
name:
- multiarch-a-1.0*
- multiarch-b-1.0*
allow_downgrade: true
register: downgrade
- name: Try to install again via virtual provides, should be unchanged
yum:
name:
- virtual-provides-multiarch-a
- virtual-provides-multiarch-b
state: present
register: install_vp
- name: Ensure the above did not change
assert:
that:
- install_vp is not changed
- name: Try to upgrade via virtual provides
yum:
name:
- virtual-provides-multiarch-a
- virtual-provides-multiarch-b
state: latest
update_only: true
register: upgrade_vp
- name: Ensure we report things correctly (both arches)
assert:
that:
- upgrade_vp is changed
# This is just testing UI stability, like above.
# We'll only have one package in "updated" per spec, even though
# (in this case) two are getting updated per spec.
- upgrade_vp.changes.updated | length == 2
always:
- name: Remove test yum repo
yum_repository:
name: multiarch-test-repo
state: absent
- name: Remove all test packages installed
yum:
name:
- multiarch-*
- virtual-provides-multiarch-*
state: absent

@ -0,0 +1 @@
multiarch_repo_baseurl: https://ansible-ci-files.s3.amazonaws.com/test/integration/targets/yum/multiarch-test-repo/RPMS/
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