Use aptitude safe-upgrade for apt upgrade=yes

Use aptitude safe-upgrade instead of apt-get upgrade to implement
apt: upgrade=yes. Using aptitude ensures that missing dependencies
will also be installed.

Fixes #2540
reviewable/pr18780/r1
Lorin Hochstein 12 years ago
parent 9d8fc0c4ff
commit 75a9687a2a

13
apt

@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ options:
choices: [ "yes", "no" ]
upgrade:
description:
- 'If yes, performs an apt-get upgrade. If dist, performs an apt-get dist-upgrade. Note: This does not upgrade a specific package, use state=latest for that.'
- 'If yes, performs an aptitude safe-upgrade. If dist, performs an apt-get dist-upgrade. Note: This does not upgrade a specific package, use state=latest for that.'
version_added: "1.1"
required: false
default: no
@ -91,6 +91,7 @@ examples:
description: Install latest version of C(openjdk-6-jdk) ignoring C(install-reccomends)
- code: "apt: upgrade=dist"
description: Update all packages to the latest version
requirements: [ python-apt, aptitude ]
'''
import traceback
@ -188,13 +189,19 @@ def remove(m, pkgspec, cache, purge=False):
def upgrade(m, mode="yes"):
upgrade_command = 'upgrade'
if mode == "dist":
upgrade_command = 'dist-upgrade'
cmd = '%s -q -y -o "Dpkg::Options::=--force-confdef" -o "Dpkg::Options::=--force-confold" %s' % (APT, upgrade_command)
cmd = '%s -q -y -o "Dpkg::Options::=--force-confdef" -o "Dpkg::Options::=--force-confold" dist-upgrade' % APT
rc, out, err = m.run_command(cmd)
if rc:
m.fail_json(msg="'apt-get %s' failed: %s" % (upgrade_command, err))
if "0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded." in out :
m.exit_json(changed=False)
else:
cmd = "/usr/bin/aptitude safe-upgrade -y"
rc, out, err = m.run_command(cmd)
if rc:
m.fail_json(msg="'aptitude safe-upgrade' failed: %s" % err)
if "No packages will be installed, upgraded, or removed." in out:
m.exit_json(changed=False)
m.exit_json(changed=True)
def main():

Loading…
Cancel
Save