Fix merge conflicts from 1.5.1 release notes

pull/6392/head
James Tanner 10 years ago
commit 7b6d5e7bbf

@ -17,7 +17,14 @@ Other notable changes:
* info pending
## 1.5 "Love Walks In" - Feb 28, 2014
## 1.5.1 "Love Walks In" - March 10, 2014
- Force command action to not be executed by the shell unless specifically enabled.
- Validate SSL certs accessed through urllib*.
- Implement new default cipher class AES256 in ansible-vault.
- Misc bug fixes.
## 1.5 "Love Walks In" - February 28, 2014
Major features/changes:

@ -14,6 +14,9 @@ Active Development
Previous
++++++++
=======
1.6 "The Cradle Will Rock" - NEXT
1.5.1 "Love Walks In" -------- 03-10-2014
1.5 "Love Walks In" -------- 02-28-2014
1.4.5 "Could This Be Magic?" - 02-12-2014
1.4.4 "Could This Be Magic?" - 01-06-2014

@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ We believe simplicity is relevant to all sizes of environments and design for bu
Ansible manages machines in an agentless manner. There is never a question of how to
upgrade remote daemons or the problem of not being able to manage systems because daemons are uninstalled. As OpenSSH is one of the most peer reviewed open source components, the security exposure of using the tool is greatly reduced. Ansible is decentralized -- it relies on your existing OS credentials to control access to remote machines; if needed it can easily connect with Kerberos, LDAP, and other centralized authentication management systems.
This documentation covers the current released version of Ansible (1.5) and also some development version features (1.6). For recent features, in each section, the version of Ansible where the feature is added is indicated. Ansible, Inc releases a new major release of Ansible approximately every 2 months. The core application evolves somewhat conservatively, valuing simplicity in language design and setup, while the community around new modules and plugins being developed and contributed moves very very quickly, typically adding 20 or so new modules in each release.
This documentation covers the current released version of Ansible (1.5.1) and also some development version features (1.6). For recent features, in each section, the version of Ansible where the feature is added is indicated. Ansible, Inc releases a new major release of Ansible approximately every 2 months. The core application evolves somewhat conservatively, valuing simplicity in language design and setup, while the community around new modules and plugins being developed and contributed moves very very quickly, typically adding 20 or so new modules in each release.
.. _an_introduction:

@ -4,12 +4,21 @@ ansible (1.6) unstable; urgency=low
-- Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan@gmail.com> Fri, 28 February 2014 15:00:03 -0500
ansible (1.5.1) unstable; urgency=low
* 1.5.1 release
-- Michael DeHaan <michael@ansible.com> Mon, 10 March 2014 17:33:44 -0500
ansible (1.5) unstable; urgency=low
* 1.5 release
<<<<<<< HEAD
-- Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan@gmail.com> Fri, 28 February 2014 15:00:02 -0500
=======
-- Michael DeHaan <michael@ansible.com> Fri, 28 February 2014 00:00:00 -0500
>>>>>>> 16c05cbc8892041cacba3ff87c86e68b86b4511b
ansible (1.4.5) unstable; urgency=low

@ -102,8 +102,16 @@ rm -rf %{buildroot}
%changelog
<<<<<<< HEAD
* Thu Feb 28 2014 Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan@gmail.com> - 1.6-0
* (PENDING)
=======
* Fri Mar 10 2014 Michael DeHaan <michael@ansible.com> - 1.5.1
- Release 1.5.1
* Fri Feb 28 2014 Michael DeHaan <michael@ansible.com> - 1.5.0
- Release 1.5.0
>>>>>>> 16c05cbc8892041cacba3ff87c86e68b86b4511b
* Thu Feb 28 2014 Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan@gmail.com> - 1.5-0
* Release 1.5

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