Have the parser explain another type of YAML gotcha to reduce the need for users to ask how to resolve it.

pull/4468/head
Michael DeHaan 11 years ago
parent 861f076df5
commit a017a69bb3

@ -355,6 +355,7 @@ It should be written as:
app_path: "{{ base_path }}/foo"
"""
return msg
elif len(probline) and len(probline) >= column and probline[column] == ":" and probline.count(':') > 1:
msg = msg + """
@ -365,18 +366,48 @@ entire line after the first colon.
For instance, if the original line was:
copy: src=file dest=/path/filename:with_colon.txt
copy: src=file.txt dest=/path/filename:with_colon.txt
It can be written as:
copy: src=file dest='/path/filename:with_colon.txt'
copy: src=file.txt dest='/path/filename:with_colon.txt'
Or:
copy: 'src=file dest=/path/filename:with_colon.txt'
copy: 'src=file.txt dest=/path/filename:with_colon.txt'
"""
return msg
else:
parts = probline.split(":")
print parts
if len(parts) > 1:
middle = parts[1].strip()
match = False
if middle.startswith("'") and not middle.endswith('"'):
match = True
elif middle.startswith('"') and not middle.endswith('"'):
match = True
if match:
msg = msg + """
This one looks easy to fix. It seems that there is a value started
with a quote, and the YAML parser is expecting to see the line ended
with the same kind of quote. For instance:
when: "ok" in result.stdout
Could be written as:
when: '"ok" in result.stdout'
or equivalently:
when: "'ok' in result.stdout"
"""
return msg
return msg
def process_yaml_error(exc, data, path=None):

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