Make fetch default to fail on errors

Fixes #23501
pull/24258/head
Toshio Kuratomi 8 years ago
parent 90a229c793
commit a0dfa8616a

@ -45,6 +45,9 @@ Ansible Changes By Release
The new behaviour mirrors how the variables would appear if there was no hash
mark in the string.
- As of 2.4.0, the fetch module fails if there are errors reading the remote
file. Use ignore_errors or failed_when in playbooks if you wish to ignore
errors.
#### New Inventory scripts:
- lxd

@ -27,9 +27,7 @@ short_description: Fetches a file from remote nodes
description:
- This module works like M(copy), but in reverse. It is used for fetching
files from remote machines and storing them locally in a file tree,
organized by hostname. Note that this module is written to transfer
log files that might not be present, so a missing remote file won't
be an error unless fail_on_missing is set to 'yes'.
organized by hostname.
version_added: "0.2"
options:
src:
@ -50,10 +48,13 @@ options:
fail_on_missing:
version_added: "1.1"
description:
- When set to 'yes', the task will fail if the source file is missing.
- When set to 'yes', the task will fail if the remote file cannot be
read for any reason. Prior to Ansible-2.4, setting this would only fail
if the source file was missing.
- The default was changed to "yes" in Ansible-2.4.
required: false
choices: [ "yes", "no" ]
default: "no"
default: "yes"
validate_checksum:
version_added: "1.4"
description:
@ -80,6 +81,11 @@ notes:
depending on the file size can consume all available memory on the
remote or local hosts causing a C(MemoryError). Due to this it is
advisable to run this module without C(become) whenever possible.
- Prior to Ansible-2.4 this module would not fail if reading the remote
file was impossible unless fail_on_missing was set. In Ansible-2.4+,
playbook authors are encouraged to use fail_when or ignore_errors to
get this ability. They may also explicitly set fail_on_missing to False
to get the non-failing behaviour.
'''
EXAMPLES = '''

@ -518,6 +518,7 @@ class ActionBase(with_metaclass(ABCMeta, object)):
2 = permissions issue
3 = its a directory, not a file
4 = stat module failed, likely due to not finding python
5 = appropriate json module not found
'''
x = "0" # unknown error has occurred
try:
@ -532,6 +533,8 @@ class ActionBase(with_metaclass(ABCMeta, object)):
x = "2" # cannot read file
elif errormsg.endswith(u'MODULE FAILURE'):
x = "4" # python not found or module uncaught exception
elif 'json' in errormsg or 'simplejson' in errormsg:
x = "5" # json or simplejson modules needed
finally:
return x

@ -122,26 +122,31 @@ class ActionModule(ActionBase):
dest = dest.replace("//","/")
if remote_checksum in ('0', '1', '2', '3', '4'):
# these don't fail because you may want to transfer a log file that
# possibly MAY exist but keep going to fetch other log files
if remote_checksum in ('0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5'):
result['changed'] = False
result['file'] = source
if remote_checksum == '0':
result['msg'] = "unable to calculate the checksum of the remote file"
elif remote_checksum == '1':
if fail_on_missing:
result['failed'] = True
del result['changed']
result['msg'] = "the remote file does not exist"
else:
result['msg'] = "the remote file does not exist, not transferring, ignored"
elif remote_checksum == '2':
result['msg'] = "no read permission on remote file, not transferring, ignored"
result['msg'] = "no read permission on remote file"
elif remote_checksum == '3':
result['msg'] = "remote file is a directory, fetch cannot work on directories"
elif remote_checksum == '4':
result['msg'] = "python isn't present on the system. Unable to compute checksum"
elif remote_checksum == '5':
result['msg'] = "stdlib json or simplejson was not found on the remote machine. Only the raw module can work without those installed"
# Historically, these don't fail because you may want to transfer
# a log file that possibly MAY exist but keep going to fetch other
# log files. Today, this is better achieved by adding
# ignore_errors or failed_when to the task. Control the behaviour
# via fail_when_missing
if fail_on_missing:
result['failed'] = True
del result['changed']
else:
result['msg'] += ", not transferring, ignored"
return result
# calculate checksum for the local file
@ -173,7 +178,9 @@ class ActionModule(ActionBase):
msg="checksum mismatch", file=source, dest=dest, remote_md5sum=None,
checksum=new_checksum, remote_checksum=remote_checksum))
else:
result.update(dict(changed=True, md5sum=new_md5, dest=dest, remote_md5sum=None, checksum=new_checksum, remote_checksum=remote_checksum))
result.update({'changed': True, 'md5sum': new_md5, 'dest': dest,
'remote_md5sum': None, 'checksum': new_checksum,
'remote_checksum': remote_checksum})
else:
# For backwards compatibility. We'll return None on FIPS enabled systems
try:

@ -56,7 +56,7 @@
- 'fetched["checksum"] == "a94a8fe5ccb19ba61c4c0873d391e987982fbbd3"'
- name: attempt to fetch a non-existent file - do not fail on missing
fetch: src={{ output_dir }}/doesnotexist dest={{ output_dir }}/fetched
fetch: src={{ output_dir }}/doesnotexist dest={{ output_dir }}/fetched fail_on_missing=False
register: fetch_missing_nofail
- name: check fetch missing no fail result
@ -78,7 +78,7 @@
- "not fetch_missing|changed"
- name: attempt to fetch a directory - should not fail but return a message
fetch: src={{ output_dir }} dest={{ output_dir }}/somedir
fetch: src={{ output_dir }} dest={{ output_dir }}/somedir fail_on_missing=False
register: fetch_dir
- name: check fetch directory result
@ -87,6 +87,17 @@
- "not fetch_dir|changed"
- "fetch_dir.msg"
- name: attempt to fetch a directory - should fail
fetch: src={{ output_dir }} dest={{ output_dir }}/somedir fail_on_missing=True
register: failed_fetch_dir
ignore_errors: true
- name: check fetch directory result
assert:
that:
- "failed_fetch_dir['failed']"
- "fetch_dir.msg"
- name: create symlink to a file that we can fetch
file:
path: "{{ output_dir }}/link"

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