Adding support for OpenBSD syspatch (#55561)

* Initial commit

* Fixing issue where applying always returned changed status

* Adding return variables: reboot_needed, rc, stderr, stdout, warnings
pull/57241/head
Andrew Klaus 6 years ago committed by Brian Coca
parent 4142cd595e
commit d8bf4f1ebb

@ -0,0 +1,169 @@
#!/usr/bin/python
# Copyright: (c) 2019, Andrew Klaus <andrewklaus@gmail.com>
# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
__metaclass__ = type
ANSIBLE_METADATA = {
'metadata_version': '1.1',
'status': ['preview'],
'supported_by': 'community'
}
DOCUMENTATION = '''
---
module: syspatch
short_description: Manage OpenBSD system patches
version_added: "2.9"
description:
- "Manage OpenBSD system patches using syspatch"
options:
apply:
description:
- Apply all available system patches
default: False
required: false
revert:
description:
- Revert system patches
required: false
type: str
choices: [ all, one ]
author:
- Andrew Klaus (@precurse)
'''
EXAMPLES = '''
- name: Apply all available system patches
syspatch:
apply: true
- name: Revert last patch
syspatch:
revert: one
- name: Revert all patches
syspatch:
revert: all
'''
RETURN = r'''
rc:
description: The command return code (0 means success)
returned: always
type: int
stdout:
description: syspatch standard output
returned: always
type: str
sample: "001_rip6cksum"
stderr:
description: syspatch standard error
returned: always
type: str
sample: "syspatch: need root privileges"
reboot_needed:
description: Whether or not a reboot is required after an update
returned: always
type: bool
sample: True
'''
from ansible.module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule
def run_module():
# define available arguments/parameters a user can pass to the module
module_args = dict(
apply=dict(type='bool', default=False),
revert=dict(type='str', choices=['all', 'one'])
)
module = AnsibleModule(
argument_spec=module_args,
supports_check_mode=True,
required_one_of=[['apply', 'revert']]
)
result = syspatch_run(module)
module.exit_json(**result)
def syspatch_run(module):
cmd = ['/usr/sbin/syspatch']
changed = False
reboot_needed = False
warnings = []
# Setup command flags
if module.params['revert']:
check_flag = ['-l']
if module.params['revert'] == 'all':
run_flag = ['-R']
else:
run_flag = ['-r']
elif module.params['apply']:
check_flag = ['-c']
run_flag = []
# Run check command
rc, out, err = module.run_command(cmd + check_flag)
if rc != 0:
module.fail_json(msg="Command %s failed rc=%d, out=%s, err=%s" % (cmd, rc, out, err))
if len(out) > 0:
# Changes pending
change_pending = True
else:
# No changes pending
change_pending = False
if module.check_mode:
changed = change_pending
elif change_pending:
rc, out, err = module.run_command(cmd + run_flag)
# Workaround syspatch ln bug:
# http://openbsd-archive.7691.n7.nabble.com/Warning-applying-latest-syspatch-td354250.html
if rc != 0 and err != 'ln: /usr/X11R6/bin/X: No such file or directory\n':
module.fail_json(msg="Command %s failed rc=%d, out=%s, err=%s" % (cmd, rc, out, err))
elif out.lower().find('create unique kernel'):
# Kernel update applied
reboot_needed = True
elif out.lower().find('syspatch updated itself'):
warnings.append['Syspatch was updated. Please run syspatch again.']
# If no stdout, then warn user
if len(out) > 0:
warnings.append['syspatch had suggested changes, but stdout was empty.']
changed = True
else:
changed = False
return dict(
changed=changed,
reboot_needed=reboot_needed,
rc=rc,
stderr=err,
stdout=out,
warnings=warnings
)
def main():
run_module()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
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