* config, moved 'choices' from wall of text, to keys
* updated to ensure all pythons handle the 2 modes correctly
* Update lib/ansible/config/base.yml
Co-authored-by: Sandra McCann <samccann@redhat.com>
* go back to keyword being explicit for plugin configs instead of using option name as implicit match
* switch spec to singular, no changes needed since no one used
* Don't send full task with async callback events. Fixes#76729
* Use args for async_status task, instead of k=v
* Make sure we send back the async task attrs for polling
* Add clog frag
* load is a staticmethod
* include_vars initialize failed
if source dir is given, but not present and traversal is empty you
can end up trying to access failed w/o it ever being defined.
also future proof for more corner cases in decision tree
dont display _terms or _intput on only changed
those always change and it expected for the plugins that support them
Co-authored-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
- Avoids false positives on become strings being echoed back
by ssh cli itself
- added test for debug lines
- also simplified some of existing test code
modules with python were always normalized to /usr/bin/python,
while other interpreters could have specific versions.
* now shebang is always constructed by get_shebang and args are preserved
* only update shebang if interpreter changed
* updated test expectation
* added python shebang test
* Update dnf tests to reflect new behavior.
Previously dnf would report there was nothing to do when trying to install a package from the cache when it was not present.
A recent update to dnf has changed this behavior to match yum, resulting in a failure instead.
* Allow dnf to fail or report no changes.
* ansible-galaxy - fix the --ignore-certs flag for the implicit galaxy server
* changelog
* Add a test without the server config
* Fix respecting --ignore-certs for individual --server URLs also
* Update changelogs/fragments/76735-ansible-galaxy-fix-ignore-certs.yaml
This adds the ability to specify a package version using >=. This will ensure the package is at the specified version or above.
* If the package is not installed, the latest version will be installed.
* If the package is installed and less than the specified version, it will be upgraded.
* If the package is installed and greater than or equal to the specified version, it will be left alone.
The version selection is handled by Apt itself, so things like the system policy, pinning, etc, are considered.