The eos_template module works by allowing configurations to be pushed
to Arista EOS devices that can be templated by the Ansible Jinja2
template engine
This adds a new module eos_command to network/eos. The eos_command module
is used for sending arbitrary commands to Arista EOS devices. It includes
arguments that allow the module to wait for specific values before the
module returns control to the playbook or fails
This adds a new module nxos_command that can be used to send arbitrary
commands to NXOS devices. The module includes an argument that allows
the responses to be evaluated and causes the module not to return
control to the playbook until a set of conditions has been met.
Using the difflist feature added in ansible/ansible@c337293 we can add
two diffs to the `diff` dict returned as JSON: A `before` and `after` pair of
changed file contents and the diff of the file attributes.
n.b.: the difflist handling from the above commit is logically broken.
PR will follow.
Example output:
TASK [change line and mode] ************************************************************
changed: [localhost]
--- before: /tmp/sshd_config (content)
+++ after: /tmp/sshd_config (content)
@@ -65,21 +65,21 @@
X11DisplayOffset 10
PrintMotd no
PrintLastLog yes
TCPKeepAlive yes
#UseLogin no
#MaxStartups 10:30:60
#Banner /etc/issue.net
# Allow client to pass locale environment variables
-AcceptEnv LANG LC_*
+AcceptEnv LANG LC_* GF_ENV_*
Subsystem sftp /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server
# Set this to 'yes' to enable PAM authentication, account processing,
# and session processing. If this is enabled, PAM authentication will
# be allowed through the ChallengeResponseAuthentication and
# PasswordAuthentication. Depending on your PAM configuration,
# PAM authentication via ChallengeResponseAuthentication may bypass
# the setting of "PermitRootLogin without-password".
# If you just want the PAM account and session checks to run without
--- before: /tmp/sshd_config (file attributes)
+++ after: /tmp/sshd_config (file attributes)
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
{
- "mode": "0700"
+ "mode": "0644"
}
Since there is no shell escape of the password parameter, a password with
a single quote (or even worst, a single quote and a pipe) could have
unattended consequences. Also, the less we use use_unsafe_shell=True, the
better.
As of Ansible 2.x, invocation of Django's ```manage.py``` requires a valid "shebang". Additionally, ```manage.py``` must be executable.
The old invocation was hardcoded as ```python manage.py ...``` while the new invocation is ```./manage.py ...```. See [this PR](https://github.com/ansible/ansible-modules-core/pull/1165).
This change allows more flexibility for which Python interpreter is invoked, but breaks existing deployment when ```manage.py``` is not properly configured. This documentation update adds a note explaining the new requirements for ```manage.py```.