Older python-apt modules don't export Package.installed_files and there
seems to be no other way to figure out if a package is
removed-but-not-purged, so we just always assume it's purged.
Signed-off-by: martin f. krafft <madduck@madduck.net>
A package may be removed but not purged with APT. The only way to
identify this state is by looking at the list of installed files of
a package. Even if the package has no files installed, this list will be
non-empty until the package is removed:
# python -c "import apt; c=apt.Cache(); c.update(); c.open(); p=c['ruby1.8']; print p, p.installed, p.installed_files"
<Package: name:'ruby1.8' id:1425> None [u'']
# dpkg --purge ruby1.8
(Reading database ... 27904 files and directories currently installed.)
Removing ruby1.8 ...
Purging configuration files for ruby1.8 ...
# python -c "import apt; c=apt.Cache(); c.update(); c.open(); p=c['ruby1.8']; print p, p.installed, p.installed_files"
<Package: name:'ruby1.8' id:1425> None []
See http://bugs.debian.org/712749 too.
If a package is not marked installed but it still 'has_files', then it
should be processed if the request is to purge it.
Signed-off-by: martin f. krafft <madduck@madduck.net>
A small error in the reuse of a variable caused packages to never get
purged. This commit fixes that.
Signed-off-by: martin f. krafft <madduck@madduck.net>
hardcoded lists in ansible code, just add WITH_ITEMS_USES_LIST in a
comment anywhere, and of course, support recieving params as list.
Signed-off-by: Brian Coca <briancoca+dev@gmail.com>
Migrated all examples: in DOCUMENTATION=''' string to standalone EXAMPLES=''' string
Added deprecation warning to moduledev.rst and remove deprecated example from it
Fixed up a few typos and uppercased some acronyms.
add consistency to how EXAMPLES are formatted
I have something like:
apt: pkg={{ item }} state=present
with_items:
- python-pysqlite2=2.6.3-*
- python-paramiko=1.7.7.1-*
But due to the use of *'s in the version specifications, the apt ansible
module always reports changed: true. This patch fixes that.