Previous change overlooked 'uncommenting' the variable entry as a way to update this to keep the functionality.
Co-authored-by: Glandos <bugs-github@antipoul.fr>
Co-authored-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
Using this dictionary to store the return values results in
the return values showing up in the returned
`invocation['module_args']`, which is confusing. It also causes all
module arguments to be returned, which is preserved by this change but
should ideally be removed in the future.
* Reject option/alias names equal up to casing belonging to different options.
* Update test/lib/ansible_test/_util/controller/sanity/validate-modules/validate_modules/main.py
Co-authored-by: Sloane Hertel <19572925+s-hertel@users.noreply.github.com>
previouslly we recorded but did not show to avoid spam
since we could not dedup from forks, that was already
fixed in another PR so now we can show/display them.
Also:
* funcitonalize deprecation msg construct from docs
* reuse formatting func in cli
* normalize alternatives: most of the code used intended plural
but some and most data/tests used the singular
* update schemas and tests
Co-authored-by: Matt Davis <6775756+nitzmahone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
Previously, `support_discard` simply returned the value of
`/sys/block/{device}/queue/discard_granularity`. When its value is `0`, then
the block device doesn't support discards; _however_, it being greater than
zero doesn't necessarily mean that the block device _does_ support discards.
But another indication that a block device doesn't support discards is
`/sys/block/{device}/queue/discard_max_hw_bytes` being equal to `0` (with the
same caveat as above). So if either of those are `0`, set `support_discard` to
zero, otherwise set it to the value of `discard_granularity` for backwards
compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Benoît Knecht <bknecht@protonmail.ch>
* Enable Ubuntu 24.04 group 6 in CI
* Disable rootfull Podman on Ubuntu
* Disable unix-chkpwd AppArmor profile on Ubuntu for Fedora 40 tests
* Document AppArmor and rootfull issues
Previously, if the checksum of the downloaded file did not match the
specified checksum, the *destination* file was removed. This possibly
leaves the system that is being provisioned in an invalid state.
Instead, the checksum should be calculated on the temporary file only.
If there's a mismatch, delete the *temporary* file, not the destination
file.
This requires checking the checksum before moving the file.
When vault password file env variable is set to blank,
this value is converted to CWD and passed for further
processing.
Check if ANSIBLE_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE is not a directory.
Fixes: #42960
Signed-off-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
also make the YAML booleanization the same as spec/JSON/module function
previous 'aproximation' was missing several options.
Co-authored-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
Improves the Add-Type temporary directory handler to include a retry
mechanism and not fail on an error. Deleting a temporary file used in
compilation is not a critical error and should improve the reliability
of Ansible on Windows hosts.
* Fix task.resolved_action for callbacks when playbooks use action or local_action
* Fix using module_defaults with 'action' and 'local_action' task FA and add a test case
Fixes#81905