* Fix imports in cli.py.
* Fix imports in executor.py.
* Remove old test/runner/ansible-test entry point.
Use the official bin/ansible-test entry point instead, which has been around since Ansible 2.5.
* Use bin/ansible-test on Shippable.
* Clean up comments in integration tests.
Tests reference soon to be outdated paths and implementation details.
* Remove unused test/runner/ reference in test.
This new script does not depend on ansible-test and provides much more robust job matrix testing.
It is also run on every job in the matrix now, to detect issues with jobs being re-run after matrix changes are made.
* Improve netapp_e_hostgroup and add unit and integration tests.
netapp_e_hostgroup was refactored for maintainability and improved
documentation clarity.
* Remove ignore sanity check E338 for netapp_e_hostgroup module
* Add __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function) to test_netapp_e_hostgroup unit test.
* Combined telemetry module commit
* Minor fixes
* Add back whitespace
* Add telemetry subscription support and simplify
* Remove comment line
* Make ansibot happy
* Create common build_args method
* More ansibot fixes
* Refactored integration tests, remove old files
* Add subscription tests
* Add integration tests
* Update module docs
* Test updates
* Address review comments
* Comment should be one line, not two
* Address Trishna comments
* State deleted should purge all config
* Remove misleading comment
* Doc fixes
* Fix source int bug and remove local debug msg
* Add additional integration test checks
* needed so ansible-test can always find the right ones to copy to a target
* renamed the underlying scripts to be properly accessible as Python modules
* Try to clarify the wording
People were confused by this paragraph. They read it as Ansible won't
auto-detect the python interpreter until 2.12. Tried to reword it so
that they'll see that Ansible will auto-detect it currently if
/usr/bin/python is not present and in the future will always autodetect.
* Format the other instances of /usr/bin/python using :command: