The `a/` and `b/` prefixes can be disabled in the `git diff` output by setting
`diff.noprefix` to `true`. The output is still a valid diff, but `ansible-test` would
raise an exception since without the prefixes, it thought the diff line was invalid.
* --offline allows in-place verify for installed collections with manifests
* manifest hash, collection name, version, and path are now always displayed
* test updates
* Begin using ArgumentSpecValidator in AnsibleModule
* Add check parameters to ArgumentSpecValidator
Add additional parameters for specifying required and mutually exclusive parameters.
Add code to the .validate() method that runs these additional checks.
* Make errors related to unsupported parameters match existing behavior
Update the punctuation in the message slightly to make it more readable.
Add a property to ArgumentSpecValidator to hold valid parameter names.
* Set default values after performining checks
* FIx sanity test failure
* Use correct parameters when checking sub options
* Use a dict when iterating over check functions
Referencing by key names makes things a bit more readable IMO.
* Fix bug in comparison for sub options evaluation
* Add options_context to check functions
This allows the parent parameter to be added the the error message if a validation
error occurs in a sub option.
* Fix bug in apply_defaults behavior of sub spec validation
* Accept options_conext in get_unsupported_parameters()
If options_context is supplied, a tuple of parent key names of unsupported parameter will be
created. This allows the full "path" to the unsupported parameter to be reported.
* Build path to the unsupported parameter for error messages.
* Remove unused import
* Update recursive finder test
* Skip if running in check mode
This was done in the _check_arguments() method. That was moved to a function that has no
way of calling fail_json(), so it must be done outside of validation.
This is a silght change in behavior, but I believe the correct one.
Previously, only unsupported parameters would cause a failure. All other checks would not be executed
if the modlue did not support check mode. This would hide validation failures in check mode.
* The great purge
Remove all methods related to argument spec validation from AnsibleModule
* Keep _name and kind in the caller and out of the validator
This seems a bit awkward since this means the caller could end up with {name} and {kind} in
the error message if they don't run the messages through the .format() method
with name and kind parameters.
* Double moustaches work
I wasn't sure if they get stripped or not. Looks like they do. Neat trick.
* Add changelog
* Update unsupported parameter test
The error message changed to include name and kind.
* Remove unused import
* Add better documentation for ArgumentSpecValidator class
* Fix example
* Few more docs fixes
* Mark required and mutually exclusive attributes as private
* Mark validate functions as private
* Reorganize functions in validation.py
* Remove unused imports in basic.py related to argument spec validation
* Create errors is module_utils
We have errors in lib/ansible/errors/ but those cannot be used by modules.
* Update recursive finder test
* Move errors to file rather than __init__.py
* Change ArgumentSpecValidator.validate() interface
Raise AnsibleValidationErrorMultiple on validation error which contains all AnsibleValidationError
exceptions for validation failures.
Return the validated parameters if validation is successful rather than True/False.
Update docs and tests.
* Get attribute in loop so that the attribute name can also be used as a parameter
* Shorten line
* Update calling code in AnsibleModule for new validator interface
* Update calling code in validate_argument_spec based in new validation interface
* Base custom exception class off of Exception
* Call the __init__ method of the base Exception class to populate args
* Ensure no_log values are always updated
* Make custom exceptions more hierarchical
This redefines AnsibleError from lib/ansible/errors with a different signature since that cannot
be used by modules. This may be a bad idea. Maybe lib/ansible/errors should be moved to
module_utils, or AnsibleError defined in this commit should use the same signature as the original.
* Just go back to basing off Exception
* Return ValidationResult object on successful validation
Create a ValidationResult class.
Return a ValidationResult from ArgumentSpecValidator.validate() when validation is successful.
Update class and method docs.
Update unit tests based on interface change.
* Make it easier to get error objects from AnsibleValidationResultMultiple
This makes the interface cleaner when getting individual error objects contained in a single
AnsibleValidationResultMultiple instance.
* Define custom exception for each type of validation failure
These errors indicate where a validation error occured. Currently they are empty but could
contain specific data for each exception type in the future.
* Update tests based on (yet another) interface change
* Mark several more functions as private
These are all doing rather "internal" things. The ArgumentSpecValidator class is the preferred
public interface.
* Move warnings and deprecations to result object
Rather than calling deprecate() and warn() directly, store them on the result object so the
caller can decide what to do with them.
* Use subclass for module arg spec validation
The subclass uses global warning and deprecations feature
* Fix up docs
* Remove legal_inputs munging from _handle_aliases()
This is done in AnsibleModule by the _set_internal_properties() method. It only makes sense
to do that for an AnsibleModule instance (it should update the parameters before performing
validation) and shouldn't be done by the validator.
Create a private function just for getting legal inputs since that is done in a couple of places.
It may make sense store that on the ValidationResult object.
* Increase test coverage
* Remove unnecessary conditional
ci_complete
* Mark warnings and deprecations as private in the ValidationResult
They can be made public once we come up with a way to make them more generally useful,
probably by creating cusom objects to store the data in more structure way.
* Mark valid_parameter_names as private and populate it during initialization
* Use a global for storing the list of additonal checks to perform
This list is used by the main validate method as well as the sub spec validation.
When using "use_regex: yes" and setting an excludes: without
specifying a pattern: the existing code passes the file-glob '*' to
the regex matcher. This results in an internal invalid-regex
exception being thrown.
This maintains the old semantics of a default match-all for pattern:
but switches the default to '.*' when use_regex is specified.
The code made sense as-is before excludes: was added (2.5). In that
case, it made no sense to set use_regex but *not* set a pattern.
However, with excludes: it now makes sense to only want to exclude a
given regex but not specify a specific matching pattern.
Closes: #50067
* moved change to new location
added changelog
* Update lib/ansible/modules/find.py
Co-authored-by: Ian Wienand <iwienand@redhat.com>
* Fix a bug adding unrelated candidates to the plugin loader redirect_list
* Add tests for the redirect list
* test redirect list for builtin module
* test redirect list for redirected builtin module
* test redirect list for collection module
* test redirect list for redirected collection module
* test redirect list for legacy module
* changelog
Ansible can gather distribution facts for older Amazon Linux
with /etc/os-release data.
Fixes: #73946
Signed-off-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
* ansible-pull: run all playbooks when multiple are supplied
* add test for ansible-pull with multiple playbooks supplied from cli
* add changelog fragment
* Catch more potential errors (and increase false-positive rate).
* Flag some false-positives in lib/ansible/modules/ with no_log=False.
Co-authored-by: John Barker <john@johnrbarker.com>
* add optional module_utils import support
Treat core and collections module_utils imports nested within any Python block statement (eg, `try`, `if`) as optional. This allows Ansible modules to implement runtime fallback behavior for missing module_utils (eg from a newer version of ansible-core), where previously, the module payload builder would always fail when unable to locate a module_util (regardless of any runtime behavior the module may implement).
* sanity test fixes
ci_complete
* finish migrating ssh plugin to config system
fixes#72739fixes#57220
* fix connection detection in reset
* correct options for connection meta reset
Co-authored-by: David Shrewsbury <Shrews@users.noreply.github.com>