failed: [127.0.0.1] => {"failed": true, "parsed": false}
invalid output was: Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/tmp/ansible-1376083321.99-111209413777779/nova_compute", line 1176, in <module>
main()
File "/tmp/ansible-1376083321.99-111209413777779/nova_compute", line 239, in main
_get_server_state(module, nova)
File "/tmp/ansible-1376083321.99-111209413777779/nova_compute", line 198, in _get_server_state
private = [ x['addr'] for x in getattr(server, 'addresses').itervalues().next() if x['OS-EXT-IPS:type'] == 'fixed']
KeyError: 'OS-EXT-IPS:type'
This extension was added less than 6 month ago, and so cannot be used on a release
older than Grizzly ( like Folsom ).
Commit of the extension : https://review.openstack.org/#/c/21453/
See https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/ReleaseNotes/Grizzly#Key_New_Features_2
Remove the reference to the unused "termination_list" parameter
in the ec2 module. The instance_ids parameter is the one that contains
the list of instance ids to be terminated.
Boto blindly assumes the us-east-1 region if you don't hardcode a
region in it's config, so you could end up attempting to modify ELB's
in one region from a totally different region. If a region isn't
specified then default to the region that the module is being run
within rather than the default us-east-1 region since it's a pretty
safe assumption that you intend to work on the ELB's within your
current region.
Also throw an error if a specified ELB instance doesn't exist. The old
behavior would be to silently succeed with changed=false, so if you had
so much as a typo in the name of your ELB (or were in the wrong region
like my initial testing) you wouldn't get a clear indication that a
problem had occurred.
The timeout parameter of glance-image was not being parsed into a
numeric type, causing the following error when specifying timeout:
msg: Error in creating image: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'float' and 'str'