Checks if update-rc.d (Ubuntu) or chkconfig (RHEL) should be used.
Adds basic bin path search for those binaries
Adds 'enable' and 'disable' options for 'enable' command since it's the
arguments that update-rc.d uses (this might be somewhat confusing to
have a command line with 'enable=enable', but probably mkes sense for
Ubuntu users).
Allows use of mixed case for 'list' and 'state' commands.
This removes the 'context' option and replaces it with checks for
'_default' value for seuser, serole, setype, or (maybe) selevel.
If '_default' is provided *and* there is a default context for the given
file, this will set the file context to the available default.
Creates system accounts/groups; corresponds to the '-r' option for {user,group}add.
The option is only honored when users/groups are added, not when modified.
When running the service module via sudo, `$PATH` didn't contain `/sbin`,
so the service binary couldn't be found. This just runs `/sbin/service`
directly. Output is spewed to stderr on error.
Added `list=status` to include the output of `service <cmd> status`.
This adds selinux_mls_enabled() and selinux_enabled() to detect a)
whether selinux is MLS aware (ie supports selevel) and b) whether
selinux is enabled. If selinux is not enabled, all selinux operations
are punted on -- same as if python's selinux module were not available.
In set_context_if_different(), I now iterate over the current context
instead of the context argument. Even if the system supports MLS, it
may not return the selevel from selinux.lgetfilecon(). Lastly, this
drops selinux_has_selevel() in lieu of the current approach.
Older versions of selinux, such as that deployed on rhel5, only return a
context of user:role:type instead of user:role:type:level. This detects
whether the tuple has three elements (old-style) or four. If the
old-style, it keeps the secontext list at three elements.
The value is passed to apt-get's "-t" option. Useful for installing backports, e.g.:
ansible webservers -m apt -a "pkg=nginx state=latest default-release=squeeze-backports"
This adjusts behavior of file module such that removal of se* option
does not revert the file's selinux context to the default. In order to
go back to the default context according to the policy, you can use the
context=default option.