Ansible can gather distribution facts for older Amazon Linux
with /etc/os-release data.
Fixes: #73946
Signed-off-by: Abhijeet Kasurde <akasurde@redhat.com>
Change:
- On CentOS Stream, make distribution_release be "Stream"
- On CentOS Core, it continues to be "Core"
- Implement custom distribution file parser for CentOS, so we can look
for "CentOS Linux" and "CentOS Stream"
- Two new fixtures introduced (CentOS Linux 8.1 and CentOS Stream 8)
- Removed two dicts from `Distribution` class that were seemingly not
used anywhere.
Test Plan:
- ci_complete
- New test fixtures
Tickets:
- Fixes#73027
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
Change:
- The FreeBSD release can contain -RC or -PRERELEASE in addition to
-RELEASE, -STABLE, or -CURRENT.
Test Plan:
- Added new fixed from an RC version of TrueNAS which uses a -PRERELEASE
version of FreeBSD.
Tickets:
- Fixes#72331
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
b6b238a fixed the SLES4SAP detection, which was at this time ok.
Sadly Suse changed with SLES 15 the /etc/os-release file, so the above
change will no longer work.
This commit updates the SLES4SAP detection regarding
https://www.suse.com/support/kb/doc/?id=000019341.
The symlink realpath is matched with endswith, because in SLES 12+ the
link target is SLES_SAP.prod, but in SLES 11 the link target is
SUSE_SLES_SAP.prod.
A couple of years ago Slackware -current began using a plus (“+”) at the end of the distribution version string to indicate a future version work-in-progress.
Rearrange distribution_files unit tests to easily support more tests
- add conftest with common fixtures
- use parametrize for testing multiple scenarios
* Add changelog
* Add unit tests for Slackware distribution parsing
* Use correct fixtures for Slackware
Data comes from /etc/slackware-version
Co-authored-by: Sam Doran <sdoran@redhat.com>
Co-authored-by: <Eduard Rozenberg <eduardr@pobox.com>>
To avoid issues with Flatcar Container Linux being unable to be found,
detect Flatcar distro name especially for hostname, just like CoreOS
Container Linux was supported.
See also https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/69516
Fixes a bug where parse_distribution_file_ClearLinux() was called on CoreOS (and probably many other distros) and it returned True since it successfully parses the distribution file. Since this file exists on many Linux distributions and they are a very similar format, add an additional check to make sure it is Clear Linux.
Change the order in which distribution files are processed so NA is last. This prevents a match on CoreOS hosts since they also have /etc/os-release and the called matching function for NA is very general and will match CoreOS.
* Add changelog
* Add unit tests
Only add tests for Clear Linux parsing since that was the cause of this issue.