It looks like the original intention was to italicize, but someone was used to another markup language. I have switched the wrapped tags so we're showing italics and not a broken link.
The --force-handlers command line argument was not correctly running
handlers on hosts which had tasks that later failed. This corrects that,
and also allows you to specify force_handlers in ansible.cfg or in a
play.
- become constants inherit existing sudo/su ones
- become command line options, marked sudo/su as deprecated and moved sudo/su passwords to runas group
- changed method signatures as privlege escalation is collapsed to become
- added tests for su and become, diabled su for lack of support in local.py
- updated playbook,play and task objects to become
- added become to runner
- added whoami test for become/sudo/su
- added home override dir for plugins
- removed useless method from ask pass
- forced become pass to always be string also uses to_bytes
- fixed fakerunner for tests
- corrected reference in synchronize action plugin
- added pfexec (needs testing)
- removed unused sudo/su in runner init
- removed deprecated info
- updated pe tests to allow to run under sudo and not need root
- normalized become options into a funciton to avoid duplication and inconsistencies
- pushed suppored list to connection classs property
- updated all connection plugins to latest 'become' pe
- includes fixes from feedback (including typos)
- added draft docs
- stub of become_exe, leaving for future v2 fixes
New users might think that "state=started" implies that the service is also started at boot-time, which isn't.
By adding it, this change makes a clear distinction between the service state, and whether it is enabled (at boot).
And makes the example more feature-complete as this is what most people would be doing anyway.