* Remove datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp and datetime.datetime.uctnow
from controller code since they are deprecated in Python 3.12.
* Update target side code to use new utcfromtimestamp and utcnow utils in ansible.module_utils.compat.datetime that return aware datetime objects on Python 2.7 and 3.
Co-authored-by: Matt Clay <matt@mystile.com>
After changes:
```
"ansible_locally_reachable_ips": {
"ipv4": [
"127.0.0.0/8",
"127.0.0.1",
"192.168.0.1",
"192.168.1.0/24"
],
"ipv6": [
"::1",
"fe80::2eea:7fff:feca:fe68",
...
]
},
```
192.168.1.0/24 is a local prefix, where any IP address inside this range
is reachable locally (or outside this host if this prefix is announced via
EGP/IGP).
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@hostinger.com>
* Add OSMC to Debian OS_FAMILY_MAP
- os_family fact of the Debian-based OSMC distribution was not detected correctly
* tweak changelog
Co-authored-by: Matt Davis <6775756+nitzmahone@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix distro fact handling for Flatcar
The existence of the file /etc/flatcar/update.conf depends on
bootstrap configuration typically provided by the user. For that
reason this file is unsuitable for determining distro facts for
Flatcar Container Linux.
The distribution_release fact is meaningless in the case of Flatcar
since Flatcar doesn't have named releases. The distribution_version
fact, however, IS meaningful and should contain a number such as
"3139.2.0".
- Use /etc/os-release instead of /etc/flatcar/update.conf.
- Drop the distribution_release fact.
- Set the distribution_version fact.
- Update distro test fixture for Flatcar
- Generate the fixture using gen_distribution_version_testcase.py.
- Override result.distribution and result.os_family manually as the
generator script gives wrong values.
- Use a recent Flatcar version.
Signed-off-by: Johanan Liebermann <jliebermann@microsoft.com>
- `processor_count` was erroneously set to the number of cores
- `processor_cores` was erroneously set to the number of threads per core
- `processor_vcpus` and `processor_threads_per_core` were not set
- `processor` was a string, while it's supposed to be a list
Before:
```
"ansible_processor": "PowerPC_POWER7",
"ansible_processor_cores": 4,
"ansible_processor_count": 12,
```
After:
```
"ansible_processor": [
"PowerPC_POWER7"
],
"ansible_processor_cores": 12,
"ansible_processor_count": 1,
"ansible_processor_threads_per_core": 4,
"ansible_processor_vcpus": 48,
```
Also add a unit test.
Co-authored-by: Baptiste Jonglez <git@bitsofnetworks.org>
* minor service_mgr facts fixes
handle case in which ps command fails or returns empty
updated tests since it now does keep trying to detect after ps fails
* correctly parse device from string
* check for command presence before running them
* check for command presence and return code for solaris and aix as well
* add changelog
Homebrew's default install location for macOS on ARM is /opt/homebrew.
Source: https://docs.brew.sh/FAQ
On a Mac M1 (Apple Silicon), homebrew will be installed at
/opt/homebrew/bin/brew.
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:
- Remove check that states that only Fedora can be an OSTree
distribution.
- This allows us to correctly return "atomic_container" as the pkg_mgr
fact for RHEL for Edge, Fedora/RHEL/CentOS Atomic Host, etc.
Test Plan:
- Created local RHEL for Edge image and tested against it.
- Tested against regular RHEL 8 and still got `dnf` as expected.
- Tested against RHEL 7 Atomic Host and got `atomic_container` now.
- New unit tests.
Tickets:
- Fixes#73084
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
The `UserFactCollector` queries the user login name via
`getpass.getuser()` and looks up the corresponding entry
in the password database.
The login name may differ from the actual user name,
eg. if the `LOGNAME` env variable is set. The lookup
fails in this case. Added a fallback in this case that
tries to get the entry via the user ID.
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>
Change:
- Use `sysctl -n` for openbsd uptime information
- Allow `get_sysctl()` to account for multi-line sysctl settings
- Add unit tests for `get_sysctl()`
Test Plan:
- New unit tests
Tickets:
- Fixes#71968
- Refs #72025
- Refs #72067
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <rick@elrod.me>
Co-authored-by: Brian Coca <brian.coca+git@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian Coca <bcoca@ansible.com>
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.
The iso8601_micro and iso8601 facts incorrectly called now.utcnow(), resulting
in a new timestamp at the time it was called, not a conversion of the previously
stored timestamp.
Correct this by capturing the UTC timestamp once then calculating the local
time using the UTC offset of the current system.
* Use time.time() for getting the current time
* Convert from that stored epoch timestamp to local and UTC times
* Used existing timestamp for epoch time
* Add unit tests that validate the formate of the return value rather than an exact value since mocking time and timezone is non-trivial
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>>