* Add RHEV host detection support
This adds RHEV host detection support based on a running 'vdsm' process and the existence of _/rhev/_ (which are both part of the vdsm RPM package in a RHEV installation). Without this change, a RHEV host would be reported as a kvm host (which is also true, but often not specific enough).
This closes#17058
* Only scan the process list when we determined /rhev/ exists
Small performance improvement, so we do not have to scan the process list if /rhev/ does not exist.
* fixed detection of ansible_virtualization_(role|path) facts for VM's running in
OpenStack Instances
* NOTE: this will break detection of ansible_virtualization_(role|path) facts
if you are using Openstack Instaces with nested virtualization
* fixed detection of ansible_virtualization_(role|path) facts for VM's running in
OpenStack Instances
Fixes#15165
* NOTE: this will break detection of ansible_virtualization_(role|path) facts
if you are using Openstack Instaces with nested virtualization
for solaris, add get_dmi_facts to get product_name fact, and update memtotal_mb to integer for consistency.
for hp-ux, user machinfo to get product_serial fact
* Refactor OpenBSD sysctl based detection in a separate class
The idea is later to reuse this code for NetBSD and FreeBSD, who
use a different sysctl key for vendor and product.
* Add detection of virtualisation on NetBSD
* Add support to detect running as a Xen guest
tested on NetBSD 7 on Rackspace.
* Add support for OpenBSD dmi fact gathering
* Refactor get_sysctl in the Hardware class
Due to difference between Darwin/NetBSD and OpenBSD, we
have to change the regexp used split the key/value
* Add support for dmi facts on NetBSD
Text strings and byte strings both have a translate method but the byte
string version is harder to use. It requires a mapping of all 256 bytes
to a translation value. Text strings only require a mapping from the
characters that are changing to the new string. Switching to text
strings on both py2 and py3 allows us to state what we're getting rid of
simply without having to rely on the maketrans() helper function.
The traceback is the following:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_module_setup.py\", line 134, in <module>
main()
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_module_setup.py\", line 126, in main
data = get_all_facts(module)
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 3641, in get_all_facts
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 3584, in ansible_facts
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 1600, in populate
File \"/tmp/ansible_8s0bj604/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 1649, in get_memory_facts
TypeError: translate() takes exactly one argument (2 given)
And the swapctl output is this:
# /sbin/swapctl -sk
total: 83090 1K-blocks allocated, 0 used, 83090 available
The only use of the code is to remove prefix in case they are present, so just
replacing them with empty space is sufficient.
smbios -i 256 return:
# smbios -i 256
ID SIZE TYPE
256 77 SMB_TYPE_SYSTEM (system information)
Manufacturer: Red Hat
Product: KVM
Version: RHEL 6.4.0 PC
UUID: 8a3b8b1a-ba59-1a4b-5f85-ab53a5a885a9
Wake-Up Event: 0x6 (power switch)
SKU Number:
Family: Red Hat Enterprise Linux
So to get the type of the python interpreter, we need to look at
sys.implementation.name which do not return 'cpython', instead of 'CPython',
but that's upstream breakage, so not much we can do.
While testing on netbsd 6.0, ansible setup failed with:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_module_setup.py\", line 134, in <module>
main()
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_module_setup.py\", line 126, in main
data = get_all_facts(module)
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 3609, in get_all_facts
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 3552, in ansible_facts
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 2500, in populate
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 2584, in get_interfaces_info
File \"/tmp/ansible_m2ieeq/ansible_modlib.zip/ansible/module_utils/facts.py\", line 2644, in parse_inet_line
socket.error: illegal IP address string passed to inet_aton
The cause is having aliases on lo like this:
lo0: flags=8049<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 33184
inet 127.0.0.1 netmask 0xff000000
inet alias 127.1.1.1 netmask 0xff000000
So if the address is 'alias', we have to skip it.
As neon is derived from Ubuntu, ansible_os_family should have the value
"Debian" instead of "Neon". Add a test case for KDE neon and set
os_family correctly for it.
Since ifconfig/ip are not present on the system, and there is no /proc
to be parsed, the only way to get information is by looking at the
argument of the pfinet translator, the process in charge of network.
In turn, this is done with fsysopts on the appropriate path, who return
something like this:
# fsysopts -L /servers/socket/inet
/hurd/pfinet --interface=/dev/eth0 --address=192.168.122.130
--netmask=255.255.255.0 --gateway=192.168.122.1 --address6=fe80::5254:12:ced/10
--address6=fe80::5054:ff:fe12:ced/10 --gateway6=::
So to get the IP addresses, one has to parse that string and fill the appropriate
structure.
More information on the system and on limitation can be found on
- https://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/hurd/translator/pfinet.html
- https://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/hurd/translator/pfinet/implementation.html
- https://www.debian.org/ports/hurd/hurd-install
* Fallback to /proc/mounts if /etc/mtab do not exist
On modern system, the file is just a compatibility symlink, and
some system (like GNU Hurd) do not have it, but provides /proc/mounts
* Add support for uptime, memory and mount facts on GNU Hurd
On openSUSE Tumbleweed, lsb-release -a currently reports
the distributor ID as "openSUSE Tumbleweed". On openSUSE
Leap, the distributor ID is "SUSE LINUX".
Add them to the OS_FAMILY dict as Suse family systems.
Also add an entry to TESTSETS in test_distribution_version.py
for openSUSE Tumbleweed.
foo.split('\n') is picky about the type of 'foo'.
if 'foo' is a bytes type, then foo.split('\n')
will fail on py3 with:
TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'
The foo.split('\n') change isn't strictly required
when run_command returns native str types, but it
is more idiomatic and conceptually also supports other
line endings.
* Specify run_command decode error style as arg
Instead of getting the stdout/stderr text from
run_command, and then decoding to utf-8 with a
particular error scheme, use the 'errors' arg
to run_command so it does that itself.
* Use 'surrogate_or_replace' instead of 'replace'
For the text decoding error scheme in run_command calls.
* Let the local_facts run_command use default errors
* fix typo
* By default, ansible_distribution is not set on DragonFly systems,
preventing some distribution-specific tests from being written
* This commit fixes the issue by returning the quite logical value
of "DragonFly" when appropriate
Change linux fact gathering to correctly gather ansible_processor_count
and ansible_processor_vcpus on systems without vendor_id/model_name in
/proc/cpuinfo (for ex, ppc64/POWER)
The statvfs(3) manpage on Linux states that `f_blocks` is the "size of fs in `f_frsize` units". The manpages on Solaris and AIX state something similar.
With ext4 on Linux, I suspect that `f_bsize` and `f_frsize` are always identical, masking this error. On Solaris, the sizes differ for each of ufs, vxfs and zfs causing the `size_available` and `size_total` facts to be set incorrectly on this OS.
I can't figure out any reason that we'd need to use long explicitly here
as python implicitly moves from a C long int to python Long
automatically under the covers. My best guess is that it was originally
used so that the facts module would work on python-2.2 where the user
had to convert a number from int to long manually but python-2.4 is our
current baseline.
long isn't present on Python3 so now is a good time to remove this
cruft. (We had a workaround for Python3; this commit also removes the
workaround.)
* Port set_*_if_different functions to python3
* Add surrogate_or_strict and surrogate_or_replace error handlers for
to_text, to_bytes, to_native
* Set default error handler to surrogate_or_replace
* Make use of the new error handlers in the already ported code
* Move the unittests for module_utils._text as they aren't in basic.py
* Cleanup around SEQUENCETYPE. On python2.6+ SEQUENCETYPE includes
strings so make sure code omits those explicitly if necessary
* Allow arg_spec aliases to be other sequence types
* Add OpenBSD virtualization facts.
Patch written by @jasperla.
Tested by various people on:
- virtualbox
- vmware esx(i) + fusion
- kvm (smartos + plain linux + a random cloud provider)
This patch is already present in the OpenBSD port of ansible.
* Rework diff to get rid of extra returns.
Requested by @bcoca.
While here, use four-space indentations of all code blocks.
* Set facts even if no match is found.
Discussed with @bcoca.
* Find sysctl via get_bin_path().
Requested by @bcoca.
* Fail if we do not find a sysctl binary.
* Do not fail if a sysctl binary is not found.
Just set empty fact values instead.
Requested by @bcoca.
Make some python3 fixes to make the unittests pass:
* galaxy imports
* dictionary iteration in role requirements
* swap_stdout helper for unittests
* Normalize to text string in a facts.py function