* WIP: wait_for_connection: Wait for system to be reachable
This action plugin allows to check when a system is back online and
usable by Ansible.
As an example, when doing a SysPrep and running Enable-WinRM.ps1, it
takes between 10 to 20 seconds between the WinRM TCP port to open, and
it actually being able to server Ansible requests. This time is variable
and depends on the boot process.
Current implementation is specific for Windows (WinRM) only, this will
be fixed shortly.
This fixes#19998
* Support other transport types
* Various improvements
- Fix reported typo
- Add transport_test support in accelerate plugin
- Ensure port is an integer
* Improve examples
* Small fixes
- Use correct ConfigureRemotingForAnsible.ps1 script name
- Only use win_ping when remote shell is known to be Powershell
- Add integration tests to CI framework
* clarify facts assignment for several corner cases
run_once/delegate_facts:
now delegate_facts > run_once, previously run_once always published facts to all hosts in play
include_vars/delegate_to:
now include_vars allows to delegate to a specific host
also fix task_vars exception in delegate_facts/loop as var was removed
fixes#15365
* removed unused loop_var
* Fix vyos signatures to match new versions
* Fix test cases referring to 'updates' instead of 'commands'
* I think this is an artifact of `connection: network_cli`?
* win_copy: Add force parameter and check-mode support
The rationale behind this is that if you're working with +3GB files,
creating the checksum takes a lot of time, which we can avoid by simply
testing if the file exists.
I also took the liberty to put the various parameters together. It
probably takes a (neglible) performance hit but makes the code a bit
easier to inspect/work with, as its closer to all other windows modules.
On a normal run, the action plugin does a local checksum of the source
and a remote checksum of the destination. And afterwards, the module
will do another remote checksum of the copied source, a remote checksum
of the original destination, and another remote checksum of the copied
destination.
On a very huge file (think 4GB) that means 5x reading the complete file
(if you have a large cache you may get away with it, otherwise you're
doomed !).
This patch will ensure with `force: no` that not checksums are being
performed.
* Moving presence check before remote checksum
* Adapted to wishes
* Even more performance improvements
Fix 'task name is not templated in retry callback'
Add a task_name property to TaskResult that knows to
check in TaskResult._task_fields.
Add integration test for v2_retry_runner callback
Fixes#18236
The requests python module is needed, however it is not a dependency of
the python-winrm package. The python-winrm package does require
python-requests_ntlm, which does not seem to pull python-requests.
So for the time being (until Red Hat fixes their package) give a more
informative error message.
trying to import from the wrong shared lib, this patch changes
network_common to connection. Also fixes a bug found in the nxos
action plugin to detect transport
fixes#21829
The nxos action handler did not map the nxapi value to the provider
argument properly. There as an additional fix in the nxos shared lib
to properly detect nxapi being set
added new base class for file based cache plugins as 99% of code was common
now also catches unexpected decoding exceptions
allows per module file modes and encoding
moved jsonfile code to base
This allows getting the Vault token from the `VAULT_TOKEN` env var or
from the file `$HOME/.vault-token`, as both of these are understood by
the Vault CLI and are a common place to put Vault tokens. This allows
avoiding hard-coding a Vault token into playbooks or having to include
lookups.
`HOME/.vault-token` is nice because a user can authenticate with the CLI
using `vault auth` and then the token will be stored in
`$HOME/.vault-token`. If we read this file, then we allow someone to do
`vault auth` "out of band" to set up Vault access.
* fixes error where eos would close the cli shell
* fixes network_cli connection plugin to check before calling open_shell()
* fixes json commands being sent over eapi
This patch adds some checks on the path that is accessed as a container,
making sure it looks like one. It implements the connection method and
add adaptations to the modern way of writing connections for Ansible.
It also rewords docs and vars to use the nspawn terminology instead of
chroot.
This commit adds a connection driver built on top of systemd-nspawn.
This is similar to the existing `chroot` driver, except that nspawn
offers a variety of additional services. For example, it takes care of
automatically mounting `/proc` and `/sys` inside the chroot environment,
which will make a variety of tools work correctly that would otherwise
fail.
You can take advantage of other system-nspawn features to perform more
complicated tasks. For example, on my x86_64 system I have a Raspberry
Pi disk image mounted on `/rpi`. I can't use `chroot` with this because
the binaries contained in the image are for the wrong architecture.
However, I can use the systemd-nspawn `--bind` option to automatically
insert the appropriate qemu-arm binary into the container using an
inventory file like this:
pi ansible_host=/rpi ansible_nspawn_extra_args='--bind /usr/bin/qemu-arm --bind /lib64'
See http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-nspawn.html
for more information about systemd-nspawn itself.
* removes unneeded supports_multiplexing var
* refactors terminal_prompts_re to terminal_stdout_re
* refactors terminal_errors_re to terminal_stderr_re
* updates network_cli unit test cases