Previously, we set the LANG (and LC_CTYPE) environment variables
directly in the module code and applied them with os.environ().
Instead, we are now pre-pending those variables to the environment
string used to execute the command which allows the user to
override the localization values by setting the environment values
directly (even on a per-task basis):
- subversion: repo=file:///path/to/repos/svn_über dest=/tmp/svntest
environment:
LANG: "C"
LC_CTYPE: "en_US.UTF-8"
So if a user wishes to default their LANG back to C, they can still
avoid unicode issues by doing the above.
Fixes#7060
If someone add ssh_args = " " to his .ansible.cfg, it will result into
strange failure later :
<server.example.org> ESTABLISH CONNECTION FOR USER: misc
<server.example.org> REMOTE_MODULE ping
<server.example.org> EXEC ['ssh', '-C', '-tt', '-q', ' ', '-o', 'KbdInteractiveAuthentication=no',
'-o', 'PreferredAuthentications=gssapi-with-mic,gssapi-keyex,hostbased,publickey', '-o', 'PasswordAuthentication=no',
'-o', 'ConnectTimeout=10', 'server.example.org', "/bin/sh -c 'mkdir -p /tmp/ansible-tmp-1397947711.21-5932460998838
&& chmod a+rx /tmp/ansible-tmp-1397947711.21-5932460998838 && echo /tmp/ansible-tmp-1397947711.21-5932460998838'"]
server.example.org | FAILED => SSH encountered an unknown error during the connection. We recommend you re-run the
command using -vvvv, which will enable SSH debugging output to help diagnose the issue
The root cause is the empty string between -q and -o, who kinda break mkdir.
If a delegated host is not found in the inventory specified
private_key_file for primary host was not used.
This allows running playbooks without having to define any inventory at
all and to use the same ssh private key for both primary host and
delegated one.
Enable the use of executable commands that use command line options with
the localhost command runner. These commands require parsing out the
base executable from the command string to pass to subprocess.
Any other module is able to detect a dark host, but raw was treating 255
as a return code from the module execution, rather from the connection
attempt. This change allows 255 to be treated as a connection failure
when using the raw module.
The jid will now also contain the PID of the async_wrapper process,
and can each unique jid from each host is tracked rather than just
relying on one global jid per task.
Fixes#5582
* Added capability to support multiple keys, so clients from different
machines can connect to a single daemon instance
* Any activity on the daemon will cause the timeout to extend, so that the
daemon must be idle for the full number of minutes before it will auto-
shutdown
* Various other small fixes to remove some redundancy
Fixes#5171
Add support for checking host against global known host files.
The effect of this is that before this fix if files are spread across the known_hosts file but not in the ~/known_hosts file the hosts will execute sequentially. This PR augments the functionality so that all of the knowns hosts will execute in parallel.
##### Issue Type:
Bugfix Pull Request
##### Ansible Version:
ansible 1.4.3
##### Environment:
N/A
##### Summary:
We are using a wrapper python script to run ansible-playbook. We use subprocess to execute and print the stdout as and when its written. Problem is when we use pause it doesn't display the prompt string as raw_input does not flush stdout before reading from stdin.
It looks like a dirty fix to add "\n" to the prompt string but i don't see any other way to over come this. If anyone else have a better fix please do propose/suggest.
##### Steps To Reproduce:
```yaml
#File: test_play.yml
- name: Test
hosts: $nodes
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- name: Waiting for User
local_action: pause prompt="Do you want to continue (yes/no)? "
```
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python
#File: test.py
import shlex, subprocess
def run_process(process):
process = process.encode("utf-8")
command = shlex.split(process)
p = subprocess.Popen(command, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
for line in iter(p.stdout.readline, b''):
print line,
cmd = "/usr/bin/python -u /usr/bin/ansible-playbook -i hosts.txt test_play.yml -e 'nodes=local'"
run_process(cmd)
```
```
shell $ python test.py
```
##### Expected Results:
```
PLAY [Test] *******************************************************************
TASK: [Waiting for User] ******************************************************
[localhost]
Do you want to continue (yes/no)? :
```
##### Actual Results:
```
PLAY [Test] *******************************************************************
TASK: [Waiting for User] ******************************************************
[localhost]
```