Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
* | Replace multi-role checks with action plugin | Rodolfo Carvalho | 2017-02-10 | 2 | -34/+0 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This approach should make it easier to add new checks without having to write lots of YAML and doing things against Ansible (e.g. ignore_errors). A single action plugin determines what checks to run per each host, including arguments to the check. A check is implemented as a class with a run method, with the same signature as an action plugin and module, and is normally backed by a regular Ansible module. Each check is implemented as a separate Python file. This allows whoever adds a new check to focus solely in a single Python module, and potentially an Ansible module within library/ too. All checks are automatically loaded, and only active checks that are requested by the playbook get executed. | ||||
* | Move Python modules into role | Rodolfo Carvalho | 2017-01-13 | 2 | -1/+3 |
| | | | | Allow reuse via role dependency. | ||||
* | Reduce code duplication using variable | Rodolfo Carvalho | 2017-01-12 | 1 | -22/+7 |
| | | | | | We can use openshift_facts's service_type to determine the package names. | ||||
* | Replace custom variables with openshift_facts | Rodolfo Carvalho | 2017-01-12 | 1 | -2/+1 |
| | | | | | | | Note: on a simple example run of ansible-playbook against a single docker-based host, I saw the execution time jump from 7s to 17s. That's unfortunate, but it is probably better to reuse openshift_facts, than to come up with new variables. | ||||
* | Refactor preflight check into roles | Rodolfo Carvalho | 2017-01-12 | 2 | -0/+48 |