A few of these fixes are absolutely horrendous but we have no choice as
we need to stay current- and future-parser compatible for now.
Once we can go Puppet 4 only we can use the `$facts` hash lookup instead
which will return undef/nil for things that aren't set instead of them
not being defined at all.
This conversion is done by Transpec 3.0.8 with the following command:
transpec spec/classes spec/defines spec/unit
* 87 conversions
from: it { should ... }
to: it { is_expected.to ... }
* 14 conversions
from: obj.should
to: expect(obj).to
* 7 conversions
from: == expected
to: eq(expected)
* 1 conversion
from: it { should_not ... }
to: it { is_expected.not_to ... }
For more details: https://github.com/yujinakayama/transpec#supported-conversions
As some places dont have port 11371 open, they are required to use URL as
key_server instead of domain name therefore adding the capability to use URL or
domain name as key_server parameter
Introducing a totally rewritten and tested apt::key. This commit also
patches the spec's of apt::source because it was passing in data that
is no longer allowed by the new validation rules in apt::key.
It does its best to not touch any other specs and where we touch them
only minimally to ensure that we're not introducing breaking changes.
Previously lowercase keys would be installed every
puppet run because apt-key list returns an uppercase
key. This commit makes the comparison case insensitive.
Previously, apt::key used a noop exec hack to do exactly what anchors were
intended to be used for. This commit removes the exec hack and achieves the
same end using Anchor resources from the puppetlabs/stdlib module.
Adding this defined type allows puppet to add keys to the apt keystore without
needing to add a corresponding source; it also adds the "key_source" parameter
for wget'ing keys from arbitrary URLs, and allows for keys to be explicity
removed.
apt::key allows a key to be ensured present multiple times to account for
apt::source resources that all reference the same key. However, this means
that it is possible for a given key to be defined multiple times with
differing source parameters. e.g.
apt::key { "Add key: 4BD6EC30 from Apt::Source bunny":
key => "4BD6EC30",
key_server => "pgp.mit.edu",
}
apt::key { "Add key: 4BD6EC30 from Apt::Source rabbit":
key => "4BD6EC30",
key_server => "keyserver.ubuntu.com",
}
The defined type will accept both definitions and will create multiple exec
resources. This was deemed preferable to the alternative (creating only one
exec resource) in that one broken definition won't hose an entire catalog. If
one definition fails to install the key because of a bad "key_server", the
next apt::key that uses the key will get it done.