The 2.x series added a changed behavior for backport pinning to pin to
origin instead of release. Pinning to release is the correct behavior
for backports though.
NOTE: While out-of-the box support is disabled, it is still possible to
get the same configurations, it will just require explicitly setting the
necessary codename-munging.
This should only affect `apt::ppa`
This makes its behaviour similar to the `update`, `proxy` and `purge`
hashes on the main classes bringing its API more in line with the rest
of the module.
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 `$facts` hash lookup instead
which will return undef/nil for things that aren't set instead of them
not being defined at all.
* Allow any configuration of apt to be done through data bindings by
passing in hashes representing the resources.
* Switch apt::ppa to use `distid` as set in `apt::params. This makes
`apt::ppa` also work for LinuxMint.
* Instead of having 4 options controlling purging we now have a single
hash with four possible keys.
* Include `apt::update` only _after_ we've assembled the `$_update`
hash.
* Instead of having 4 options controlling purging we now have a single
hash with four possible keys.
* We purge everything by default.
* `/etc/apt/preferences` is now always managed.
* Add missing `mode` to some of the files.
Re-introduce proxy support at the class level. Needing to configure a
proxy is such a common scenario that having it on the class is a
reasonable thing. It also affects `apt::ppa`.
Change `apt::ppa` to no longer have its own `proxy` parameter but use
the proxy as configured on the main `apt` class.
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
* Update `release` to default to `$::lsbdistcodename`
* Default `include_src` to false
* Validate more things!
* Stop redefining variables from `apt::params`
I'm not entirely clear on the history behind this feature, and this
feels sort of hack-y. If you could explain why this is needed that would
be awesome, or if it isn't just merge this :)
Add "oldstable" to the default update origins to ensure
the updates keep working after wheezy+1 gets released
See unattended-upgrades 0.79.5+wheezy1 and https://bugs.debian.org/711826
- fix spec tests to include osfamily fact
- add spec tests to verify current default behavior unimpacted.
- manage the update-stamp file in puppet via content rather than a served file.
- update custom fact to return -1 if the file doesn't exist
- add spec test for custom fact
- refactor to use a variable vs a collector/override
- document parameters a bit more verbosely
- remove empty unconstrained fact
- Add osfamily fact to backports tests to facilitate functional tests on non-debian hosts
Adds spec test
If lab-release is not installed, then the end user sees a confusing/ vague message
Error: Unsupported lsbdistid () at /modules/apt/manifests/params.pp:52
It is common for docker containers to not include this package by default
After fix, the user sees a friendlier message if lab-release is not installed
Error: Unable to determine lsbdistid, is lsb-release installed? at /modules/apt/manifests/params.pp:52
Quoting https://wiki.debian.org/LTS
Official security support for Debian GNU/Linux 6.0
(code name "Squeeze") has ended on 31 May 2014.
However long term support for the distribution
is going to be extended until February 2016,
i.e. five years after the initial release.
See https://wiki.debian.org/LTS for more details.