You can feed the command the long key, but it truncates it to add the
key. This causes issues due to the short-key collision with the
puppetlabs key. So, test with a different key on debian 6.
A lot of the tests were testing things that really should be tested via
unit tests, so those were deleted and unit tests will be revamped to
make sure they are covering everything they need to be covering.
Conflicts:
spec/acceptance/unattended_upgrade_spec.rb
New fact was added that matched a regex breaking the always_apt_update
tests. Updated the tests to check for the apt_update exec, not just the
string apt_update.
Ubuntu 14.04 ships with apt 0.9.15, has a ``fancy progress bar'', which
is a green bar that shows at the bottom of the terminal showing progress
throughout install.
This patch enables the progress bar, which is usually done by running
echo 'Dpkg::Progress-Fancy "1";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/99progressbar
This commit changes the proxy file name to be more consistent with other files
in `apt.conf.d`. The old file (`apt.conf.d/proxy`) is removed.
Tests has been updated.
The module used to always pin backports to a priority of 200. This
default is still retained but is now configurable.
Additionally the default is now an Integer, not a 'quoted Integer' and
the tests have been updated to reflect this. This matters for future
parser as it will now kick people if they pass in a stringified integer
as priority.
We already had a feature to manage and purge entries in preferences.d
but not the preferences file in /etc/apt. This commit adds that
capability.
Fixes#199
Lucid (10.04) has `add-apt-repository` but it doesn't accept any
options. The define defaulted to `-y` but this changes that on lucid.
This was made 7 months ago, so apparently no one cares about 10.04 any
more.
This commits introduces:
* The apt_key type;
* The apt_key provider;
* Unit tests for the type;
* Beaker/acceptance tests for the type/provider.
The idea behind apt_key is that apt::key will simply become a wrapper
that uses apt_key. Being a native type/provider apt_key is a lot less
error prone than the current exec behaviour of apt::key and adds a few
nice bonuses like inventory capabilities for mcollective users.