From the Python docs on the exec statement:
> Remember that at module level, globals and locals are the same dictionary.
> If two separate objects are given as globals and locals, the code will be
> executed as if it were embedded in a class definition.
We were providing a specific object for locals and in the specific case
reported in #21796 this caused a very strange name error when used in a
specific way. By removing the explicit locals dictionary and just having the
globals dictionary be shared fixes the issue, and we weren't using the
specific locals anyway.
Fixes#21707
The issue is basically that the master has seen N minions-- and not all N are currently connected. The publish job returns to the salt-api that N minions got the job-- and it dutifilly waits for all the returns. With this we use the same ping timeout that the CLI does while waiting for returns. So once all minions are no longer running the job we will return.
Fixes#21707
The issue is basically that the master has seen N minions-- and not all N are currently connected. The publish job returns to the salt-api that N minions got the job-- and it dutifilly waits for all the returns. With this we use the same ping timeout that the CLI does while waiting for returns. So once all minions are no longer running the job we will return.
The change in runner output behavior caused the output of test_envs to
change, causing some changes to need to be made in da163471 to get them
to pass. Now that runner output is fixed, the test was returning the
output it should have been in the first place. This commit changes that
test back so that it now expects a list as output.
Additionally, I've taken the opportunity to add additional test calls to
test the "backend" argument for those functions which now have it.
- present func: should not require key/fingerprint.
In normal mode, key AND fingerprint can be omitted but
test mode requires them, so fix the test mode to behave same
way.
- absent function: return correct ret when change suppose to be made.
- refactor a bit.