Some states are complicated and multiple subparts,
or maybe cross-call into __states__ if they manage subresources.
In these cases, they will have multiple comments.
Make this more ergonomic by supporting a list of strings as the
value for ret['comment'] in state returns and documenting this.
By joining comments on newlines, it is possible to combine
single-line and multi-line comments cleanly, as opposed to e.g. commas.
The driving impetus for this is some of the boto modules.
An update to the boto_sqs module is included as an example.
Add a check that outgoing state return data has the right shape,
and add a testcase as well.
Fix the NPM state tests and the saltmod runner & wheel state functions
to comply with the prescribed format.
Moves the `get_colors` and `get_color_theme` out of `salt.utils.py`
and into a new file named `salt.utils.color.py`.
This PR moves the original functions, adds a deprecation warning to
the old function paths, and updates any references to the functions
in Salt code to the new location. This includes moving a test as well.
This fails on centos 6 because its node is too old to support the version of
hawk bumped here https://github.com/request/request/pull/2751, we can still
test the functionality. This will pull from github, and install a specific tag
version, and we still do the uninstall using the github path.
This should be more stable.
This moves the following functions from salt.utils to salt.utils.versions:
- warn_until
- kwargs_warn_until
- compare_versions (as salt.utils.versions.compare)
- version_cmp
This PR is part of what will be an ongoing effort to use explicit
unicode strings in Salt. Because Python 3 does not suport Python 2's raw
unicode string syntax (i.e. `ur'\d+'`), we must use
`salt.utils.locales.sdecode()` to ensure that the raw string is unicode.
However, because of how `salt/utils/__init__.py` has evolved into the
hulking monstrosity it is today, this means importing a large module in
places where it is not needed, which could negatively impact
performance. For this reason, this PR also breaks out some of the
functions from `salt/utils/__init__.py` into new/existing modules under
`salt/utils/`. The long term goal will be that the modules within this
directory do not depend on importing `salt.utils`.
A summary of the changes in this PR is as follows:
* Moves the following functions from `salt.utils` to new locations
(including a deprecation warning if invoked from `salt.utils`):
`to_bytes`, `to_str`, `to_unicode`, `str_to_num`, `is_quoted`,
`dequote`, `is_hex`, `is_bin_str`, `rand_string`,
`contains_whitespace`, `clean_kwargs`, `invalid_kwargs`, `which`,
`which_bin`, `path_join`, `shlex_split`, `rand_str`, `is_windows`,
`is_proxy`, `is_linux`, `is_darwin`, `is_sunos`, `is_smartos`,
`is_smartos_globalzone`, `is_smartos_zone`, `is_freebsd`, `is_netbsd`,
`is_openbsd`, `is_aix`
* Moves the functions already deprecated by @rallytime to the bottom of
`salt/utils/__init__.py` for better organization, so we can keep the
deprecated ones separate from the ones yet to be deprecated as we
continue to break up `salt.utils`
* Updates `salt/*.py` and all files under `salt/client/` to use explicit
unicode string literals.
* Gets rid of implicit imports of `salt.utils` (e.g. `from salt.utils
import foo` becomes `import salt.utils.foo as foo`).
* Renames the `test.rand_str` function to `test.random_hash` to more
accurately reflect what it does
* Modifies `salt.utils.stringutils.random()` (née `salt.utils.rand_string()`)
such that it returns a string matching the passed size. Previously
this function would get `size` bytes from `os.urandom()`,
base64-encode it, and return the result, which would in most cases not
be equal to the passed size.