Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The `disable_update` parameter has been removed. The main apt class
defaults to *not* run an `apt-get update` on every run anyway so
this parameter seems useless.
You can include the `apt::update` class if you want it to be
run every time.
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Signed-off-by: Gabriel Filion <lelutin@gmail.com>
+ more linting by intrigeri.
Conflicts:
manifests/apticron.pp
manifests/cron/dist_upgrade.pp
manifests/cron/download.pp
manifests/dist_upgrade/initiator.pp
manifests/init.pp
manifests/listchanges.pp
manifests/preferences.pp
manifests/preseeded_package.pp
manifests/proxy_client.pp
manifests/unattended_upgrades.pp
manifests/update.pp
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-y instead of --force-yes. this way we are acting in the same way as the dist_upgrade class
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things that are unrelated to the task at hand, such as deinstalling automatically installed packages, which can be undesirable behavior
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This define was previously broken unless dctrl-tools and apt-show-versions were
installed.
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Move this Exec to a dedicated class that is not included by default i.e. we
default not to "apt-get update" on every Puppet run.
We now make use of this class in the apt::upgrade_package define to make sure
APT indexes are up-to-date before attempting package upgrades.
One may now use the following to ensure current packages are installed by
Package resources:
include apt::update
Package { require => Exec[apt_updated] }
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... because Exec[update_apt] is currently never run since we set it refreshonly.
Better solutions are being thought of, but in the meantime the least we can do
is somehow repair apt::upgrade_package.
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