antsibull-docs
ansible-lint
antsibull-docs | ansible-lint | |
---|---|---|
5 | 10 | |
19 | 2,713 | |
- | - | |
8.9 | 9.4 | |
4 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
antsibull-docs
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The Bullhorn #124 (Ansible Newsletter)
antsibull-docs 2.6.0 has been released with a fix for EXAMPLES parsing and error message improvements.
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The Bullhorn #92 (Ansible Newsletter)
More than two years ago the Ansible Docs Working Group started discussing the use of semantic markup for Ansible plugin/module documentation. This resulted in a specification that has been implemented as proofs of concept both for ansible-doc and the validate-modules sanity test, as well as for antsibull-docs. From the docs perspective this will improve plugin, module, and now also role documentation a lot, and in particular separate markup from content. (Right now you have to use C(...) and I(...) for values and option names, which stand for 'code-style' and 'italics'.)
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The Bullhorn #84 (Ansible Newsletter)
antsibull-core 2.0.0a1 has been released. This major release drops support for Python 3.6, 3.7, and 3.8 and deprecates some compatability code (full changelog). It also includes a new feature needed by antsibull-build. antsibull-core houses shared code used by antsibull-build and antsibull-docs. If you use either of these tools, please help us test this new release. It can be installed with pip install -U antsibull-core==2.0.0a1. Note that you'll need the latest version of antsibull and antsibull-docs to use antsibull-core 2.0.0a1.
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The Bullhorn #70 (Ansible Newsletter)
antsibull-docs 1.3.0 (changelog) has been released with several new features for the docs build! The most important changes are that now booleans are rendered as true and false instead of yes and no (https://github.com/ansible-community/community-topics/issues/116), and that a proper parser is used for Ansible markup, which properly escapes for example backticks instead of simply inserting them into the RST files (https://github.com/ansible-community/antsibull-docs/issues/21).
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The Bullhorn #54 (Ansible Newsletter)
If you are using the antsibull-docs or antsibull-lint collection-docs CLI command from the antsibull package, consider switching to using the new antsibull-docs 1.0.0 package instead! It is more stable and comes with less potential baggage to carry around.
ansible-lint
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The Bullhorn #99 (Ansible Newsletter)
Ansible-lint version 6.14.6 is here, started using ruff linter along with 10+ bugfixes in this release.
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The Bullhorn #95 (Ansible Newsletter)
Ansible-Devtools team made a new release of Ansible-Lint version 6.14.2 with couple of exciting bugfixes.
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The Bullhorn #94 (Ansible Newsletter)
The Devtools team has released ansible-lint version 6.14.0, which includes 23 bugfixes and 3 minor changes. Please refer to the changelog here for more information.
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The Bullhorn #93 (Ansible Newsletter)
ansible-lint 6.14 was released, dropping support for py38 and including over 25 changes and bugfixes.
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The Bullhorn #92 (Ansible Newsletter)
Ansible-lint 6.13 introduces a new feature that allows users to utilize a .ansible-lint-ignore file. This file contains skip-rules that are loaded from the ignore file which is adjacent to the config file. Additionally, users can take advantage of the --generate-ignore argument to dump any current violations into an ignore file.
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Open Source Collection of Ansible Good and Bad Practices
Cool, but ansible-lint and the official RedHat docs are a much better way to ensure you're using the official best practices. No offense, but stuff two random guys on Reddit threw together isn't a great resource for best practices.
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ansible-lint 6.8.0b1 is out
Check https://github.com/ansible/ansible-lint/discussions/2534 for details and comment there if you detect any regressions.
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Correct use of block: and when: (key-order)
There is more context here: https://github.com/ansible/ansible-lint/issues/578
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The Bullhorn #69 (Ansible Newsletter)
ansible-lint 6.4.0 was released with lots of bugfixes and a new feature called "profiles", one that allow you to easily pick which set of rules you want to follow. https://github.com/ansible/ansible-lint/discussions/2254
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What is your preferred software to write playbooks?
I use vanilla vim or nvim with checks from ansible-lint.
What are some alternatives?
awesome-ansible - Awesome Ansible List
ansible-vim - A vim plugin for syntax highlighting Ansible's common filetypes
skydive - Ansible Collection for Skydive network / protocols analyzer
ansible-language-server - 🚧 Ansible Language Server codebase is now included in vscode-ansible repository
community.network - Ansible Community Network Collection
ansible.scm - An ansible collection for prescriptive retrieval and publish using git
cisco.ios - Ansible Network Collection for Cisco IOS
community.zabbix - Zabbix Ansible modules
Ansible - Ansible is a radically simple IT automation platform that makes your applications and systems easier to deploy and maintain. Automate everything from code deployment to network configuration to cloud management, in a language that approaches plain English, using SSH, with no agents to install on remote systems. https://docs.ansible.com.
coc-ansible - ansible-language-server extension for coc.nvim
community.sap_libs - Automation for SAP - Collection of Ansible Modules for SAP for low-level activities which are highly reusable
jinja-docsite - A docsite for the Ansible community