If guests have the following capabilities, automatic NFS client
installation will be done:
* nfs_client_installed - Checks if the NFS client is installed
* nfs_client_install - Install the NFS client
Support is already in for Debian, Ubuntu, RedHat, CentOS, and Fedora
This PR sets the active hostname back to the name specified in the Vagrantfile (fqdn) and updates the unit tests.
Setting it to the short name causes loads of problems while configuring the system. I've had issues with sudoers hostname matching, Weblogic certificate generation and a few others. Even if I changed all of the Chef recipes, the fqdn is set in /etc/sysconfig/network so the active hostname will switch to the fqdn after a reboot.
When `/etc/hosts` contained a FQDN with a trailing dot, the `\b` in the
sed expression would not match, since dot is not considered to be a word
character.
Fix this by regexp-escaping the hostname search, and matching the end of
the line on optional space followed by additional characters.
Also add some tests that extract the regexp used by sed and verify that
it does what we want. These will hopefully serve us in the future if we
ever need to test additional edge cases.
there's been a lot of churn around this code, so i figure it was worth
trying to clean it up.
- the methods were doing a lot, so make them into template methods with
one helper per step
- spread out /etc/hosts regexp into a couple of helper variables for
clarity
- remove handling for broken hostname implementations (like basing all
of the checks on name.split('.')[0]), since it seems reasonable to
remove code dedicated only to handling broken boxes
- DRY up the shared code between debian/ubuntu implementations, which
clarifies the differences as well
- add unit tests around the behavior; this will help us in the future
to separate flaws in our understanding from flaws in implementation
- includes a new DummyCommunicator in tests which should be useful in
supporting additional unit testing of this kind
- manually tested this on squeeze, wheezy, precise, quantal, raring,
and saucy successfully.
handles the issue in #2333
The default shell is "bash -l" which does not get installed by default
on FreeBSD. This change allows the plugin to override the default shell
and use a known installed shell (sh).