Small fix for issue #9275

This commit is contained in:
CaptTofu 2014-10-05 03:35:22 -07:00
parent 05644686de
commit 83457e147c

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@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ The directory "./library", alongside your top level playbooks, is also automatic
added as a search directory.
Should you develop an interesting Ansible module, consider sending a pull request to the
`moudule-extras project <http://github.com/ansible/ansible-module-extras>`_. There's also a core
`moudules-extras project <http://github.com/ansible/ansible-modules-extras>`_. There's also a core
repo for more established and widely used modules. "Extras" modules may be promoted to core periodically,
but there's no fundamental difference in the end - both ship with ansible, all in one package, regardless
of how you acquire ansible.
@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ modules. Keep in mind, though, that some modules in ansible's source tree are
so look at `service` or `yum`, and don't stare too close into things like `async_wrapper` or
you'll turn to stone. Nobody ever executes async_wrapper directly.
Ok, let's get going with an example. We'll use Python. For starters, save this as a file named `time`::
Ok, let's get going with an example. We'll use Python. For starters, save this as a file named `time.py`::
#!/usr/bin/python
@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ There's a useful test script in the source checkout for ansible::
Let's run the script you just wrote with that::
ansible/hacking/test-module -m ./time
ansible/hacking/test-module -m ./time.py
You should see output that looks something like this::
@ -444,7 +444,7 @@ If you are having trouble getting your module "found" by ansible, be sure it is
If you have a fork of one of the ansible module projects, do something like this::
ANSIBLE_LIBRARY=~/ansible-module-core:~/ansible-module-extras
ANSIBLE_LIBRARY=~/ansible-modules-core:~/ansible-modules-extras
And this will make the items in your fork be loaded ahead of what ships with Ansible. Just be sure
to make sure you're not reporting bugs on versions from your fork!