In particular, do not rely on the $USER environment variable always existing.
tmux for example seems to clear it, causing lots of invalid messages:
"previous known host file not found"
This broke in commit 80fd22dc, but instead of reverting that commit, we now
fall back to expanding just ~ when $USER is not set.
su_user_var. My last PR was only half merged, and when the bug fix for
the su/su_pass typo was merged, the removed line in this commit was
mistakenly reintroduced.
As part of 94f3b9bfab the code was changed to support dynamically adding localhost to the inventory. This change introduced an crash when run via ansible-pull
```
Starting ansible-pull at 2014-01-20 23:09:57
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/tmp/ansible/bin/ansible", line 157, in <module>
(runner, results) = cli.run(options, args)
File "/tmp/ansible/bin/ansible", line 82, in run
hosts = inventory_manager.list_hosts(pattern)
File "/tmp/ansible/lib/ansible/inventory/__init__.py", line 372, in list_hosts
result = [ h.name for h in self.get_hosts(pattern) ]
File "/tmp/ansible/lib/ansible/inventory/__init__.py", line 136, in get_hosts
subset = self._get_hosts(self._subset)
File "/tmp/ansible/lib/ansible/inventory/__init__.py", line 177, in _get_hosts
that = self.__get_hosts(p)
File "/tmp/ansible/lib/ansible/inventory/__init__.py", line 198, in __get_hosts
hpat = self._hosts_in_unenumerated_pattern(name)
File "/tmp/ansible/lib/ansible/inventory/__init__.py", line 275, in _hosts_in_unenumerated_pattern
ungrouped.add_host(new_host)
AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'add_host'
```
The root cause is there is no group for the host to be added to. I fixed this case by creating the ungrouped group when it doesn't exist and then adding the host to the newly added group. This fixes the regression for me.
Operate on that play attribute to make things faster for larger
inventories. Instead of making a round trip through inventory.list_hosts
and working through some lengthy list comprehensions over and over
again, calculate the potenital hosts for a play once, then reduce from
it the unavailable hosts when necessary.
Also moves how the %fail is done. The host count is a play level count
of available hosts, which then is compared after each task to the
current number of available hosts for the play. This used to get a new
count every task which was also time expensive.
1. if accept_hostkey is false, no matter if the host key is known or not, it will fail.
2. We don't check for the host key in /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
This fixes both of those issues.