Use more unit test utils from community.internal_test_tools (#9918)
* Make conftest's patch_ansible_module use the context manager from .utils.
* Fix test dependencies.
* Use module mock utils from community.internal_test_tools.
* Use DataDictLoader from community.internal_test_tools.
* Use trust util from community.internal_test_tools.
(cherry picked from commit 8ab8010b6d)
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
Unit tests: make set_module_args() a context manager, and remove copies of it in some tests (#9838)
Make set_module_args() a context manager, and remove copies of set_module_args().
Prepares for Data Tagging.
(cherry picked from commit a1781d09dd)
Co-authored-by: Felix Fontein <felix@fontein.de>
- pass the arguments to run_command() directly as list, rather than
joining the arguments to string, which run_command() will need to
split again
- disable the expansions of variables, as there are none
Adapt the unit test to the different way run_command() is called,
factorizing the kwargs for run_command() so there is less repetition.
There should be no behaviour changes.
subscription-manager on RHEL installs a symlink in /usr/bin to
console-helper (part of usermode), which triggers an interactive prompt
for root credentials when run as user. It seems that console-helper
does not handle well non-interactive contexts (e.g. without a TTY for
input), and thus it will hang waiting for input when run as user in an
Ansible task.
Since subscription-manager requires root already anyway (and it will
fail when explicitly run as user), then apply the same logic locally on
all the modules that interact with it: redhat_subscription,
rhsm_release, and rhsm_repository.