blob: db15d75b77d4c98545ce76b19ef657ed46a24969 (
plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
|
---
- name: "Check whether OS is a SUSE derivative"
ansible.builtin.assert:
that:
- ansible_distribution_file_variety == 'SUSE' or ansible_distribution_file_variety == 'SuSE'
no_log: true
- name: Check for existence of rkhunter
ansible.builtin.stat:
path: /usr/bin/rkhunter
register: rkhex
- name: Update zypper cache (SUSE)
# we cannot cheat like we did with yum: we need to update any package to refresh the cache with the zypper module. Hence falling back
# to shell.
ansible.builtin.shell:
cmd: 'zypper refs && zypper ref'
changed_when: false
register: zypperref
become: true
- name: Verify Zypper repository availability
# Now, here's the thing with zypper. If you have a dead repository, you need to face the following facts:
# 1. All output goes to stdout. For zypper lu at least on SLE12/openSUSE42 and earlier, this is:
# - The packages available for update
# - Debug output lik "loading repository data..." and "reading installed packages..."
# (could be silenced with -q, but without RC feedback we need the debug strings again, kek.)
# - WARNING(!!) messages
# ... there is no STDERR.
# 2. There is no return code other than 0 for warnings.
# Great. Interaction with automatisms as if that stuff came directly from Redmond.
# So we need to parse the fucking output string in ansible. Let's start with the "repository not available" warnings.
ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "Dead repositories existing and no update present, we consider this a failure."
when:
- zypperref is search("Repository.*appears to be outdated")
- zypperref is search("No updates found")
failed_when: true
- name: Check for zypper updates
ansible.builtin.command: zypper lu
register: zypperlu
changed_when: false
become: true
- block:
- name: Update all packages (SUSE)
# we could narrow this down via type:patch, but that's about all. So fire away.
community.general.zypper:
name: '*'
state: latest
extra_args: '--no-refresh'
# this is only document as "zypper rm -u", so apparently nothing is existing like
# rpm's cleanup or apt's "autoremove" :(
# clean_deps: true
become: true
name: Update and RKhunter checks
when:
- zypperlu is not search("No updates found.")
- block:
- name: Register requirement for reboot (SUSE)
# change in paradigm: we will now use "needs-rebooting", suse implemented that somewhere between 12 and 15, instead of "ps -sss"
# todo: what to do if services require a refork?
# shell: zypper ps -sss
ansible.builtin.command: zypper needs-rebooting
register: nrout
changed_when: nrout.rc|int == 102
failed_when: nrout.rc|int != 102 and nrout.rc|int != 0
notify: "Reboot if required"
# we listen to "suse upd" here in case a previous reboot was skipped. Change to "suse updates available" if undesired.
name: Check reboot requirement
- block:
- name: Clean packages cache
# ansible's zypper module does not have a dedicated action for this yet. So shell it is:
ansible.builtin.command: zypper clean
changed_when: false
- name: Purge old kernels
# ansible's zypper module does not have a dedicated action for this yet. So shell it is:
ansible.builtin.command: zypper purge-kernels
# TODO: Check output for actual kernel-purging and make this a proper statement:
changed_when: false
name: Cleanup
become: true
- name: RKhunter properties update
ansible.builtin.command: rkhunter --propupd --rwo --ns
become: true
changed_when: true
when:
- rkhex.stat is defined
- rkhex.stat.executable is defined
- rkhex.stat.executable|bool == true
- name: Reboot if required
# ignore_errors: yes
ansible.builtin.reboot:
reboot_timeout: 300
pre_reboot_delay: 5
test_command: uptime
reboot_command: "/bin/systemctl reboot"
become: true
when: nrout is defined and nrout.rc is defined and nrout.rc|int == 102
|