Commit Graph

4 Commits (f92eaea0fd45d0368d530554ce01b05cb1ce4ed1)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sébastien Han d100b4e596 name includes and set_fact for clarity
When Ansible is not run with verbose options it's difficult to see which
include and/or set_fact does what. So adding a name for each clarifies.

Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
2017-09-18 23:39:46 +02:00
Sébastien Han aa364264cd resync ceph-iscsi-gw with old upstream
Taken from https://github.com/pcuzner/ceph-iscsi-ansible/tree/tcmu-fixes

Closes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1454945 and
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1484083
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
2017-09-12 18:06:10 -06:00
Ali Maredia 55724c6e93 nfs-ganesha: add dev, stable, and rhcs nfs-ganesha's for ceph-nfs role
Signed-off-by: Ali Maredia <amaredia@redhat.com>
2017-09-08 09:13:20 -04:00
Sébastien Han ae2fd45994 common: refactor installation method
The installation process is now described as follow:

* you still have to choose a 'ceph_origin' installation method. The
origin can be a 'repository' (add a new repository), distro (it will use
the packages provided by the native repo source of your distribution),
local (only available on redhat system, it installs locally built
packages). This option is not well tested, so use it carefully

* if ceph_origin == 'repository' you will have to decide what kind of
repository you want to enable:
  - community: corresponds to the stable upstream/community version
  - enterprise: corresponds to the stable enterprise/downstream version
    (basically you are a red hat customer)
  - dev: it will install ceph from packages built out of the github
    development branches

Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-by: Guillaume Abrioux <gabrioux@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Abrioux <gabrioux@redhat.com>
2017-08-30 10:52:01 +02:00