The last time they were re-installed they defaulted to 1500 and it's
causing some problems for some of them at least (01-08 for sure).
Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi <kevin@scrye.com>
Turns out the current version of linux-system-roles network doesn't like
setting ipv6 no and setting search domains since NetworkManager wants to
set them for both ipv4 and ipv6. There's some upstream fix, but not in
our current version.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi <kevin@scrye.com>
This was done using yq (
https://mikefarah.gitbook.io/yq/operators/sort-keys )
Doing things this way makes it much easier to see if a variable is set
in a file or if two hosts differ in what variables they set. Hopefully
we can keep things sorted moving forward.
Basically this means just sort a-z anything you add to any host or group
vaiable and it will be in the right place.
Additionally, this enforces 'normal' intent rules for all the variable
files which we should also try and obey. 2 spaces for first level, 3 for
next, etc. When in doubt you can run yq on it.
This should cause NO actual vairable changes, it's all just readability
fixing for humans, ansible parses it exactly the same.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi <kevin@scrye.com>
Normally it's just a nitpick to not have trailing spaces on variables.
However, for some things like mac address, it really matters.
Bunches of buildhw's were failing ansibile because they were passing
"mac address " to linux-system-roles networking and ansible was going
'huh, nope, I can't find that mac address here at all'.
So, just blow all the tailing spaces away to avoid any other variables
that hit this.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi <kevin@scrye.com>