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(Created page with "I think this is essentially the same as the `pip` `ansible` package that is being published by the Ansible team. That is, if I do `pip install ansible` I get an `ansible` 3.0...")
 
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I think this is essentially the same as the `pip` `ansible` package that is being published by the Ansible team.  That is, if I do `pip install ansible` I get an `ansible` 3.0 or later release that contains `ansible-core` (Ansible cli like `ansible-playbook`, vault, `ansible-galaxy`; built-in modules/plugins) plus all of the collections listed at https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/index.html
I think this is essentially the same as the `pip` `ansible` package that is being published by the Ansible team.  That is, if I do `pip install ansible` I get an `ansible` 3.0 or later release that contains `ansible-core` (Ansible cli like `ansible-playbook`, vault, `ansible-galaxy`; built-in modules/plugins) plus all of the collections listed at https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/index.html
(dmsimard): ^ this is correct, I am from the Ansible team and, in fact, the intent is to mirror the same user experience as when installing from PyPi as outlined in the detailed description: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Ansible5#Detailed_Description

Revision as of 15:55, 15 October 2021

I think this is essentially the same as the pip ansible package that is being published by the Ansible team. That is, if I do pip install ansible I get an ansible 3.0 or later release that contains ansible-core (Ansible cli like ansible-playbook, vault, ansible-galaxy; built-in modules/plugins) plus all of the collections listed at https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/index.html

(dmsimard): ^ this is correct, I am from the Ansible team and, in fact, the intent is to mirror the same user experience as when installing from PyPi as outlined in the detailed description: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Ansible5#Detailed_Description