Playbooks can ship a human description Steward reads and shows when one is
selected. Convention: a `# description: <text>` magic comment (Ansible rejects
unknown play keys, so a comment is the portable place — works for third-party
playbooks too); falls back to the first play's name:. sources
.discover_playbook_description().
Surfaced at the top of the shared _playbook_vars.html partial, which loads on
playbook selection in the host run form, schedules form, and browse run form.
All four bundled playbooks (provision/install/update/docker_prune) now carry a
description line. Unit tests added.
Scribe #900.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Provisioning review corrections + the matching frontend, plus breadcrumb
header integration.
- provision.yml: authorize the managed pubkey with a regexp match on the
' steward-managed' comment so rotating the key REPLACES the host's steward
key in place instead of stacking a second authorized entry. Hand-added keys
(other comments) are untouched.
- update.yml (new): refresh agent.py + restart only. Does NOT rotate the token
or rewrite /etc/steward-agent.conf — the host keeps its identity. Asserts the
agent is already installed and fails clearly otherwise.
- host_agent /update route: runs update.yml as the managed steward user (no
token minting). Token rotation stays a deliberate action.
- settings/ansible/generate-key honors a safe relative `next` redirect, so an
inline trigger elsewhere returns to its page.
- Host Agents settings: reworked into a clear lifecycle — an intro card that
explains it runs Ansible to deploy the agent (+ inline "generate managed key"
warning/trigger when none exists), then three labelled cards: 1 Provision,
2 Install/enroll, 3 Update. Each explains what it does.
- base.html: breadcrumb now renders as a kicker line directly above the page
title (moved below alerts, tightened margin) so nested and top-level views
share one consistent header.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>