You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
ansible/docs/docsite/rst/user_guide/windows_dsc.rst

506 lines
19 KiB
ReStructuredText

Desired State Configuration
===========================
.. contents:: Topics
:local:
What is Desired State Configuration?
````````````````````````````````````
Desired State Configuration, or DSC, is a tool built into PowerShell that can
be used to define a Windows host setup through code. The overall purpose of DSC
is the same as Ansible, it is just executed in a different manner. Since
Ansible 2.4, the ``win_dsc`` module has been added and can be used to leverage
existing DSC resources when interacting with a Windows host.
More details on DSC can be viewed at `DSC Overview <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/dsc/overview/overview>`_.
Host Requirements
`````````````````
To use the ``win_dsc`` module, a Windows host must have PowerShell v5.0 or
newer installed. All supported hosts, except for Windows Server 2008 (non R2) can be
upgraded to PowerShell v5.
Once the PowerShell requirements have been met, using DSC is as simple as
creating a task with the ``win_dsc`` module.
Why Use DSC?
````````````
DSC and Ansible modules have a common goal which is to define and ensure the state of a
resource. Because of
this, resources like the DSC `File resource <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/dsc/reference/resources/windows/fileresource>`_
and Ansible ``win_file`` can be used to achieve the same result. Deciding which to use depends
on the scenario.
Reasons for using an Ansible module over a DSC resource:
* The host does not support PowerShell v5.0, or it cannot easily be upgraded
* The DSC resource does not offer a feature present in an Ansible module. For example
win_regedit can manage the ``REG_NONE`` property type, while the DSC
``Registry`` resource cannot
* DSC resources have limited check mode support, while some Ansible modules have
better checks
* DSC resources do not support diff mode, while some Ansible modules do
* Custom resources require further installation steps to be run on the host
beforehand, while Ansible modules are built-in to Ansible
* There are bugs in a DSC resource where an Ansible module works
Reasons for using a DSC resource over an Ansible module:
* The Ansible module does not support a feature present in a DSC resource
* There is no Ansible module available
* There are bugs in an existing Ansible module
In the end, it doesn't matter whether the task is performed with DSC or an
Ansible module; what matters is that the task is performed correctly and the
playbooks are still readable. If you have more experience with DSC over Ansible
and it does the job, just use DSC for that task.
How to Use DSC?
```````````````
The ``win_dsc`` module takes in a free-form of options so that it changes
according to the resource it is managing. A list of built in resources can be
found at `resources <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/dsc/resources/resources>`_.
Using the `Registry <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/dsc/reference/resources/windows/registryresource>`_
resource as an example, this is the DSC definition as documented by Microsoft:
.. code-block:: powershell
Registry [string] #ResourceName
{
Key = [string]
ValueName = [string]
[ Ensure = [string] { Enable | Disable } ]
[ Force = [bool] ]
[ Hex = [bool] ]
[ DependsOn = [string[]] ]
[ ValueData = [string[]] ]
[ ValueType = [string] { Binary | Dword | ExpandString | MultiString | Qword | String } ]
}
When defining the task, ``resource_name`` must be set to the DSC resource being
used - in this case the ``resource_name`` should be set to ``Registry``. The
``module_version`` can refer to a specific version of the DSC resource
installed; if left blank it will default to the latest version. The other
options are parameters that are used to define the resource, such as ``Key`` and
``ValueName``. While the options in the task are not case sensitive,
keeping the case as-is is recommended because it makes it easier to distinguish DSC
resource options from Ansible's ``win_dsc`` options.
This is what the Ansible task version of the above DSC Registry resource would look like:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Use win_dsc module with the Registry DSC resource
win_dsc:
resource_name: Registry
Ensure: Present
Key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\ExampleKey
ValueName: TestValue
ValueData: TestData
Starting in Ansible 2.8, the ``win_dsc`` module automatically validates the
input options from Ansible with the DSC definition. This means Ansible will
fail if the option name is incorrect, a mandatory option is not set, or the
value is not a valid choice. When running Ansible with a verbosity level of 3
or more (``-vvv``), the return value will contain the possible invocation
options based on the ``resource_name`` specified. Here is an example of the
invocation output for the above ``Registry`` task:
.. code-block:: ansible-output
changed: [2016] => {
"changed": true,
"invocation": {
"module_args": {
"DependsOn": null,
"Ensure": "Present",
"Force": null,
"Hex": null,
"Key": "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\\SOFTWARE\\ExampleKey",
"PsDscRunAsCredential_password": null,
"PsDscRunAsCredential_username": null,
"ValueData": [
"TestData"
],
"ValueName": "TestValue",
"ValueType": null,
"module_version": "latest",
"resource_name": "Registry"
}
},
"module_version": "1.1",
"reboot_required": false,
"verbose_set": [
"Perform operation 'Invoke CimMethod' with following parameters, ''methodName' = ResourceSet,'className' = MSFT_DSCLocalConfigurationManager,'namespaceName' = root/Microsoft/Windows/DesiredStateConfiguration'.",
"An LCM method call arrived from computer SERVER2016 with user sid S-1-5-21-3088887838-4058132883-1884671576-1105.",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ Start Set ] [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess]",
"[SERVER2016]: [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess] (SET) Create registry key 'HKLM:\\SOFTWARE\\ExampleKey'",
"[SERVER2016]: [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess] (SET) Set registry key value 'HKLM:\\SOFTWARE\\ExampleKey\\TestValue' to 'TestData' of type 'String'",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ End Set ] [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess] in 0.1930 seconds.",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ End Set ] in 0.2720 seconds.",
"Operation 'Invoke CimMethod' complete.",
"Time taken for configuration job to complete is 0.402 seconds"
],
"verbose_test": [
"Perform operation 'Invoke CimMethod' with following parameters, ''methodName' = ResourceTest,'className' = MSFT_DSCLocalConfigurationManager,'namespaceName' = root/Microsoft/Windows/DesiredStateConfiguration'.",
"An LCM method call arrived from computer SERVER2016 with user sid S-1-5-21-3088887838-4058132883-1884671576-1105.",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ Start Test ] [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess]",
"[SERVER2016]: [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess] Registry key 'HKLM:\\SOFTWARE\\ExampleKey' does not exist",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ End Test ] [[Registry]DirectResourceAccess] False in 0.2510 seconds.",
"[SERVER2016]: LCM: [ End Set ] in 0.3310 seconds.",
"Operation 'Invoke CimMethod' complete.",
"Time taken for configuration job to complete is 0.475 seconds"
]
}
The ``invocation.module_args`` key shows the actual values that were set as
well as other possible values that were not set. Unfortunately this will not
show the default value for a DSC property, only what was set from the Ansible
task. Any ``*_password`` option will be masked in the output for security
reasons, if there are any other sensitive module options, set ``no_log: True``
on the task to stop all task output from being logged.
Property Types
--------------
Each DSC resource property has a type that is associated with it. Ansible
will try to convert the defined options to the correct type during execution.
For simple types like ``[string]`` and ``[bool]`` this is a simple operation,
but complex types like ``[PSCredential]`` or arrays (like ``[string[]]``) this
require certain rules.
PSCredential
++++++++++++
A ``[PSCredential]`` object is used to store credentials in a secure way, but
Ansible has no way to serialize this over JSON. To set a DSC PSCredential property,
the definition of that parameter should have two entries that are suffixed with
``_username`` and ``_password`` for the username and password respectively.
For example:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
PsDscRunAsCredential_username: '{{ ansible_user }}'
PsDscRunAsCredential_password: '{{ ansible_password }}'
SourceCredential_username: AdminUser
SourceCredential_password: PasswordForAdminUser
.. Note:: On versions of Ansible older than 2.8, you should set ``no_log: yes``
on the task definition in Ansible to ensure any credentials used are not
stored in any log file or console output.
A ``[PSCredential]`` is defined with ``EmbeddedInstance("MSFT_Credential")`` in
a DSC resource MOF definition.
CimInstance Type
++++++++++++++++
A ``[CimInstance]`` object is used by DSC to store a dictionary object based on
a custom class defined by that resource. Defining a value that takes in a
``[CimInstance]`` in YAML is the same as defining a dictionary in YAML.
For example, to define a ``[CimInstance]`` value in Ansible:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
# [CimInstance]AuthenticationInfo == MSFT_xWebAuthenticationInformation
AuthenticationInfo:
Anonymous: no
Basic: yes
Digest: no
Windows: yes
In the above example, the CIM instance is a representation of the class
`MSFT_xWebAuthenticationInformation <https://github.com/dsccommunity/xWebAdministration/blob/master/source/DSCResources/MSFT_xWebSite/MSFT_xWebSite.schema.mof>`_.
This class accepts four boolean variables, ``Anonymous``, ``Basic``,
``Digest``, and ``Windows``. The keys to use in a ``[CimInstance]`` depend on
the class it represents. Please read through the documentation of the resource
to determine the keys that can be used and the types of each key value. The
class definition is typically located in the ``<resource name>.schema.mof``.
HashTable Type
++++++++++++++
A ``[HashTable]`` object is also a dictionary but does not have a strict set of
keys that can/need to be defined. Like a ``[CimInstance]``, define it like a
normal dictionary value in YAML. A ``[HashTable]]`` is defined with
``EmbeddedInstance("MSFT_KeyValuePair")`` in a DSC resource MOF definition.
Arrays
++++++
Simple type arrays like ``[string[]]`` or ``[UInt32[]]`` are defined as a list
or as a comma separated string which are then cast to their type. Using a list
is recommended because the values are not manually parsed by the ``win_dsc``
module before being passed to the DSC engine. For example, to define a simple
type array in Ansible:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
# [string[]]
ValueData: entry1, entry2, entry3
ValueData:
- entry1
- entry2
- entry3
# [UInt32[]]
ReturnCode: 0,3010
ReturnCode:
- 0
- 3010
Complex type arrays like ``[CimInstance[]]`` (array of dicts), can be defined
like this example:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
# [CimInstance[]]BindingInfo == MSFT_xWebBindingInformation
BindingInfo:
- Protocol: https
Port: 443
CertificateStoreName: My
CertificateThumbprint: C676A89018C4D5902353545343634F35E6B3A659
HostName: DSCTest
IPAddress: '*'
SSLFlags: 1
- Protocol: http
Port: 80
IPAddress: '*'
The above example, is an array with two values of the class `MSFT_xWebBindingInformation <https://github.com/dsccommunity/xWebAdministration/blob/master/source/DSCResources/MSFT_xWebSite/MSFT_xWebSite.schema.mof>`_.
When defining a ``[CimInstance[]]``, be sure to read the resource documentation
to find out what keys to use in the definition.
DateTime
++++++++
A ``[DateTime]`` object is a DateTime string representing the date and time in
the `ISO 8601 <https://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime>`_ date time format. The
value for a ``[DateTime]`` field should be quoted in YAML to ensure the string
is properly serialized to the Windows host. Here is an example of how to define
a ``[DateTime]`` value in Ansible:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
# As UTC-0 (No timezone)
DateTime: '2019-02-22T13:57:31.2311892+00:00'
# As UTC+4
DateTime: '2019-02-22T17:57:31.2311892+04:00'
# As UTC-4
DateTime: '2019-02-22T09:57:31.2311892-04:00'
All the values above are equal to a UTC date time of February 22nd 2019 at
1:57pm with 31 seconds and 2311892 milliseconds.
Run As Another User
-------------------
By default, DSC runs each resource as the SYSTEM account and not the account
that Ansible use to run the module. This means that resources that are dynamically
loaded based on a user profile, like the ``HKEY_CURRENT_USER`` registry hive,
will be loaded under the ``SYSTEM`` profile. The parameter
``PsDscRunAsCredential`` is a parameter that can be set for every DSC resource
force the DSC engine to run under a different account. As
``PsDscRunAsCredential`` has a type of ``PSCredential``, it is defined with the
``_username`` and ``_password`` suffix.
Using the Registry resource type as an example, this is how to define a task
to access the ``HKEY_CURRENT_USER`` hive of the Ansible user:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Use win_dsc with PsDscRunAsCredential to run as a different user
win_dsc:
resource_name: Registry
Ensure: Present
Key: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ExampleKey
ValueName: TestValue
ValueData: TestData
PsDscRunAsCredential_username: '{{ ansible_user }}'
PsDscRunAsCredential_password: '{{ ansible_password }}'
no_log: yes
Custom DSC Resources
````````````````````
DSC resources are not limited to the built-in options from Microsoft. Custom
modules can be installed to manage other resources that are not usually available.
Finding Custom DSC Resources
----------------------------
You can use the
`PSGallery <https://www.powershellgallery.com/>`_ to find custom resources, along with documentation on how to install them on a Windows host.
The ``Find-DscResource`` cmdlet can also be used to find custom resources. For example:
.. code-block:: powershell
# Find all DSC resources in the configured repositories
Find-DscResource
# Find all DSC resources that relate to SQL
Find-DscResource -ModuleName "*sql*"
.. Note:: DSC resources developed by Microsoft that start with ``x``, means the
resource is experimental and comes with no support.
Installing a Custom Resource
----------------------------
There are three ways that a DSC resource can be installed on a host:
* Manually with the ``Install-Module`` cmdlet
* Using the ``win_psmodule`` Ansible module
* Saving the module manually and copying it another host
This is an example of installing the ``xWebAdministration`` resources using
``win_psmodule``:
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Install xWebAdministration DSC resource
win_psmodule:
name: xWebAdministration
state: present
Once installed, the win_dsc module will be able to use the resource by referencing it
with the ``resource_name`` option.
The first two methods above only work when the host has access to the internet.
When a host does not have internet access, the module must first be installed
using the methods above on another host with internet access and then copied
across. To save a module to a local filepath, the following PowerShell cmdlet
can be run::
Save-Module -Name xWebAdministration -Path C:\temp
This will create a folder called ``xWebAdministration`` in ``C:\temp`` which
can be copied to any host. For PowerShell to see this offline resource, it must
be copied to a directory set in the ``PSModulePath`` environment variable.
In most cases the path ``C:\Program Files\WindowsPowerShell\Module`` is set
through this variable, but the ``win_path`` module can be used to add different
paths.
Examples
````````
Extract a zip file
------------------
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Extract a zip file
win_dsc:
resource_name: Archive
Destination: C:\temp\output
Path: C:\temp\zip.zip
Ensure: Present
Create a directory
------------------
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Create file with some text
win_dsc:
resource_name: File
DestinationPath: C:\temp\file
Contents: |
Hello
World
Ensure: Present
Type: File
- name: Create directory that is hidden is set with the System attribute
win_dsc:
resource_name: File
DestinationPath: C:\temp\hidden-directory
Attributes: Hidden,System
Ensure: Present
Type: Directory
Interact with Azure
-------------------
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Install xAzure DSC resources
win_psmodule:
name: xAzure
state: present
- name: Create virtual machine in Azure
win_dsc:
resource_name: xAzureVM
ImageName: a699494373c04fc0bc8f2bb1389d6106__Windows-Server-2012-R2-201409.01-en.us-127GB.vhd
Name: DSCHOST01
ServiceName: ServiceName
StorageAccountName: StorageAccountName
InstanceSize: Medium
Windows: yes
Ensure: Present
Credential_username: '{{ ansible_user }}'
Credential_password: '{{ ansible_password }}'
Setup IIS Website
-----------------
.. code-block:: yaml+jinja
- name: Install xWebAdministration module
win_psmodule:
name: xWebAdministration
state: present
- name: Install IIS features that are required
win_dsc:
resource_name: WindowsFeature
Name: '{{ item }}'
Ensure: Present
loop:
- Web-Server
- Web-Asp-Net45
- name: Setup web content
win_dsc:
resource_name: File
DestinationPath: C:\inetpub\IISSite\index.html
Type: File
Contents: |
<html>
<head><title>IIS Site</title></head>
<body>This is the body</body>
</html>
Ensure: present
- name: Create new website
win_dsc:
resource_name: xWebsite
Name: NewIISSite
State: Started
PhysicalPath: C:\inetpub\IISSite\index.html
BindingInfo:
- Protocol: https
Port: 8443
CertificateStoreName: My
CertificateThumbprint: C676A89018C4D5902353545343634F35E6B3A659
HostName: DSCTest
IPAddress: '*'
SSLFlags: 1
- Protocol: http
Port: 8080
IPAddress: '*'
AuthenticationInfo:
Anonymous: no
Basic: yes
Digest: no
Windows: yes
.. seealso::
:ref:`playbooks_intro`
An introduction to playbooks
:ref:`playbooks_best_practices`
Collections docs generation backport (#70515) * Build documentation for Ansible-2.10 (formerly known as ACD). Builds plugin docs from collections whose source is on galaxy The new command downloads collections from galaxy, then finds the plugins inside of them to get the documentation for those plugins. * Update the python syntax checks * docs builds can now require python 3.6+. * Move plugin formatter code out to an external tool, antsibull-docs. Collection owners want to be able to extract docs for their own websites as well. * The jinja2 filters, tests, and other support code have moved to antsibull * Remove document_plugins as that has now been integrated into antsibull-docs * Cleanup and bugfix to other build script code: * The Commands class needed to have its metaclass set for abstractmethod to work correctly * Fix lint issues in some command plugins * Add the docs/docsite/rst/collections to .gitignore as everything in that directory will be generated so we don't want any of it saved in the git repository * gitignore the build dir and remove edit docs link on module pages * Add docs/rst/collections as a directory to remove on make clean * Split the collections docs from the main docs * remove version and edit on github * remove version banner for just collections * clarify examples need collection keyword defined * Remove references to plugin documentation locations that no longer exist. * Perhaps the pages in plugins/*.rst should be deprecated altogether and their content moved? * If not, perhaps we want to rephrase and link into the collection documentation? * Or perhaps we want to link to the plugins which are present in collections/ansible/builtin? * Remove PYTHONPATH from the build-ansible calls One of the design goals of the build-ansible.py script was for it to automatically set its library path to include the checkout of ansible and the library of code to implement itself. Because it automatically includes the checkout of ansible, we don't need to set PYTHONPATH in the Makefile any longer. * Create a command to only build ansible-base plugin docs * When building docs for devel, only build the ansible-base docs for now. This is because antsibull needs support for building a "devel tree" of docs. This can be changed once that is implemented * When building docs for the sanity tests, only build the ansible-base plugin docs for now. Those are the docs which are in this repo so that seems appropriate for now. * Docs: User guide overhaul, part 5 (#70307) (cherry picked from commit db354c03002440bbcb286b4897307dbb981d02db) * Need to return any error code from running antsibull-docs (#70763) This way we fail early if there's a problem (cherry picked from commit 1e3989c9f7919cbcfe82733711e13b93c026c2d8) Co-authored-by: Alicia Cozine <879121+acozine@users.noreply.github.com>
4 years ago
Tips and tricks for playbooks
:ref:`List of Windows Modules <windows_modules>`
Windows specific module list, all implemented in PowerShell
`User Mailing List <https://groups.google.com/group/ansible-project>`_
Have a question? Stop by the google group!
`irc.libera.chat <https://libera.chat/>`_
#ansible IRC chat channel