This section discusses the behavioral changes between Ansible 2.4 and Ansible 2.5.
It is intended to assist in updating your playbooks, plugins and other parts of your Ansible infrastructure so they will work with this version of Ansible.
We suggest you read this page along with `Ansible Changelog <https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/CHANGELOG.md#2.5>`_ to understand what updates you may need to make.
This document is part of a collection on porting. The complete list of porting guides can be found at :ref:`porting guides <porting_guides>`.
In Ansible version 2.4, the concept of dynamic includes (``include_tasks``) versus static imports (``import_tasks``) was introduced to clearly define the differences in how ``include`` works between dynamic and static includes.
All attributes applied to a dynamic ``include_*`` would only apply to the include itself, while attributes applied to a
static ``import_*`` would be inherited by the tasks within.
This separation was only partially implemented in Ansible version 2.4. As of Ansible version 2.5, this work is complete and the separation now behaves as designed; attributes applied to an ``include_*`` task will not be inherited by the tasks within.
To achieve an outcome similar to how Ansible worked prior to version 2.5, playbooks
should use an explicit application of the attribute on the needed tasks, or use blocks to apply the attribute to many tasks. Another option is to use a static ``import_*`` when possible instead of a dynamic task.
Prior to Ansible 2.5, jinja tests included within Ansible were most often used as filters. The large difference in use is that filters are referenced as ``variable | filter_name`` where as jinja tests are refereced as ``variable is test_name``.
Jinja tests are used for comparisons, while filters are used for data manipulation and have different applications in jinja. This change is to help differentiate the concepts for a better understanding of jinja, and where each can be appropriately used.
In addition to the deprecation warnings, many new tests have been introduced that are aliases of the old tests. These new tests make more sense grammatically with the jinja test syntax, such as the new ``successful`` test which aliases ``success``.
Additionally, a script was created to assist in the conversion for tests using filter syntax to proper jinja test syntax. This script has been used to convert all of the Ansible integration tests to the correct format. There are a few limitations documented, and all changes made by this script should be evaluated for correctness before executing the modified playbooks. The script can be found at `https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/hacking/fix_test_syntax.py <https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/hacking/fix_test_syntax.py>`_.
In Ansible versions 2.4 and older, after creating a GitHub release using the ``create_release`` state, the ``github_release`` module reported state as ``skipped``.
In Ansible version 2.5 and later, after creating a GitHub release using the ``create_release`` state, the ``github_release`` module now reports state as ``changed``.
As a developer, you can now use 'doc fragments' for common configuration options on plugin types that support the new plugin configuration system.
Inventory
---------
Inventory plugins have been fine tuned, and we have started to add some common features:
* The ability to use a cache plugin to avoid costly API/DB queries is disabled by default.
If using inventory scripts, some may already support a cache, but it is outside of Ansible's knowledge and control.
Moving to the interal cache will allow you to use Ansible's existing cache refresh/invalidation mechanisms.
* A new 'auto' plugin, enabled by default, that can automatically detect the correct plugin to use IF that plugin is using our 'common YAML configuration format'.
The previous host_list, script, yaml and ini plugins still work as they did, the auto plugin is now the last one we attempt to use.
If you had customized the enabled plugins you should revise the setting to include the new auto plugin.
Shell
-----
Shell plugins have been migrated to the new plugin configuration framework. It is now possible to customize more settings, and settings which were previously 'global' can now also be overriden using host specific variables.
For example, ``system_temps`` is a new setting that allows you to control what Ansible will consider a 'system temporary dir'. This is used when escalating privileges for a non-administrative user. Previously this was hardcoded to '/tmp', which some systems cannot use for privilege escalation. This setting now defaults to ``[ '/var/tmp', '/tmp']``.
Another new setting is ``admin_users`` which allows you to specify a list of users to be considered 'administrators'. Previouslu this was hardcoded to ``root``. It now it defaults to ``[root, toor, admin]``. This information is used when choosing between your ``remote_temp`` and ``system_temps`` directory.
For a full list, check the shell plugin you are using, the default shell plugin is ``sh``.
Those that had to work around the global configuration limitations can now migrate to a per host/group settings,
but also note that the new defaults might conflict with existing usage if the assumptions don't correlate to your environment.