mirror of https://github.com/ansible/ansible.git
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.
46 lines
2.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
46 lines
2.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
11 years ago
|
Ansible Documentation
|
||
11 years ago
|
=====================
|
||
|
|
||
|
About Ansible
|
||
|
`````````````
|
||
11 years ago
|
|
||
11 years ago
|
Welcome to the Ansible documentation!
|
||
12 years ago
|
|
||
11 years ago
|
Ansible is an IT automation tool. It can configure systems, deploy software, and orchestrate more advanced IT tasks
|
||
11 years ago
|
such as continuous deployments or zero downtime rolling updates.
|
||
12 years ago
|
|
||
10 years ago
|
Ansible's main goals are simplicity and ease-of-use. It also has a strong focus on security and reliability, featuring a minimum of moving parts, usage of OpenSSH for transport (with an accelerated socket mode and pull modes as alternatives), and a language that is designed around auditability by humans--even those not familiar with the program.
|
||
11 years ago
|
|
||
10 years ago
|
We believe simplicity is relevant to all sizes of environments, so we design for busy users of all types: developers, sysadmins, release engineers, IT managers, and everyone in between. Ansible is appropriate for managing all environments, from small setups with a handful of instances to enterprise environments with many thousands of instances.
|
||
11 years ago
|
|
||
10 years ago
|
Ansible manages machines in an agent-less manner. There is never a question of how to
|
||
10 years ago
|
upgrade remote daemons or the problem of not being able to manage systems because daemons are uninstalled. Because OpenSSH is one of the most peer-reviewed open source components, security exposure is greatly reduced. Ansible is decentralized--it relies on your existing OS credentials to control access to remote machines. If needed, Ansible can easily connect with Kerberos, LDAP, and other centralized authentication management systems.
|
||
12 years ago
|
|
||
8 years ago
|
This documentation covers the current released version of Ansible (|version|) and also some development version features (|versiondev|). For recent features, we note in each section the version of Ansible where the feature was added.
|
||
10 years ago
|
|
||
|
Ansible, Inc. releases a new major release of Ansible approximately every two months. The core application evolves somewhat conservatively, valuing simplicity in language design and setup. However, the community around new modules and plugins being developed and contributed moves very quickly, typically adding 20 or so new modules in each release.
|
||
13 years ago
|
|
||
11 years ago
|
.. _an_introduction:
|
||
|
|
||
11 years ago
|
.. toctree::
|
||
11 years ago
|
:maxdepth: 1
|
||
12 years ago
|
|
||
11 years ago
|
intro
|
||
11 years ago
|
quickstart
|
||
13 years ago
|
playbooks
|
||
11 years ago
|
playbooks_special_topics
|
||
|
modules
|
||
11 years ago
|
modules_by_category
|
||
11 years ago
|
guides
|
||
8 years ago
|
dev_guide/index
|
||
11 years ago
|
tower
|
||
11 years ago
|
community
|
||
|
galaxy
|
||
11 years ago
|
test_strategies
|
||
11 years ago
|
faq
|
||
|
glossary
|
||
|
YAMLSyntax
|
||
9 years ago
|
porting_guide_2.0
|
||
8 years ago
|
python_3_support
|
||
11 years ago
|
|