Merge pull request #9564 from bcoca/start_step_docs

Start step docs
pull/9307/merge
Brian Coca 10 years ago
commit 9245acbf44

@ -335,25 +335,6 @@ Let's run a playbook using a parallelism level of 10::
ansible-playbook playbook.yml -f 10 ansible-playbook playbook.yml -f 10
Playbooks can also be executed interactively with ``--step``::
ansible-playbook playbook.yml --step
This will cause ansible to stop on each task, and ask if it should execute that task.
Say you had a task called "configure ssh", the playbook run will stop and ask::
Perform task: configure ssh (y/n/c):
Answering "y" will execute the task, answering "n" will skip the task, and answering "c"
will continue executing all the remaining tasks without asking.
If you want to start executing your playbook at a particular task, you can do so
with the ``--start-at`` option::
ansible-playbook playbook.yml --start-at="install packages"
The above will start executing your playbook at a task named "install packages".
.. _ansible-pull: .. _ansible-pull:
Ansible-Pull Ansible-Pull

@ -17,3 +17,4 @@ and adopt these only if they seem relevant or useful to your environment.
playbooks_prompts playbooks_prompts
playbooks_tags playbooks_tags
playbooks_vault playbooks_vault
playbooks_startnstep

@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
Start and Step
======================
This shows a few alternative ways to run playbooks. These modes are very useful for testing new plays or debugging.
.. _start_at_task
Start-at-task
`````````````
If you want to start executing your playbook at a particular task, you can do so with the ``--start-at`` option::
ansible-playbook playbook.yml --start-at="install packages"
The above will start executing your playbook at a task named "install packages".
.. _step
Step
````
Playbooks can also be executed interactively with ``--step``::
ansible-playbook playbook.yml --step
This will cause ansible to stop on each task, and ask if it should execute that task.
Say you had a task called "configure ssh", the playbook run will stop and ask::
Perform task: configure ssh (y/n/c):
Answering "y" will execute the task, answering "n" will skip the task, and answering "c"
will continue executing all the remaining tasks without asking.
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