updated better yaml host examples

pull/22424/head
Brian Coca 8 years ago
parent 41f5648c44
commit ced73389de

@ -4,15 +4,16 @@
#
# - Comments begin with the '#' character
# - Blank lines are ignored
# - Top level entries are assumed to be groups
# - Top level entries are assumed to be groups, start with 'all' to have a full hierchy
# - Hosts must be specified in a group's hosts:
# and they must be a key (: terminated)
# - groups can have children, hosts and vars keys
# - Anything defined under a hosts is assumed to be a var
# - You can enter hostnames or ip addresses
# - A hostname/ip can be a member of multiple groups
# Ex 1: Ungrouped hosts, put in 'ungrouped' group
##ungrouped:
# Ex 1: Ungrouped hosts, put in 'all' or 'ungrouped' group
##all:
## hosts:
## green.example.com:
## ansible_ssh_host: 191.168.100.32
@ -21,23 +22,29 @@
## 192.168.100.10:
# Ex 2: A collection of hosts belonging to the 'webservers' group
##webservers:
## hosts:
## alpha.example.org:
## beta.example.org:
## 192.168.1.100:
## 192.168.1.110:
## children:
## webservers:
## hosts:
## alpha.example.org:
## beta.example.org:
## 192.168.1.100:
## 192.168.1.110:
# Ex 3: You can create hosts using ranges and add children groups and vars to a group
# The child group can define anything you would normally add to a group
##testing:
## hosts:
## www[001:006].example.com:
## testing:
## hosts:
## www[001:006].example.com:
## vars:
## testing1: value1
## children:
## webservers:
## hosts:
## beta.example.org:
# Ex 4: all vars
# keeping withing 'all' group you can define common 'all' vars here with lowest precedence
## vars:
## testing1: value1
## children:
## webservers:
## hosts:
## beta.example.org:
## commontoall: thisvar

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