Ansible Modules =============== .. contents:: :depth: 3 .. _modules_intro: Introduction ```````````` Ansible ships with a number of modules (called the 'module library') that can be executed directly on remote hosts or through :doc:`playbooks`. Users can also write their own modules. These modules can control system resources, like services, packages, or files (anything really), or handle executing system commands. Let's review how we execute three different modules from the command line:: ansible webservers -m service -a "name=httpd state=running" ansible webservers -m ping ansible webservers -m command -a "/sbin/reboot -t now" Each module supports taking arguments. Nearly all modules take ``key=value`` arguments, space delimited. Some modules take no arguments, and the command/shell modules simply take the string of the command you want to run. From playbooks, Ansible modules are executed in a very similar way:: - name: reboot the servers action: command /sbin/reboot -t now Version 0.8 and higher support the following shorter syntax:: - name: reboot the servers command: /sbin/reboot -t now All modules technically return JSON format data, though if you are using the command line or playbooks, you don't really need to know much about that. If you're writing your own module, you care, and this means you do not have to write modules in any particular language -- you get to choose. Modules are `idempotent`, meaning they will seek to avoid changes to the system unless a change needs to be made. When using Ansible playbooks, these modules can trigger 'change events' in the form of notifying 'handlers' to run additional tasks. Documention for each module can be accessed from the command line with the ansible-doc as well as the man command:: ansible-doc command man ansible.template Let's see what's available in the Ansible module library, out of the box: .. include:: modules/_list.rst .. _ansible_doc: Reading Module Documentation Locally ```````````````````````````````````` ansible-doc is a friendly command line tool that allows you to access module documentation locally. It comes with Ansible. To list documentation for a particular module:: ansible-doc yum | less To list all modules available:: ansible-doc --list | less To access modules outside of the stock module path (such as custom modules that live in your playbook directory), use the '--module-path' option to specify the directory where the module lives. .. _writing_modules: Writing your own modules ```````````````````````` See :doc:`developing_modules`. .. seealso:: :doc:`intro_adhoc` Examples of using modules in /usr/bin/ansible :doc:`playbooks` Examples of using modules with /usr/bin/ansible-playbook :doc:`developing_modules` How to write your own modules :doc:`developing_api` Examples of using modules with the Python API `Mailing List `_ Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups `irc.freenode.net `_ #ansible IRC chat channel