Ansible Galaxy ++++++++++++++ "Ansible Galaxy" can either refer to a website for sharing and downloading Ansible roles, or a command line tool for managing and creating roles. .. contents:: Topics The Website ``````````` The website `Ansible Galaxy `_, is a free site for finding, downloading, and sharing community developed Ansible roles. Downloading roles from Galaxy is a great way to jumpstart your automation projects. Access the Galaxy web site using GitHub OAuth, and to install roles use the 'ansible-galaxy' command line tool included in Ansible 1.4.2 and later. Read the "About" page on the Galaxy site for more information. The ansible-galaxy command line tool ```````````````````````````````````` The ansible-galaxy command has many different sub-commands for managing roles both locally and at `galaxy.ansible.com `_. .. note:: The search, login, import, delete, and setup commands in the Ansible 2.0 version of ansible-galaxy require access to the 2.0 Beta release of the Galaxy web site available at `https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com `_. Use the ``--server`` option to access the beta site. For example:: $ ansible-galaxy search --server https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com mysql --author geerlingguy Additionally, you can define a server in ansible.cfg:: [galaxy] server=https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com Installing Roles ---------------- The most obvious use of the ansible-galaxy command is downloading roles from `the Ansible Galaxy website `_:: $ ansible-galaxy install username.rolename roles_path ========== You can specify a particular directory where you want the downloaded roles to be placed:: $ ansible-galaxy install username.role -p ~/Code/ansible_roles/ This can be useful if you have a master folder that contains ansible galaxy roles shared across several projects. The default is the roles_path configured in your ansible.cfg file (/etc/ansible/roles if not configured). Installing Multiple Roles From A File ===================================== To install multiple roles, the ansible-galaxy CLI can be fed a requirements file. All versions of ansible allow the following syntax for installing roles from the Ansible Galaxy website:: $ ansible-galaxy install -r requirements.txt Where the requirements.txt looks like:: username1.foo_role username2.bar_role To request specific versions (tags) of a role, use this syntax in the roles file:: username1.foo_role,version username2.bar_role,version Available versions will be listed on the Ansible Galaxy webpage for that role. Installing Multiple Roles From Multiple Files ============================================= At a basic level, including requirements files allows you to break up bits of configuration policy into smaller files. Role includes pull in roles from other files. :: ansible-galaxy install -r requirements.yml Content of requirements.yml :: # from github - src: yatesr.timezone - include: webserver.yml Content of the webserver.yml file. :: # from github - src: https://github.com/bennojoy/nginx # from github installing to a relative path - src: https://github.com/bennojoy/nginx Advanced Control over Role Requirements Files ============================================= For more advanced control over where to download roles from, including support for remote repositories, Ansible 1.8 and later support a new YAML format for the role requirements file, which must end in a 'yml' extension. It works like this:: ansible-galaxy install -r requirements.yml The extension is important. If the .yml extension is left off, the ansible-galaxy CLI will assume the file is in the "basic" format and will be confused. And here's an example showing some specific version downloads from multiple sources. In one of the examples we also override the name of the role and download it as something different:: # from galaxy - src: yatesr.timezone # from GitHub - src: https://github.com/bennojoy/nginx # from GitHub, overriding the name and specifying a specific tag - src: https://github.com/bennojoy/nginx version: master name: nginx_role # from a webserver, where the role is packaged in a tar.gz - src: https://some.webserver.example.com/files/master.tar.gz name: http-role # from Bitbucket - src: git+http://bitbucket.org/willthames/git-ansible-galaxy version: v1.4 # from Bitbucket, alternative syntax and caveats - src: http://bitbucket.org/willthames/hg-ansible-galaxy scm: hg # from GitLab or other git-based scm - src: git@gitlab.company.com:mygroup/ansible-base.git scm: git version: 0.1.0 As you can see in the above, there are a large amount of controls available to customize where roles can be pulled from, and what to save roles as. You can also pull down multiple roles from a single source (just make sure that you have a meta/main.yml file at the root level). :: meta\main.yml common-role1\tasks\main.yml common-role2\tasks\main.yml For example, if the above common roles are published to a git repo, you can pull them down using: :: # multiple roles from the same repo - src: git@gitlab.company.com:mygroup/ansible-common.git name: common-roles scm: git version: master You could then use these common roles in your plays :: --- - hosts: webservers roles: - common-roles/common-role1 - common-roles/common-role2 Roles pulled from galaxy work as with other SCM sourced roles above. To download a role with dependencies, and automatically install those dependencies, the role must be uploaded to the Ansible Galaxy website. .. seealso:: :doc:`playbooks_roles` All about ansible roles `Mailing List `_ Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups `irc.freenode.net `_ #ansible IRC chat channel Building Role Scaffolding ------------------------- Use the init command to initialize the base structure of a new role, saving time on creating the various directories and main.yml files a role requires:: $ ansible-galaxy init rolename The above will create the following directory structure in the current working directory: :: README.md .travis.yml defaults/ main.yml files/ handlers/ main.yml meta/ main.yml templates/ tests/ inventory test.yml vars/ main.yml .. note:: .travis.yml and tests/ are new in Ansible 2.0 If a directory matching the name of the role already exists in the current working directory, the init command will result in an error. To ignore the error use the --force option. Force will create the above subdirectories and files, replacing anything that matches. Search for Roles ---------------- The search command provides for querying the Galaxy database, allowing for searching by tags, platforms, author and multiple keywords. For example: :: $ ansible-galaxy search elasticsearch --author geerlingguy The search command will return a list of the first 1000 results matching your search: :: Found 2 roles matching your search: Name Description ---- ----------- geerlingguy.elasticsearch Elasticsearch for Linux. geerlingguy.elasticsearch-curator Elasticsearch curator for Linux. .. note:: The format of results pictured here is new in Ansible 2.0. Get More Information About a Role --------------------------------- Use the info command To view more detail about a specific role: :: $ ansible-galaxy info username.role_name This returns everything found in Galaxy for the role: :: Role: username.rolename description: Installs and configures a thing, a distributed, highly available NoSQL thing. active: True commit: c01947b7bc89ebc0b8a2e298b87ab416aed9dd57 commit_message: Adding travis commit_url: https://github.com/username/repo_name/commit/c01947b7bc89ebc0b8a2e298b87ab company: My Company, Inc. created: 2015-12-08T14:17:52.773Z download_count: 1 forks_count: 0 github_branch: github_repo: repo_name github_user: username id: 6381 is_valid: True issue_tracker_url: license: Apache min_ansible_version: 1.4 modified: 2015-12-08T18:43:49.085Z namespace: username open_issues_count: 0 path: /Users/username/projects/roles scm: None src: username.repo_name stargazers_count: 0 travis_status_url: https://travis-ci.org/username/repo_name.svg?branch=master version: watchers_count: 1 List Installed Roles -------------------- The list command shows the name and version of each role installed in roles_path. :: $ ansible-galaxy list - chouseknecht.role-install_mongod, master - chouseknecht.test-role-1, v1.0.2 - chrismeyersfsu.role-iptables, master - chrismeyersfsu.role-required_vars, master Remove an Installed Role ------------------------ The remove command will delete a role from roles_path: :: $ ansible-galaxy remove username.rolename Authenticate with Galaxy ------------------------ To use the import, delete and setup commands authentication with Galaxy is required. The login command will authenticate the user,retrieve a token from Galaxy, and store it in the user's home directory. :: $ ansible-galaxy login We need your Github login to identify you. This information will not be sent to Galaxy, only to api.github.com. The password will not be displayed. Use --github-token if you do not want to enter your password. Github Username: dsmith Password for dsmith: Succesfully logged into Galaxy as dsmith As depicted above, the login command prompts for a GitHub username and password. It does NOT send your password to Galaxy. It actually authenticates with GitHub and creates a personal access token. It then sends the personal access token to Galaxy, which in turn verifies that you are you and returns a Galaxy access token. After authentication completes the GitHub personal access token is destroyed. If you do not wish to use your GitHub password, or if you have two-factor authentication enabled with GitHub, use the --github-token option to pass a personal access token that you create. Log into GitHub, go to Settings and click on Personal Access Token to create a token. .. note:: The login command in Ansible 2.0 requires using the Galaxy 2.0 Beta site. Use the ``--server`` option to access `https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com `_. You can also add a *server* definition in the [galaxy] section of your ansible.cfg file. Import a Role ------------- Roles can be imported using ansible-galaxy. The import command expects that the user previously authenticated with Galaxy using the login command. Import any GitHub repo you have access to: :: $ ansible-galaxy import github_user github_repo By default the command will wait for the role to be imported by Galaxy, displaying the results as the import progresses: :: Successfully submitted import request 41 Starting import 41: role_name=myrole repo=githubuser/ansible-role-repo ref= Retrieving Github repo githubuser/ansible-role-repo Accessing branch: master Parsing and validating meta/main.yml Parsing galaxy_tags Parsing platforms Adding dependencies Parsing and validating README.md Adding repo tags as role versions Import completed Status SUCCESS : warnings=0 errors=0 Use the --branch option to import a specific branch. If not specified, the default branch for the repo will be used. If the --no-wait option is present, the command will not wait for results. Results of the most recent import for any of your roles is available on the Galaxy web site under My Imports. .. note:: The import command in Ansible 2.0 requires using the Galaxy 2.0 Beta site. Use the ``--server`` option to access `https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com `_. You can also add a *server* definition in the [galaxy] section of your ansible.cfg file. Delete a Role ------------- Remove a role from the Galaxy web site using the delete command. You can delete any role that you have access to in GitHub. The delete command expects that the user previously authenticated with Galaxy using the login command. :: $ ansible-galaxy delete github_user github_repo This only removes the role from Galaxy. It does not impact the actual GitHub repo. .. note:: The delete command in Ansible 2.0 requires using the Galaxy 2.0 Beta site. Use the ``--server`` option to access `https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com `_. You can also add a *server* definition in the [galaxy] section of your ansible.cfg file. Setup Travis Integrations -------------------------- Using the setup command you can enable notifications from `travis `_. The setup command expects that the user previously authenticated with Galaxy using the login command. :: $ ansible-galaxy setup travis github_user github_repo xxxtravistokenxxx Added integration for travis github_user/github_repo The setup command requires your Travis token. The Travis token is not stored in Galaxy. It is used along with the GitHub username and repo to create a hash as described in `the Travis documentation `_. The calculated hash is stored in Galaxy and used to verify notifications received from Travis. The setup command enables Galaxy to respond to notifications. Follow the `Travis getting started guide `_ to enable the Travis build process for the role repository. When you create your .travis.yml file add the following to cause Travis to notify Galaxy when a build completes: :: notifications: webhooks: https://galaxy.ansible.com/api/v1/notifications/ .. note:: The setup command in Ansible 2.0 requires using the Galaxy 2.0 Beta site. Use the ``--server`` option to access `https://galaxy-qa.ansible.com `_. You can also add a *server* definition in the [galaxy] section of your ansible.cfg file. List Travis Integrations ======================== Use the --list option to display your Travis integrations: :: $ ansible-galaxy setup --list ID Source Repo ---------- ---------- ---------- 2 travis github_user/github_repo 1 travis github_user/github_repo Remove Travis Integrations ========================== Use the --remove option to disable and remove a Travis integration: :: $ ansible-galaxy setup --remove ID Provide the ID of the integration you want disabled. Use the --list option to get the ID.