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526 lines
19 KiB
YAML
526 lines
19 KiB
YAML
#!/usr/bin/env ansible-playbook
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# ^ Trick: the above line can be used to make your play an executable
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# you also must add 'x' permissions to the file
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#
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# this file is based on phred's 'pedantically commented playbook'
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# https://github.com/phred/ansible-examples/blob/master/pedantically_commented_playbook.yml
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#
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---
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# ^^^ YAML documents can begin with the document separator "---"
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# and end with the "...", neither is needed for Ansible # as it does not
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# support multiple YAML documents per file, but some linters incorrectly insist
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# you must have it ....
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#
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# The '#' is a comment character, so any line starting with it will be ignored by Ansible.
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# Blank lines are ignored, so can be used # to create spacing to your taste.
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# Note about YAML: like Python, cares about whitespace, it requires actual spaces, tabs won't work.
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# Indent consistently throughout.
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# Two-space or four space indents is what most users prefer, but do whatever you like.
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#
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# If you're new to YAML, keep in mind that YAML documents, like XML
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# documents, represent a tree-like structure of nodes and text. More
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# familiar with JSON? Think of YAML as a strict (with spaces) but also more flexible
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# JSON (fewer significant characters, e.g., :, "", {}, [] and liberal quoting).
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# Also, JSON is a subset of YAML, so most YAML parser can read JSON just the same.
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#
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# The curious may read more about YAML at:
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# http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.1/current.html
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# there is a 1.2, but Ansible uses pyyaml which is mostly 1.1
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# the following line configures 'vim' to handle 2 space indents.
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# vim:ff=unix ts=2 sw=2 ai expandtab
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###
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# Notice the minus (-) on the line below, this is the start of a 'list' in YAML
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# In Ansible this is the 'list of plays' which starts this playbook.
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# Plays map the inventory hosts to the tasks, the most minimal play you can have
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# just requires 'hosts'
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- hosts: all
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###########
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# Play keyword: hosts
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# Required: yes
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# Description:
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# The selection of hosts (or host) that the tasks in this play play should apply to.
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#
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## Example values:
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# hosts: all -- applies to all hosts
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# hosts: host1 -- apply ONLY to the host that inventory defines as 'host1'
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# hosts: group1 -- apply to all hosts in group1
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# hosts: group1,group2 -- apply to hosts in group1 & group2
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# hosts: group1,host1 -- hosts in group1 AND host
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#
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## now using host patterns (TODO: url)
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# hosts: group1,!group3 -- hosts in group1 that are not in group3
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# hosts: group1,&group3 -- hosts in group1 that are also in group3
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# hosts: group1:&group3 -- same as above, but using : instead of , as separator
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# hosts: group1:!group2:&group3 -- hosts in group1 what are not in group2 but are also in group3
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#
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## Using a variable value for 'hosts'
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#
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# You can, in fact, set hosts to a variable, for example:
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#
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# hosts: '{{mygroups}}' -- apply to all hosts specified in the variable 'mygroups'
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#
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# This is handy for testing playbooks, running the same playbook against a
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# staging environment before running it against production, occasional
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# maintenance tasks, and other cases where you want to run the playbook
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# against just a few systems rather than a whole group.
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# Note that the variable cannot be set in inventory, since we need to know the hosts
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# before we can use inventory variables. So normally 'extra vars' are used, as you can
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# see below.
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#
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# If you set hosts as shown above, then you can specify which hosts to
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# apply the playbook to on each run as so:
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#
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# ansible-playbook playbook.yml --extra-vars="mygroups=staging"
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#
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# Use --extra-vars to set the variable to any combination of groups, hostnames,
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# or host patterns just like the examples in the previous section.
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#
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name: my heavily commented play
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###########
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# Play keyword: name
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# Default: play###
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# Required: no
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# Description: Just a description to document the play
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gather_facts: yes
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###########
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# Play keyword: gather_facts
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# Default: None
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# This controls if the play will trigger a 'fact gathering task' (aka 'gather_facts' or 'setup' action) to get information about the remote target.
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# These facts normally provide useful variables on which to base decisions and task inputs. For example `ansible_os_distribution` can tell us if
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# the target is a RHEL, Ubuntu or FreeBSD machine (among others), number of CPUs, RAM, etc.
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# TODO: url to fact gathering
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remote_user: login_user
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###########
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# Play keyword: user
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# Default: depends on connection plugin, for ssh it is 'current user executing Ansible'
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# Remote user to login on remote targets and 'normally' execute the tasks as
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become: True
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###########
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# Play keyword: become
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# Default: False
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# If True, always use privilege escalation to run tasks from this play, just like passing the
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# --become flag to ansible or ansible-playbook.
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become_user: root
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###########
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# Play keyword: become_user
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# Default: None
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# When using privilege escalation this is the user you 'become' after login with the remote_user
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# for example you login to the remote as 'login_user' then you 'become' root to execute the tasks
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become_method: sudo
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###########
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# Play keyword: become_method
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# Default: sudo
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# When using privilege escalation this chooses the become plugin to use for privilege escalation.
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# use `ansible-doc -t become -l` to list all the options.
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connection: ssh
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###########
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# Play keyword: connection
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# Default: ssh
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# This sets which connection plugin Ansible will use to try to communicate with the target host.
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# notable options are paramiko (python implementation of ssh, mostly useful in corner cases in which the ssh cli
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# does not work well with the target. Also 'local' which forces a 'local fork' to execute the task, but normally
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# what you really want is `delegate_to: localhost` see examples below in 'Run things locally!' entry.
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# use `ansible-doc -t connection -l` to list all the options.
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vars:
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###########
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# Play keyword: vars
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# Default: none
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# Mapping of variables defined for this play, normally for use in templates or as variables for tasks.
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# to get the value just use {{color}} to reference that value
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color: brown
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# Mapping structures allow complex variables structures, to use you can reference
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# the variable name with {{web['memcache']}} when using nested key value or {{web}}
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# when using the whole structure..
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web:
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memcache: 192.168.1.2
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httpd: apache
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# lists use a slightly different notation {{ mylist[1] }} to get 'b', they are 0 indexed.
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mylist:
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- a
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- b
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- c
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# Variables can be dynamically set via Jinja templates, to be filled when consumed.
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#
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# In this playbook, this will always evaluate to False, because 'color'
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# is set to 'brown' above.
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#
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# When ansible interprets the following, it will first expand 'color' to
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# 'brown' and then evaluate 'brown' == 'blue' as a Jinja expression.
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is_color_blue: "{{ color == 'blue' }}"
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# TODO: (url variables)
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vars_files:
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##########
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# Play keyword: vars_files
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# Specifies a list of YAML files to load variables from.
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#
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# Always evaluated after the 'vars' section, no matter which section
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# occurs first in the playbook. Examples are below.
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#
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# Example YAML for a file to be included by vars_files:
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# ---
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# monitored_by: phobos.mars.nasa.gov
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# fish_sticks: "good with custard"
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# ... # (END OF DOCUMENT)
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#
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# Remove the indentation & comments of course, the '---' should be at
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# the left margin in the variables file.
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#
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# Include a file from this absolute path
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- /srv/ansible/vars/vars_file.yml
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# Include a file from a path relative to this playbook
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- vars/vars_file.yml
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# By the way, variables set in 'vars' or as extra vars are available here.
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- vars/{{something}}.yml
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# It's also possible to pass an array of files, in which case
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# Ansible will loop over the array and include the first file that
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# exists. If none exist, ansible-playbook will halt with an error.
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#
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# An excellent way to handle platform-specific differences.
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- [ 'vars/{{platform}}.yml', vars/default.yml ]
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# Files in vars_files process in order, so later files can
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# provide more specific configuration:
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- [ 'vars/{{host}}.yml' ]
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# Hey, but if you're doing host-specific variable files, you might
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# consider setting the variable for a group in your inventory and
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# adding your host to that group. Just a thought.
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vars_prompt:
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##########
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# Play keyword: vars_prompt
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# A list of variables that Ansible will prompt for manual input each time this playbook
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# runs. Used for sensitive data and also things like release numbers that
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# vary on each deployment.
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#
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# Ansible won't prompts for this value if already provided, like when
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# passed through --extra-vars, but not from inventory.
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#
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# Also it won't prompt if it detects that it is a non interactive session.
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# For example, when called from cron.
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#
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- name: passphrase
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prompt: "Please enter the passphrase for the SSL certificate"
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private: yes
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# The input won't be echoed back to the terminal when private (default yes)
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# Not sensitive, but something that should vary on each playbook run.
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- name: release_version
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prompt: "Please enter a release tag"
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private: no
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# you can even have a default
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- name: package_version
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prompt: "Please enter a package version"
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default: '1.0'
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# You can find more advanced features in https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_prompts.html
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roles:
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##########
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# Play keyword: roles
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# Required: no
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# Description: A list of roles to import and execute in this play. Executes AFTER pre_tasks and play fact gathering, but before 'tasks'.
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# TODO url roles + url to 'play stages'
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tasks:
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##########
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# Play keyword: tasks
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# Required: no
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# Description: A list of tasks to perform in this play. Executes AFTER roles and before post_tasks
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# A simple task
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# Each task must have an action. 'name' is optional but very useful to document what the task does
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- name: Check that the target can execute Ansible tasks
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action: ping
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##########
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# Ansible modules do the work!, 'action' is not needed, you can use the 'action itself' as part of the task
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- file: path=/tmp/secret mode=0600 owner=root group=root
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#
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# Format 'action' like above:
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# <modulename>: <module parameters>
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#
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# Test your parameters using:
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# ansible -m <module> -a "<module parameters>"
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#
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# Documentation for the stock modules:
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# http://ansible.github.com/modules.html
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# normally most will want to use 'k: v' notation instead of 'k=v' used above (but useful for adhoc execution).
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# while both formats are mostly interchangable, `k: v` is more explicit, 'type friendly' and simpler to escape.
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- name: Ensure secret is locked down
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file:
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path: /tmp/secret
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mode: '0600'
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owner: root
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group: root
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# note that 'action options' are indented inside the option, while 'task keywords' stay on the top level
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##########
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# Use variables in the task! It expands on use.
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- name: Paint the server
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command: echo {{color}}
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# you can also define variables at the task level
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- name: Ensure secret is locked down
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file:
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path: '{{secret_file}}'
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mode: '0600'
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owner: root
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group: root
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vars:
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secret_file: /tmp/secret
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##########
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# Trigger handlers when things change!
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#
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# Most Ansible actions can detect and report when something changed.
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# Like if file permissions were not the same as requested,
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# a file's content is different or a package was installed (or removed)
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# When a change is reported, the task assumes the 'changed' status.
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# Ansible can optionally notify one or more Handlers.
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# Handlers are like normal tasks, the main difference is that they only
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# run when notified.
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# A common use is to restart a service after updating it's configuration file.
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# https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_intro.html#handlers-running-operations-on-change
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# TODO: explain handler per stage execution
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# This will call the "Restart Apache" handler whenever 'copy' alters
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# the remote httpd.conf.
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- name: Update the Apache config
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copy:
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src: httpd.conf
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dest: /etc/httpd/httpd.conf
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notify: Restart Apache
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# Here's how to specify more than one handler
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- name: Update our app's configuration
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copy:
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src: myapp.conf
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dest: /etc/myapp/production.conf
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notify:
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- Restart Apache
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- Restart Redis
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##########
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# Include tasks from another file!
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#
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# Ansible can insert a list of tasks from another file. The file
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# must represent a list of tasks, which is different than a play.
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#
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# Task list format:
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# ---
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# - name: create user
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# user: name={{myuser}} color={{color}}
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#
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# - name: add user to group
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# user: name={{myuser}} groups={{hisgroup}} append=true
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# ... # (END OF DOCUMENT)
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#
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# A 'tasks' YAML file represents a list of tasks. Don't use playbook
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# YAML for a 'tasks' file.
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#
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# Remove the indentation & comments of course, the '---' should be at
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# the left margin in the variables file.
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# TODO: point at import_playbook, includes and roles
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# In this example the user will be 'sklar'
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# and 'color' will be 'red' inside new_user.yml
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- import_tasks: tasks/new_user.yml
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vars:
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myuser: sklar
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color: red
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# In this example the user will be 'mosh'
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# and $color will be 'mauve' inside new_user.yml
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- import_tasks: tasks/new_user.yml
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vars:
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myuser: mosh
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color: mauve
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##########
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# Run a task on each thing in a list!
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#
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# Ansible provides a simple loop facility. If 'loop' is provided for
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# a task, then the task will be run once for each item in the provided
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# list. Each iteration will create the 'item' variable with a different value.
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- name: Create a file named via variable in /tmp
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file: path=/tmp/{{item}} state=touched
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loop:
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- tangerine
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- lemon
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- name: Loop using a variable
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file: path=/tmp/{{item}} state=touched
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loop: '{{mylist}}'
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vars:
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# defined here, but could be anywhere before the task runs
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# also note that YAML lists can be flush with their key,
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# we normally indent for clarity, but this form is also correct.
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mylist:
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- tangerine
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- lemon
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##########
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# Conditionally execute tasks!
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#
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# Sometimes you only want to run an action when a under certain conditions.
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# Ansible supports using conditional Jinja expression, executing the task only when 'True'.
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#
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# If you're trying to run an task only when a value changes,
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# consider rewriting the task as a handler and using 'notify' (see below).
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#
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- name: "shutdown all ubuntu"
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command: /sbin/shutdown -t now
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when: '{{is_ubuntu|bool}}'
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- name: "shutdown the if host is in the government"
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command: /sbin/shutdown -t now
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when: "{{inventory_hostname in groups['government']}}"
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# another way to write the same.
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- name: "shutdown the if host is in the government"
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command: /sbin/shutdown -t now
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when: "{{'government' in group_names}}"
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# Ansible has some built in variables, you can check them here (TODO url)
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# inventory_hostname is the name of the current host the task is executing for (derived from the hosts: keyword)
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# group_names has the list of groups the current host (inventory_hostname) is part of
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# groups is a mapping of the inventory groups with the list of hosts that belong to them
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##########
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# Run things as other users!
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#
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# Each task has optional keywords that control which
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# user a task should run as and whether or not to use privilege escalation
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# (like sudo or su) to switch to that user.
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- name: login in as postgres and dump all postgres databases
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shell: pg_dumpall -w -f /tmp/backup.psql
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remote_user: postgres
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become: False
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- name: login normally, but sudo to postgres to dump all postgres databases
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shell: pg_dumpall -w -f /tmp/backup.psql
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become: true
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become_user: postgres
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become_method: sudo
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##########
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# Run things locally!
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#
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# Each task can also be delegated to the control host
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- name: create tempfile
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local_action: shell dd if=/dev/urandom of=/tmp/random.txt count=100
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# which is equivalent to the following
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- name: create tempfile
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shell: dd if=/dev/urandom of=/tmp/random.txt count=100
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delegate_to: localhost
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# delegate_to can use any target, but for the case above, it is the same as using local_action
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# TODO url to delegation and implicit localhost
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handlers:
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##########
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# Play keyword: handlers
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# Required: no
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# Description:
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# Handlers are tasks that run when another task has changed something.
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# See above for examples on how to trigger them.
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# The format to define a handler is exactly the same as for tasks.
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# Note that if multiple tasks notify the same handler in a playbook run
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# that handler will only run once for that host.
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#
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# Handlers are referred to by name or using the listen keyword.
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# They will be run in the order declared in the playbook.
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# For example: if a task were to notify the handlers in reverse order like so:
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#
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# - task: ensure file does not exist
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# file:
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# name: /tmp/lock.txt
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# state: absent
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# notify:
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# - Restart application
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# - Restart nginx
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#
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# The "Restart nginx" handler will still run before the "Restart application"
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# handler because it is declared first in this playbook.
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# this one can only be called by name
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- name: Restart nginx
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service:
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name: nginx
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state: restarted
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|
|
|
# this one can be called by name or via any entry in the listen keyword
|
|
- name: redis restarter
|
|
service:
|
|
name: redis
|
|
state: restarted
|
|
listen:
|
|
- Restart redis
|
|
|
|
# Any module can be used for the handler action
|
|
# even though this can be triggered multiple ways and times
|
|
# it will only execute once per host
|
|
- name: restart application that should really be a service
|
|
command: /srv/myapp/restart.sh
|
|
listen:
|
|
- Restart application
|
|
- restart myapp
|
|
|
|
# It's also possible to include handlers from another file. Structure is
|
|
# the same as a tasks file, see the tasks section above for an example.
|
|
- import_tasks: handlers/site.yml
|
|
|
|
|
|
# NOTE: this is not a complete list of all possible keywords in a play or task (TODO: url playbook object and keywords), just an example of very common options.
|
|
|
|
# below is the "totally optional" YAML "End of document" marker.
|
|
...
|