Difference between revisions of "Ansible playbooks"

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== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
* [[gather facts]]
 
* [[gather facts]]
 +
* {{ansible}}
  
 
[[Category:Server administration]]
 
[[Category:Server administration]]

Revision as of 10:57, 16 January 2020

Ansible playbooks[1] are written in YAML text files and define actions to execute against host/devices, check official Ansible playbook introduction: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/devel/user_guide/playbooks_intro.html

Task definitions or Playbooks

Task definitions are defined in text files, called playbooks in Ansible terminology, in YAML format. Execution of task definitions or playbooks are make using ansible-playbook command followed by your desired playbook to execute. Playbooks can also use Jinja templates to enable dynamic expressions and access to variables[2].

Ansible Playbook execution:

  • ansible-playbook my_new_created_playbook.yml
  • ansible-playbook my_new_created_playbook.yml -f 10 -f 10 parallelize 10 executions
-f forks

Create "Executable" Playbooks

Add the following line #!/usr/bin/env ansible-playbook at the beginning of your playbooks and make it executable chmod +x /path/to/your/playbook.yml to execute without calling ansible-playbook binary.

Ansible Playbooks Examples

Create a new file touch /tmp/test_file.txt, REMOTE_SERVER should be already present in your Ansible inventory:/etc/ansible/host

Playbook using module file[3]:

- hosts: REMOTE_SERVER_HOSTNAME
  tasks:
  - name: Ansible create a new file called test_fle.txt in /tmp directory
    file:
      path: "/tmp/test_file.txt"
      state: touch

Important Note: dash symbol (-) and indentation has to be properly formatted.

Variables

You can use variables in your playbooks, check official documentation for further information: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/devel/user_guide/playbooks_variables.html


Activities

  1. Read Ansible introduction to playbooks: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/devel/user_guide/playbooks_intro.html
  2. Review different options for running playbooks, including: --limit

See also


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