I am writing a playbook to create a user if it does not exist. If it exist then it ask again for a new username. It must ask again for new user input. But var_promt runs only one time. How can I do that?
- name: An example prompting playbook
hosts: all
vars_prompt:
- name: username
prompt: "Enter a username"
tasks:
- name: Print out your input
debug:
msg: "You provided the {{ username }} for the prompt"
- name: User Exist
command: grep {{ username }} /etc/passwd
ignore_errors: yes
register: user_exist
- name: User Existance output
debug: var=user_exist.stdout
- name: User creation
user: name={{ username }}
when: user_exist.stdout is not match(".*:.*:.*:.*::.*:")
- name: Display Message
debug:
msg: "User {{ username }} already exists"
when: user_exist.stdout is match(".*:.*:.*:.*::.*:")
- name: User check
command: id {{ username }}
ignore_errors: yes
register: ID
- name: UserID of Username
debug: var=ID.stdout
name: An example prompting playbook
hosts: localhost
vars_files:
/root/users.yml
tasks:
name: Create deploy user
user:
name: "{{ item.name }}"
shell: "{{ item.shell }}"
password: "{{ lookup('password', '/tmp/{{ item.name }}.txt chars=ascii_letters') | password_hash('sha512') }}"
createhome: yes
groups: "{{ item.groups }}"
update_password: on_create
with_items: "{{ users }}"
Related
I have the following user lists in separated files.
The idea behind this is to create multiple users and assign them to different user groups.
To make it easier, I shortened the list. I reality they include passwords and etc.
First variables file
userlist-os:
group: os
users:
- comment: Test User
username: ostest1
user_id: 9404
user_state: present
- comment: Test User
username: ostest2
user_id: 9405
user_state: present
Second variables file
userlist-zos:
group: zos
users:
- comment: Test User1
username: zostest1
user_id: 9204
user_state: present
- comment: Test User2
username: zostest2
user_id: 9205
user_state: present
This is how my playbook looks like:
- name: test
hosts: all
user: root
vars_files:
- [userlist-zos.yml]
- [userlist-os.yml]
tasks:
- name: Create user accounts
user:
name: "{{ item.users.username }}"
update_password: on_create
uid: "{{ item.users.user_id }}"
shell: /bin/bash
create_home: yes
group: "{{ item.group }}"
state: present
comment: "{{ item.users.comment }}"
when: item.users.user_state == 'present'
with_items:
- "{{ userlist-os }}"
- "{{ userlist-zos }}"
The problem is that I'm not getting into the sub elements of users(variable username is undefined), but when I set an index like this name: "{{ item.users.0.username }}" I do get the first username from each file.
Any help is appreciated.
In your scenario, item.users are lists of users, they are not dictionaries. Therefore they don't have username field, they have list elements which have that field instead. You were able to access to first element of the list with "item.users.0.username". What I suggest you to do is to access these nested variables with an include_task variable as follows:
main.yaml
- name: Trial
hosts: localhost
vars:
# YOUR VARS
tasks:
- name: Create user accounts
include_tasks: helper.yml
with_items:
- "{{ userlistos }}"
- "{{ userlistzos }}"
loop_control:
loop_var: list
helper.yml
- name: Create user accounts
user:
name: "{{ item.username }}"
update_password: on_create
uid: "{{ item.user_id }}"
shell: /bin/bash
create_home: yes
group: "{{ list.group }}"
state: present
comment: "{{ item.comment }}"
when: item.user_state == 'present'
with_items:
- "{{list.users}}"
I have a list of users and I only want to create those, which do not exist on the system.
This is what I have tried:
- name: Connection to Unix server
hosts: localhost
vars:
USER_ID_details:
- user_id: my_user1
groups: wheel
real_full_name: my_user_name1
affected_host: localhost
email_id: my_user1#ibm.com
- user_id: my_user2
groups: wheel
real_full_name: my_user_name2
affected_host: localhost
email_id: my_user2#ibm.com
tasks:
- name: check for the ID is present
#shell: "id {{ item.user_id }}"
shell: grep "{{ item.user_id }}" /etc/passwd | awk -F":" '{print $1}'
loop: "{{ USER_ID_details }}"
ignore_errors: true
register: id_check
- name: setting var
set_fact:
user_id_names1: "{{ user_id_names1|default([]) + [item.stdout] }}"
with_items: "{{ id_check.results }}"
when: item.stdout != ""
- debug: var=user_id_names1
- block:
- name: create Linux user as per specification
user:
name: "{{ item.user_id }}"
password: "{{ pass_reg.stdout_lines[0] | password_hash('sha512') }}"
group: "{{ group_name }}"
groups: "{{ item.groups }}"
comment: "{{ comment }}"
shell: "{{ user_shell }}"
#uid: "{{ uid_num.item }}"
home: "/home/{{ item.user_id}}"
loop: "{{ USER_ID_details }}"
when:
- os_type == "RedHat"
- "{{ item.user_id }} not {{id_check.results}}"
What could be the best way to check if user exists, and only add those, that don't exist on server. I'm trying to check the user_id_names1 list of ids generated against list dictionary USER_ID_details and filter the existing ones.
As Vladimir Botka stated on the comment, ansible does that already. Most modules (including the user module) will ensure that the state you specify will be present on the machine, after ansible ran.
For example, if you specify that a certain user exists on the system, it will after you ran the playbook. It will be created if it didn't exist before, but it will not be added, if it already existed.
The catch is, that ansible will try to create the state you specified, possibly changing your existing users.
For example, let's assume your user already exists, but has changed the default shell to /bin/zsh while in your playbook you specify, that it should have /bin/bash. In that case, ansible will change the default shell to /bin/bash whenever you run your playbook.
If you don't care about existing users being modified (or you are sure they never will be) you can just run the user module for all users every time, as users will not be added twice.
Otherwise you can do this to check if a user exists and only add it if it does not:
tasks:
- name: get list of existing users
getent:
database: passwd
- name: get list of existing usernames
set_fact:
existing_users: "{{ ansible_facts.getent_passwd.keys() | list }}"
- name: create Linux user as per specification
user:
name: "{{ item.user_id }}"
password: "{{ pass_reg.stdout_lines[0] | password_hash('sha512') }}"
group: "{{ group_name }}"
groups: "{{ item.groups }}"
comment: "{{ comment }}"
shell: "{{ user_shell }}"
home: "/home/{{ item.user_id}}"
loop: "{{ USER_ID_details }}"
when: item.user_id not in existing_users
Make sure to read the documentation of the user module and that you understand what all the options do.
For example, the password option will set the password of that user to the specified value. If the user changed his password, you will change it back every time you run the playbook. Set update_password: on_create to prevent that.
You are also setting the primary group of all users to the same value (in group_name). Make sure that is what you actually want to do.
#toydarian Used below method too when i didnot know about the getent option.
- name: check for the ID is present
#shell: "id {{ item.user_id }}"
shell: grep "{{ item.user_id }}" /etc/passwd | awk -F":" '{print $1}'
loop: "{{ USER_ID_details }}"
ignore_errors: true
register: id_check
- name: setting var
set_fact:
user_id_names1: "{{ user_id_names1|default([]) + [item.stdout] }}"
with_items: "{{ id_check.results }}"
when: item.stdout != ""
- debug: var=user_id_names1
- name: create Linux user as per specification
user:
name: "{{ item.user_id }}"
password: "{{ pass_reg.stdout_lines[0] | password_hash('sha512') }}"
group: "{{ group_name }}"
groups: "{{ item.groups }}"
comment: "{{ item.real_full_name }}"
shell: "{{ user_shell }}"
#uid: "{{ uid_num.item }}"
home: "/home/{{ item.user_id}}"
loop: "{{ USER_ID_details }}"
when:
- os_type == "RedHat"
- item.user_id not in user_id_names1
I am using an Ansible playbook to manage users (taken from https://keksi.io/tutorials/2016/12/05/how-to-manage-remote-server-users-with-ansible/):
vars/users.yml file (users, user to group assignments, passwords, SSH keys):
---
users:
- username: user1
comment: "User 1"
group: admin
password: "sha password"
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
admin: yes
- username: user2
comment: "User 2"
group: users
groups: deployer
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
- username: user3
[...]
And this is the playbook:
- hosts: all
become: true
tasks:
- include_vars: ../vars/users.yml
- name: Install sudo
apt: name=sudo state=present
- name: Add the group admin
group:
name: admin
state: present
- name: Create users
user:
name: "{{ item.username }}"
comment: "{{ item.comment | default('User {{item.username}}') }}"
password: "{{ item.password | default('!') }}"
state: "{{ item.state | default('present') }}"
shell: "{{ item.shell | default('/bin/bash') }}"
group: "{{ item.group | default('users') }}"
when: item.username is defined
with_items: '{{ users }}'
- name: Setup administrator users with complete sudo access
user: name={{ item.username }} groups=sudo append=yes
with_items: '{{ users }}'
when: item.admin is defined and item.admin == True
- name: Add SSH-keys to users
authorized_key:
user: "{{ item.0.username }}"
key: "{{ item.1 }}"
with_subelements:
- "{{ users }}"
- keys.active
- flags:
skip_missing: True
when: item.0.state is not defined or item.0.state != "absent"
- name: Remove old SSH-keys from users
authorized_key:
user: "{{ item.0.username }}"
key: "{{ item.1 }}"
state: absent
with_subelements:
- "{{ users }}"
- keys.disabled
- flags:
skip_missing: True
when: item.0.state is not defined or item.0.state != "absent"
I can correctly execute this playbook on all servers and have admin and normal users created and managed on them.
Now I want to add a new step. I have several servers, and not every users should be configured on every server, and some users should be in an additional group only on some servers (for example developers on developing servers).
So I wish to create some assignments for users on hosts or host groups, something like:
- host: host1
admins:
- user1
- user2
deployers:
- user2
- user3
users:
- user4
- user5
- host: hostgroup1
admins:
- user2
users:
- user3
- user5
So I would like to be able to execute the playbook on all servers to have users created or updated based on this declarations, without writing a duplication of the playbook for every host.
I don't have any idea about how to achieve this, could you help me please?
Edit: I tried to add a new "hosts" key in my users.yml variable file, this way:
---
users:
- username: user1
comment: "User 1"
group: admin
password: "sha password"
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
admin: yes
- username: user2
comment: "User 2"
group: users
groups: deployer
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
hosts:
user:
- host1
- host2
deployer:
- host3
And I modified the task this way:
- name: Create users
user:
name: "{{ item.username }}"
comment: "{{ item.comment | default('User {{item.username}}') }}"
password: "{{ item.password | default('!') }}"
state: "{{ item.state | default('present') }}"
shell: "{{ item.shell | default('/bin/bash') }}"
group: "{{ item.group | default('users') }}"
with_items: '{{ users }}'
when: item.username is defined and ((item.admin is defined and item.admin == True) or (item.hosts is defined and item.hosts.user is defined and inventory_hostname in item.hosts.user)
My explanation: I need to create the user if it's admin (so it must be created on every host or if the current host's inventory_hostname is listed into one of the hosts subkeys arrays (in a second step I wish to extend this check also if the current host is in an hostgroup listed in one of item.hosts subkeys.
The problem is that this way user1 is created (because item.admin is True) but user2 not because the other condition is always False.
You could use host_vars or group_vars to store the users data instead of vars/users.yml
When you run the playbook against multiple hosts the appropriate values for each host or group member will be read from the related group_vars or host_cars file
See here for more information: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/intro_inventory.html#splitting-out-host-and-group-specific-data
I am trying to check if inventory_hostname is in a list into an imported variable.
vars/users.yml file:
---
users:
- username: user1
comment: "User 1"
group: admin
password: "sha password"
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
admin: yes
- username: user2
comment: "User 2"
group: users
groups: deployer
keys:
active:
- "ssh-rsa etc"
hosts:
user:
- host1
- host2
deployer:
- host3
I want to execute a task only if inventory_hostname is into any of hosts lists (user, deployer, others ...).
I tried this:
- name: Create users
user:
name: "{{ item.username }}"
comment: "{{ item.comment | default('User {{item.username}}') }}"
password: "{{ item.password | default('!') }}"
state: "{{ item.state | default('present') }}"
shell: "{{ item.shell | default('/bin/bash') }}"
group: "{{ item.group | default('users') }}"
with_items: '{{ users }}'
when: item.username is defined and ((item.admin is defined and item.admin == True) or (item.hosts is defined and item.hosts.user is defined and inventory_hostname in item.hosts.user)
It works for user1 (which have admin enabled) but not for user2 (if this play is executed on host1 which is included into user2's hosts.user list).
Well .. I tried your code snippet and it works well for both users. Only thing which can make it fail is that hostnames in item.host.user are not matching the inventory_hostname. You can try to debug the inventory_hostname before this task to see what are the inventory hostnames read by ansible and whether you have specified them correctly in item.host.user list.
- debug: var=inventory_hostname
How can I solve problem with run ansible role below? If a user doesn't exist on the remote server, ansible gets me the error "Failed to lookup user test1: 'getpwnam(): name not found: test1". I need manage multiple users on multiple servers. Thanks
vars:
user_list:
- user: test1
state: present
path: /usr/local/test1/.ssh/authoried_keys
keys:
- "ssh-rsa test1"
- user: test2
state: absent
path: /home/test2/.ssh/authoried_keys
keys:
- "ssh-rsa test2"
tasks:
- name: Manage SSH-keys
authorized_key:
user: "{{ item.0.user }}"
key: "{{ item.1 }}"
path: "{{ item.0.path }}"
state: "{{ item.0.state }}"
with_subelements:
- '{{ user_list }}'
- keys
CentOS Linux 7, Ansible 2.4.2.0
Perhaps you could check the existing users through ansible's wrapper for getent?
It feels a bit simpler and you don't need to use the shell module:
tasks:
- name: Get existing users
getent:
database: passwd
- name: Disable expired users
user:
name: "{{ item.name }}"
shell: /sbin/nologin
with_items:
- "{{ users_removed }}"
when: item.name in getent_passwd.keys()
Note though that as #techraf points out, at production environments you should always aim at declaring and knowing beforehand which users should and shouldn't be present :)
I think, that I solved my problem.
tasks:
- name: Check for users
shell: cat /etc/passwd | cut -f1 -d":"
register: sshkeys_users
changed_when: False
- name: Manage SSH-keys
authorized_key:
user: "{{ item.0.user }}"
key: "{{ item.1 }}"
path: "{{ item.0.path }}"
state: "{{ item.0.state }}"
with_subelements:
- '{{ user_list }}'
- keys
when: sshkeys_users is defined and item.0.user in sshkeys_users.stdout_lines