I'm trying to create a playbook that will first modify another playbook, then run that modified version of the playbook. But import_playbook pre-processes, so the original playbook, not the modified, is run. Is there any way to tell Ansible to re-read this playbook? Note I am changing more that the hosts, but using this simple example.
- name: Change the playbook
hosts: localhost
connection: local
gather_facts: False
tasks:
- name: Change the playbook
lineinfile:
path: "my_playbook.yml"
regexp: "- hosts: some_group_name"
line: "- hosts: some_other_group_name"
- name: Include the playbook that was modified
import_playbook: my_playbook.yml
With proper organized inventory, group_vars, variables, templating and add_host or dynamic inventory, there is no need for self-modifying code (SMC).
Regarding
But import_playbook pre-processes, so the original playbook ...
you may have a look into What's the difference between include_tasks and import_tasks?.
Furthermore, there is no dynamic include_playbook.
I have a requirement to setup environment on multiple hosts. I need to read variables from a file and I want them to execute on a particular hosts or a set of hosts. I am unable to make out how can I use single task to achieve this?
Assuming I have a file which contains variables in a following format:
container_name: java1
container_hostname: java-mc1
script_location: /tmp
execute_on_hosts: host1,host2,host3
container_name: java2
container_hostname: java-mc2
script_location: /tmp
execute_on_hosts: host1
I want my task to read from this file and execute the task on specified hosts only by matching hostname in hosts section (provided in playbook).
You should read the Ansible Variables docs. Whilst you can probably get something to work, you are not really using Ansible the way it was intended.
Ansible fundamentally is built around the concept of 'plays'. Each play represents one or more tasks, that should be targetted at a host or group of hosts. Those plays are then packaged up into a 'playbook'. Ansible provides methods to organise variables in the 'Inventory'. A common approach would be to do something like:
/some/ansible/dir/hosts
[mc1_hosts]
host1
host2
host3
[mc2_hosts]
host1
/some/ansible/dir/group_vars/mc1_hosts
---
mc1_container_data:
container_name: java1
container_hostname: java-mc1
script_location: /tmp
/some/ansible/dir/group_vars/mc2_hosts
---
mc2_container_data:
container_name: java2
container_hostname: java-mc2
script_location: /tmp
/some/ansible/dir/playbook.yml
---
- hosts: mc1_hosts
tasks:
- name: Display variables
debug:
msg: "{{ mc1_container_data }}"
- name: Display container_name
msg: "{{ mc1_container_data.container_name }}"
- hosts: mc2_hosts
tasks:
- name: Display variables
debug:
msg: "{{ mc2_container_data }}"
- name: Display container_name
msg: "{{ mc2_container_data.container_name }}"
And finally ansible-playbook playbook.yml to run those tasks.
How can I declare global variable within Ansible playbook. I have searched in google and found the below solution, but its not working as expected.
- hosts: all
vars:
prod-servers:
- x.x.x.x
- x.x.x.x
- hosts: "{{prod-servers}}"
tasks:
- name: ping
action: ping
When I'm trying the above code, it says variable prod-servers is undefined.
You cannot define a variable accessible on a playbook level (global variable) from within a play.
Variable Scopes
Ansible has 3 main scopes:
Global: this is set by config, environment variables and the command line
Play: each play and contained structures, vars entries (vars; vars_files; vars_prompt), role defaults and vars.
Host: variables directly associated to a host, like inventory, include_vars, facts or registered task outputs
Anything you declare inside a play can thus only be either a play variable, or a (host) fact.
To define a variable, which you can use in the hosts declaration:
run ansible-playbook with --extra-vars option and pass the value in the argument;
or to achieve the same functionality (decide which hosts to run a play on, from within a preceding play):
define an in-memory inventory and run the subsequent play against that inventory.
what you seem to want is an inventory (http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/intro_inventory.html), it looks like you have an static list of IP's that may be prod servers (or dev, or whatever), therefore you can create an static inventory.
In your second play you want to use the list of IP's as hosts to run the tasks, that's not what Ansible expects. After the "hosts" keyword in a play declaration, Ansible expects a group name from the inventory.
If, on the opossite, your prod servers change from time to time, you may need to create a dynamic inventory. You can have a look at examples in https://github.com/ansible/ansible/tree/devel/contrib/inventory (for instance, there are examples of dynamic inventory based on EC2 from Amazon or vsphere)
regards
well, this can be done using
set_fact.
I don't know the best practice for this but this works for me
Here's my playbook example
- hosts: all
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- set_fact: host='hostname'
- hosts: host-name1
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- name: CheckHostName
shell: "{{ host }}"
register: output
- debug: msg="{{ output }}"
- hosts: host-name2
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- name: CheckHostName
shell: "{{ host }}"
register: output
- debug: msg="{{ output }}"
I'd like to pass a variable to an included Ansible playbook as follows:
---
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
vars:
my_group: foo
- include: site.yml hosts={{ my_group }}
Then, in site.yml...
---
- hosts: "{{ hosts }}"
...
Unfortunately, I get an error saying that my_group is undefined in site.yml. Ansible docs do say that:
Note that you cannot do variable substitution when including one playbook inside another.
Is this my case? Is there a way around it?
You can use this syntax, but my_group has to be defined at the global level. Now it's local to the first play - it's even clear from the indentation.
You can confirm this by running your playbook with --extra-vars my_group=foo.
But generally what you seem to want to achieve is done using in-memory inventory files and add_host module. Take this as an example:
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
vars:
target_host: foo
some_other_variable: bar
tasks:
- add_host:
name: "{{ target_host }}"
groups: dynamically_created_hosts
some_other_variable: "{{ some_other_variable }}"
- include: site.yml
with site.yml:
---
- hosts: dynamically_created_hosts
tasks:
- debug:
var: some_other_variable
I added some_other_variable to answer the question from your comment "how do I make a variable globally available from inside a play". It's not global, but it's passed to another play as a "hostvar".
From what I see (and I can't explain why) in Ansible >=2.1.1.0, there must be an inventory file specified for the dynamic in-memory inventory to work. In older versions it worked with Ansible executed ad hoc, without an inventory file, but now you must run ansible-playbook with -i inventory_file or have an inventory file defined through ansible.cfg.
This is a fragment of a playbook that I'm using (server.yml):
- name: Determine Remote User
hosts: web
gather_facts: false
roles:
- { role: remote-user, tags: [remote-user, always] }
My hosts file has different groups of servers, e.g.
[web]
x.x.x.x
[droplets]
x.x.x.x
Now I want to execute ansible-playbook -i hosts/<env> server.yml and override hosts: web from server.yml to run this playbook for [droplets].
Can I just override as a one time off thing, without editing server.yml directly?
Thanks.
I don't think Ansible provides this feature, which it should. Here's something that you can do:
hosts: "{{ variable_host | default('web') }}"
and you can pass variable_host from either command-line or from a vars file, e.g.:
ansible-playbook server.yml --extra-vars "variable_host=newtarget(s)"
For anyone who might come looking for the solution.
Play Book
- hosts: '{{ host }}'
tasks:
- debug: msg="Host is {{ ansible_fqdn }}"
Inventory
[web]
x.x.x.x
[droplets]
x.x.x.x
Command: ansible-playbook deplyment.yml -i hosts --extra-vars "host=droplets"
So you can specify the group name in the extra-vars
We use a simple fail task to force the user to specify the Ansible limit option, so that we don't execute on all hosts by default/accident.
The easiest way I found is this:
---
- name: Force limit
# 'all' is okay here, because the fail task will force the user to specify a limit on the command line, using -l or --limit
hosts: 'all'
tasks:
- name: checking limit arg
fail:
msg: "you must use -l or --limit - when you really want to use all hosts, use -l 'all'"
when: ansible_limit is not defined
run_once: true
Now we must use the -l (= --limit option) when we run the playbook, e.g.
ansible-playbook playbook.yml -l www.example.com
Limit option docs:
Limit to one or more hosts This is required when one wants to run a
playbook against a host group, but only against one or more members of
that group.
Limit to one host
ansible-playbook playbooks/PLAYBOOK_NAME.yml --limit "host1"
Limit to multiple hosts
ansible-playbook playbooks/PLAYBOOK_NAME.yml --limit "host1,host2"
Negated limit.
NOTE: Single quotes MUST be used to prevent bash
interpolation.
ansible-playbook playbooks/PLAYBOOK_NAME.yml --limit 'all:!host1'
Limit to host group
ansible-playbook playbooks/PLAYBOOK_NAME.yml --limit 'group1'
This is a bit late, but I think you could use the --limit or -l command to limit the pattern to more specific hosts. (version 2.3.2.0)
You could have
- hosts: all (or group)
tasks:
- some_task
and then ansible-playbook playbook.yml -l some_more_strict_host_or_pattern
and use the --list-hosts flag to see on which hosts this configuration would be applied.
An other solution is to use the special variable ansible_limit which is the contents of the --limit CLI option for the current execution of Ansible.
- hosts: "{{ ansible_limit | default(omit) }}"
If the --limit option is omitted, then Ansible issues a warning, but does nothing since no host matched.
[WARNING]: Could not match supplied host pattern, ignoring: None
PLAY ****************************************************************
skipping: no hosts matched
I'm using another approach that doesn't need any inventory and works with this simple command:
ansible-playbook site.yml -e working_host=myhost
To perform that, you need a playbook with two plays:
first play runs on localhost and add a host (from given variable) in a known group in inmemory inventory
second play runs on this known group
A working example (copy it and runs it with previous command):
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
tasks:
- add_host:
name: "{{ working_host }}"
groups: working_group
changed_when: false
- hosts: working_group
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "I'm on {{ ansible_host }}"
I'm using ansible 2.4.3 and 2.3.3
I changed mine to default to no host and have a check to catch it. That way the user or cron is forced to provide a single host or group etc. I like the logic from the comment from #wallydrag. The empty_group contains no hosts in the inventory.
- hosts: "{{ variable_host | default('empty_group') }}"
Then add the check in tasks:
tasks:
- name: Fail script if required variable_host parameter is missing
fail:
msg: "You have to add the --extra-vars='variable_host='"
when: (variable_host is not defined) or (variable_host == "")
Just came across this googling for a solution. Actually, there is one in Ansible 2.5. You can specify your inventory file with --inventory, like this: ansible --inventory configs/hosts --list-hosts all
If you want to run a task that's associated with a host, but on different host, you should try delegate_to.
In your case, you should delegate to your localhost (ansible master) and calling ansible-playbook command
I am using ansible 2.5 (2.5.3 exactly), and it seems that the vars file is loaded before the hosts param is executed. So you can set the host in a vars.yml file and just write hosts: {{ host_var }} in your playbook
For example, in my playbook.yml:
---
- hosts: "{{ host_name }}"
become: yes
vars_files:
- vars/project.yml
tasks:
...
And inside vars/project.yml:
---
# general
host_name: your-fancy-host-name
Here's a cool solution I came up to safely specify hosts via the --limit option. In this example, the play will end if the playbook was executed without any hosts specified via the --limit option.
This was tested on Ansible version 2.7.10
---
- name: Playbook will fail if hosts not specified via --limit option.
# Hosts must be set via limit.
hosts: "{{ play_hosts }}"
connection: local
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- set_fact:
inventory_hosts: []
- set_fact:
inventory_hosts: "{{inventory_hosts + [item]}}"
with_items: "{{hostvars.keys()|list}}"
- meta: end_play
when: "(play_hosts|length) == (inventory_hosts|length)"
- debug:
msg: "About to execute tasks/roles for {{inventory_hostname}}"
This worked for me as I am using Azure devops to deploy an application using CICD pipelines. I had to make this hosts (in yml file) more dynamic so in release pipeline I can add it's value, for example:
--extra-vars "host=$(target_host)"
pipeline_variable
My ansible playbook looks like this
- name: Apply configuration to test nodes
hosts: '{{ host }}'