It can be controlled via a user's /.ssh/config, via remoteuser in Ansible or through the Ansible inventory. This has changed drastically between Ansible versions pre-2.0 and post 2.0 Follow this link to see how this can be done. Next Ansible – Installing Ansible Next Search All Categories ads Ansible Apache Web Server AWS AWS-CSA-Associate c# CentOS Consul Docker git Golang Jenkins Kubernetes Linux Networking OSX Other PostgreSQL PowerShell Puppet Python Rails RedHat RHCE RHCSA rspec-puppet Ruby Rubygems Tutorials Uncategorized Vagrant Vault Virtualbox WIX Wordpress. How To Run Multiple SSH Command. Run date and hostname commands: $ ssh user@host 'date && hostname' You can run sudo command as follows on a remote box called server1.cyberciti.biz. I am using Ansible and I have this configuration in my inventory/all: master 192.168.1.10 ansibleconnection=ssh ansiblesshuser=vagrant ansiblesshpass=vagrant slave 192.168.1.11. MELPA (Milkypostman’s Emacs Lisp Package Archive). Up-to-date packages built on our servers from upstream source; Installable in any Emacs with 'package.el' - no local version-control tools needed.
The basic syntax consists of ansible
then the host group from hosts
to run against, -m <MODULE_NAME>
, and optionally providing arguments via -a 'OPT_ARGS'
Simple Modules
Ping hosts
Display gathered facts
Filter gathered facts
Advanced Modules
Copy SSH key manually
Modify file using lineinfile
There are multiple ways to control which user account is used when executing Ansible. It can be controlled via a user's ~/.ssh/config
, via remote_user
in Ansible or through the Ansible inventory.
This has changed drastically between Ansible versions pre-2.0 and post 2.0
Follow this link to see how this can be done.
When running from the command line, one can just specify which user account to run against directly. Please note that specifying a user can sometime conflict with a user defined in /etc/ansible/hosts
Specifying a user:
Using a specific SSH
private key:
Variables can be pesky, but sometimes are required to be passed in via the CLI. Any variable can be set via the command line. Often the command line is the be all, end all in variable overrides.
Passing arguments:
When writing Ansible, sometimes it is tedious to make a change in a playbook
or task
, then run the playbook
It can sometimes be very helpful to run a module directly as shown above, but only against a single development host.
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
Limit to multiple hosts
Negated limit. NOTE: Single quotes MUST be used to prevent bash interpolation.
Limit to host group
Osx Enable Disk Encryption
Limiting Tasks with Tags
Limit to all tags matching install
Skip any tag matching sudoers
Busted Cache
Sometimes Ansible has a tendency to hold on to variables too long, which causes Ansible to think that a task/operation had already been done or changed when in fact it didn't.
A simple fix is to flush the redis
cache during a code execution.
This can be done like this:
Check for bad syntax
One can check to see if code contains any syntax errors by running the playbook.
Check for bad syntax:
Running a playbook in dry-run mode
Sometimes it can be useful to see what Ansible might do, but without actually changing anything.
One can run in dry-run mode like this:
Modules
Sometimes Ansible just can't cut performing a task using the built-in modules. Raw module to the rescue!
Using raw
module to run command similar to running directly via SSH
:
Other times, Ansible's modules either aren't well defined yet, or simply do not exist. This is a use case for using shell
and command
modules. More information for shell and command modules.
The main differences between the two comes down to what kind of command one wishes to run. If the command uses IO redirection of ANY sort, use shell
. If the command only contains CLI flags, command
module will suffice.
Checking Redis
Command reference: http://redis.io/commands
Sometimes it may be neccessary to manually check Redis for gathered facts from a remote host. Redis is the default back-end for Ansible and usually is running as a server under 127.0.0.1
. One can check Redis by performing the following steps:
- Log in to Ansible controller, if Ansible is not running on your local machine
Login to Redis
redis-cli
List all stored entries for Ansible
KEYS ansible*
Find the entry for the remote host and display the gathered facts for that host
MGET 'ansible_factsXXX.XXX.XXX.XXX'
Exit Redis
quit
Manually flushing controller's redis cache
Running Redis on OS X as a daemon
Write your own module
There is a wealth of modules available, and writing your own should only be done as an absolute last resort.
Osx Ansible Ec2
If you still wish to write your own, take a look at the docs here: http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/developing_modules.html