The Ansible plugin enables you to configure Cloudify resources with Ansible and provides an agentless method for executing operations on remote hosts.
Similar to the Script Plugin and the Fabric Plugin, there is no one node type associated with the Ansible plugin. Instead, you modify existing node types to perform one or more of their lifecycle operations using the Ansible plugin and any additional inputs that you provide.
Ansible Playbook Executor Node uses
ansible.cloudify_ansible.tasks.run as start
action.
Properties:
site_yaml_path
: A path to yoursite.yaml
ormain.yaml
in your Ansible Playbook.sources
: Your Inventory sources. Either YAML or a path to a file. If not provided the inventory will be take from thesources
runtime property.run_data
: Variable values.options_config
: Command-line options, such astags
orskip_tags
.ansible_env_vars
: A dictionary of environment variables to set. Default is{"ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING": "False"}
.debug_level
: Debug level.
NOTE there is a special handling for "ANSIBLE_FACT_PATH" environment variable, where you could add custom .fact
files -which could be executable that Ansible expect JSON on stdout. If you include files that are not executable and simply contain raw JSON then Ansible will just read them and use the data inside - when gather facts is triggered they will be part of runtime_properties.facts.ansible_local.{fact_file_name}
For example you could do something like this inside your playbook:
- hosts: all
connection: local
tasks:
- name: "Set fact: output dictionary"
set_fact:
output_dict:
just_a_test: "my value from ansible gathered fact !!"
- name: "Creates facts directory if it doesn't exist"
file:
path: "{{ lookup('ansible.builtin.env', 'ANSIBLE_FACT_PATH') }}"
state: directory
- name: "Insert custom fact file"
copy:
content: "{{ output_dict | to_nice_json }}"
dest: "{{ lookup('ansible.builtin.env', 'ANSIBLE_FACT_PATH') }}/custom.fact"
mode: 0644
Execute the equivalent of ansible-playbook
on the Ansible Playbook provided
in the site_yaml_path
input.
Inputs:
site_yaml_path
: A path to yoursite.yaml
ormain.yaml
in your Ansible Playbook.sources
: Your Inventory sources. Either YAML or a path to a file. If not provided the inventory will be take from thesources
runtime property.run_data
: Variable values.options_config
: Command-line options, such astags
orskip_tags
.ansible_env_vars
: A dictionary of environment variables to set.debug_level
: Debug level, Default is 2.
In addition, you can provide additional key-word args parameters to the
AnsiblePlaybookFromFile
class, such as options_config
.
There are also two methods for generating the sources parameter automatically, see using compute nodes and Relationships.
For all inventory sources, we require these parameters:
ansible_host
: The hostname or IP address of the host to SSH into.ansible_user
: The username to SSH with.ansible_ssh_private_key_file
: The private key file to SSH with.
In addition, we handle these parameters if provided (and highly recommend them):
ansible_become
: A boolean value,true
orfalse
whether to assume the user privileges.ansible_ssh_common_args
: Additional arguments to the SSH command like, we suggest,'-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
.
For more information on the sources format in YAML, see Ansible Inventory YAML.
If your operation is mapped on the lifecycle operation of a node template
derived from cloudify.nodes.Compute
, we will attempt to generate the sources
parameter from the node properties.
Provision some component on a VM.
compute_and_component:
type: cloudify.nodes.Compute
properties:
ip: { get_input: ip }
agent_config:
install_method: none
key: { get_input: private_key_path }
user: { get_input: username }
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
start:
implementation: ansible.cloudify_ansible.tasks.run
inputs:
site_yaml_path: resources/component/site.yaml
Use the cloudify.ansible.relationships.connected_to_host
relationship defined
in the plugin to populate the sources parameter, if the target node is derived
from cloudify.nodes.Compute
.
Inputs:
group_name
: Ansible node group namehostname
: Hostnamehost_config
: Host configuration:ansible_host
: The hostname or IP address of the host to SSH into.ansible_user
: The username to SSH with.ansible_ssh_private_key_file
: The private key file to SSH with.ansible_become
: A boolean value,true
orfalse
whether to assume the user privileges.ansible_ssh_common_args
: Additional arguments to the SSH command, by default: '-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
component:
type: cloudify.nodes.Root
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
start:
implementation: ansible.cloudify_ansible.tasks.run
inputs:
site_yaml_path: resources/component/site.yaml
sources: { get_attribute: [ SELF, sources ] }
relationships:
- type: cloudify.ansible.relationships.connected_to_host
target: compute
compute:
type: cloudify.nodes.Compute
properties:
ip: { get_input: ip }
agent_config:
install_method: none
key: { get_input: private_key_path }
user: { get_input: username }
Basic usage with no special node or relationship type behavior.
my_node:
type: cloudify.nodes.Root
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
create:
implementation: ansible.cloudify_ansible.tasks.run
inputs:
site_yaml_path: resources/my_ansible_playbook/site.yaml
sources:
webservers:
hosts:
web:
ansible_host: { get_input: ip }
ansible_user: { get_input: username }
ansible_ssh_private_key_file: { get_input: private_key_path }
ansible_become: true
ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
Passing run_data
at runtime:
component:
type: cloudify.nodes.Root
interfaces:
cloudify.interfaces.lifecycle:
create:
implementation: ansible.cloudify_ansible.tasks.run
inputs:
site_yaml_path: resources/my_ansible_playbook/site.yaml
sources:
foo_group:
hosts:
foo_host:
ansible_host: { get_input: ip }
ansible_user: { get_input: username }
ansible_ssh_private_key_file: { get_input: private_key_path }
ansible_become: true
ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
run_data:
foo: bar
For official blueprint examples using this Cloudify plugin, please see Cloudify Community Blueprints Examples.