The results of this can be used to create dynamic groups of hosts that match particular critera, see the :doc:`modules` documentation on 'group_by' for details, as well as in generalized conditional statements as discussed in the `playbook_conditionals` chapter.
If you know you don't need any fact data about your hosts, and know everything about your systems centrally, you
can turn off fact gathering. This has advantages in scaling Ansible in push mode with very large numbers of
systems, mainly, or if you are using Ansible on experimental platforms. In any play, just do this::
- hosts: whatever
gather_facts: no
Local Facts (Facts.d)
`````````````````````
..versionadded:: 1.3
As discussed in the playbooks chapter, Ansible facts are a way of getting data about remote systems for use in playbook variables.
Usually these are discovered automatically by the 'setup' module in Ansible. Users can also write custom facts modules, as described
in the API guide. However, what if you want to have a simple way to provide system or user
provided data for use in Ansible variables, without writing a fact module? For instance, what if you want users to be able to control some aspect about how their systems are managed? "Facts.d" is one such mechanism.
If a remotely managed system has an "/etc/ansible/facts.d" directory, any files in this directory
ending in ".fact", can be JSON, INI, or executable files returning JSON, and these can supply local facts in Ansible.
For instance assume a /etc/ansible/facts.d/preferences.fact::
[general]
asdf=1
bar=2
This will produce a hash variable fact named "general" with 'asdf' and 'bar' as members.
To validate this, run the following::
ansible <hostname> -m setup -a "filter=ansible_local"
And you will see the following fact added::
"ansible_local": {
"preferences": {
"general": {
"asdf" : "1",
"bar" : "2"
}
}
}
And this data can be accessed in a template/playbook as::
{{ ansible_local.preferences.general.asdf }}
The local namespace prevents any user supplied fact from overriding system facts
Additionally, *group_names* is a list (array) of all the groups the current host is in. This can be used in templates using Jinja2 syntax to make template source files that vary based on the group membership (or role) of the host::
{% if 'webserver' in group_names %}
# some part of a configuration file that only applies to webservers
{% endif %}
*groups* is a list of all the groups (and hosts) in the inventory. This can be used to enumerate all hosts within a group.
For example::
{% for host in groups['app_servers'] %}
# something that applies to all app servers.
{% endfor %}
A frequently used idiom is walking a group to find all IP addresses in that group::
An example of this could include pointing a frontend proxy server to all of the app servers, setting up the correct firewall rules between servers, etc.
Just a few other 'magic' variables are available... There aren't many.
Additionally, *inventory_hostname* is the name of the hostname as configured in Ansible's inventory host file. This can
be useful for when you don't want to rely on the discovered hostname `ansible_hostname` or for other mysterious
reasons. If you have a long FQDN, *inventory_hostname_short* also contains the part up to the first
period, without the rest of the domain.
Don't worry about any of this unless you think you need it. You'll know when you do.
Also available, *inventory_dir* is the pathname of the directory holding Ansible's inventory host file, *inventory_file* is the pathname and the filename pointing to the Ansible's inventory host file.
Variable File Separation
````````````````````````
It's a great idea to keep your playbooks under source control, but
you may wish to make the playbook source public while keeping certain
important variables private. Similarly, sometimes you may just
want to keep certain information in different files, away from
the main playbook.
You can do this by using an external variables file, or files, just like this::
---
- hosts: all
remote_user: root
vars:
favcolor: blue
vars_files:
- /vars/external_vars.yml
tasks:
- name: this is just a placeholder
command: /bin/echo foo
This removes the risk of sharing sensitive data with others when
sharing your playbook source with them.
The contents of each variables file is a simple YAML dictionary, like this::
---
# in the above example, this would be vars/external_vars.yml
somevar: somevalue
password: magic
..note::
It's also possible to keep per-host and per-group variables in very
similar files, this is covered in :ref:`patterns`.
Passing Variables On The Command Line
`````````````````````````````````````
In addition to `vars_prompt` and `vars_files`, it is possible to send variables over
the Ansible command line. This is particularly useful when writing a generic release playbook
where you may want to pass in the version of the application to deploy::
The key=value form is obviously simpler, but it's there if you need it!
As of Ansible 1.3, extra vars can be loaded from a JSON file with the "@" syntax::
--extra-vars "@some_file.json"
Also as of Ansible 1.3, extra vars can be formatted as YAML, either on the command line
or in a file as above.
Conditional Imports
```````````````````
.. note: this behavior is infrequently used in Ansible. You may wish to skip this section. The 'group_by' module as described in the module documentation is a better way to achieve this behavior in most cases.
Sometimes you will want to do certain things differently in a playbook based on certain criteria.
Having one playbook that works on multiple platforms and OS versions is a good example.
As an example, the name of the Apache package may be different between CentOS and Debian,
but it is easily handled with a minimum of syntax in an Ansible Playbook::