1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/ansible-collections/community.general.git synced 2024-09-14 20:13:21 +02:00
community.general/docs/proposals/publish-subscribe.md

206 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# Publish / Subscribe for Handlers
*Author*: René Moser <@resmo>
*Date*: 07/03/2016
## Motivation
In some use cases a publish/subscribe kind of event to run a handler is more convenient, e.g. restart services after replacing SSL certs.
However, ansible does not provide a built-in way to handle it yet.
### Problem
If your SSL cert changes, you usually have to reload/restart services to use the new certificate.
However, If you have a ssl role or a generic ssl play, you usually don't want to add specific handlers to it.
Instead it would be much more convenient to use a publish/subscribe kind of paradigm in the roles where the services are configured in.
The way we implemented it currently:
I use notify to set a fact where later (in different plays) we act on a fact using notify again.
~~~yaml
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: copy an ssl cert
shell: echo cert has been changed
notify: publish ssl cert change
handlers:
- name: publish ssl cert change
set_fact:
ssl_cert_changed: true
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: subscribe for ssl cert change
shell: echo cert changed
notify: service restart one
when: ssl_cert_changed is defined and ssl_cert_changed
handlers:
- name: service restart one
shell: echo service one restarted
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: subscribe for ssl cert change
shell: echo cert changed
when: ssl_cert_changed is defined and ssl_cert_changed
notify: service restart two
handlers:
- name: service restart two
shell: echo service two restarted
~~~
However, this looks like a workaround of a feature that ansible should provide in a much cleaner way.
## Approaches
### Approach 1:
Provide new `subscribe` keyword on handlers:
~~~yaml
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: copy an ssl cert
shell: echo cert has been changed
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
handlers:
- name: service restart one
shell: echo service one restarted
subscribe: copy an ssl cert
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
handlers:
- name: service restart two
shell: echo service two restarted
subscribe: copy an ssl cert
~~~
### Approach 2:
Provide new `subscribe` on handlers and `publish` keywords in tasks:
~~~yaml
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: copy an ssl cert
shell: echo cert has been changed
publish: yes
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
handlers:
- name: service restart one
shell: echo service one restarted
subscribe: copy an ssl cert
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
handlers:
- name: service restart two
shell: echo service two restarted
subscribe: copy an ssl cert
~~~
### Approach 3:
Provide new `subscribe` module:
A subscribe module could consume the results of a task by name, optionally the value to react on could be specified (default: `changed`)
~~~yaml
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: copy an ssl cert
shell: echo cert has been changed
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- subscribe:
name: copy an ssl cert
notify: service restart one
handlers:
- name: service restart one
shell: echo service one restarted
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- subscribe:
name: copy an ssl cert
react_on: changed
notify: service restart two
handlers:
- name: service restart two
shell: echo service two restarted
~~~
### Approach 4:
Provide new `subscribe` module (same as Approach 3) and `publish` keyword:
~~~yaml
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- name: copy an ssl cert
shell: echo cert has been changed
publish: yes
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- subscribe:
name: copy an ssl cert
notify: service restart one
handlers:
- name: service restart one
shell: echo service one restarted
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- subscribe:
name: copy an ssl cert
notify: service restart two
handlers:
- name: service restart two
shell: echo service two restarted
~~~
### Clarifications about role dependencies and publish
When using service roles having the subscription handlers and the publish task (e.g. cert change) is defined in a depended role (SSL role) only the first service role running the "cert change" task as dependency will trigger the publish.
In any other service role in the playbook having "SSL role" as dependency, the task won't be `changed` anymore.
Therefore a once published "message" should not be overwritten or so called "unpublished" by running the same task in a followed role in the playbook.
## Conclusion
Feedback is requested to improve any of the above approaches, or provide further approaches to solve this problem.