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

Update docs on import/include tasks (#33032)

This commit is contained in:
Sam Doran 2018-06-11 13:01:53 -04:00 committed by GitHub
parent bea3baf94d
commit 30da71d880
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23

View file

@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ As noted in :doc:`playbooks_reuse`, include and import statements are very simil
Please refer to :doc:`playbooks_reuse` for documentation concerning the trade-offs one may encounter when using each type.
Also be aware that this behaviour changed in 2.4; prior to that Ansible version only ``include`` was available, and it behaved differently depending on context.
Also be aware that this behaviour changed in 2.4. Prior to Ansible 2.4, only ``include`` was available and it behaved differently depending on context.
.. versionadded:: 2.4
@ -22,7 +22,6 @@ Importing Playbooks
It is possible to include playbooks inside a master playbook. For example::
---
- import_playbook: webservers.yml
- import_playbook: databases.yml
@ -36,16 +35,15 @@ Prior to 2.4 only ``include`` was available and worked for both playbooks and ta
Including and Importing Task Files
``````````````````````````````````
Use of included task lists is a great way to define a role that system is going to fulfill. A task include file simply contains a flat list of tasks::
Breaking tasks up into different files is an excellent way to organize complex sets of tasks or reuse them. A task file simply contains a flat list of tasks::
# common_tasks.yml
---
- name: placeholder foo
command: /bin/foo
- name: placeholder bar
command: /bin/bar
You can then use ``import_tasks`` or ``include_tasks`` to include this file in your main task list::
You can then use ``import_tasks`` or ``include_tasks`` to execute the tasks in a file in the main task list::
tasks:
- import_tasks: common_tasks.yml
@ -65,27 +63,17 @@ You can also pass variables into imports and includes::
vars:
wp_user: bob
Variables can also be passed to include files using an alternative syntax, which also supports structured variables like dictionaries and lists::
See :ref:`ansible_variable_precedence` for more details on variable inheritance and precedence.
tasks:
- include_tasks: wordpress.yml
vars:
wp_user: timmy
ssh_keys:
- "{{ lookup('file', 'keys/one.pub') }}"
- "{{ lookup('file', 'keys/two.pub') }}"
Using either syntax, variables passed in can then be used in the included files. These variables will only be available to tasks within the included file. See :ref:`ansible_variable_precedence` for more details on variable inheritance and precedence.
Task include statements can be used at arbitrary depth.
Task include and import statements can be used at arbitrary depth.
.. note::
Static and dynamic can be mixed, however this is not recommended as it may lead to difficult-to-diagnose bugs in your playbooks.
- Static and dynamic can be mixed, however this is not recommended as it may lead to difficult-to-diagnose bugs in your playbooks.
- The ``key=value`` syntax for passing variables to import and include is deprecated. Use YAML ``vars:`` instead.
Includes and imports can also be used in the ``handlers:`` section; for instance, if you want to define how to restart apache, you only have to do that once for all of your playbooks. You might make a handlers.yml that looks like::
Includes and imports can also be used in the ``handlers:`` section. For instance, if you want to define how to restart Apache, you only have to do that once for all of your playbooks. You might make a ``handlers.yml`` that looks like::
# more_handlers.yml
---
- name: restart apache
service: name=apache state=restarted