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changed examples to not have a non working variable that gets confused
with directives as per #9264
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1 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions
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@ -61,19 +61,19 @@ For instance, if deploying multiple wordpress instances, I could
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contain all of my wordpress tasks in a single wordpress.yml file, and use it like so::
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tasks:
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- include: wordpress.yml user=timmy
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- include: wordpress.yml user=alice
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- include: wordpress.yml user=bob
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- include: wordpress.yml wp_user=timmy
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- include: wordpress.yml wp_user=alice
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- include: wordpress.yml wp_user=bob
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If you are running Ansible 1.4 and later, include syntax is streamlined to match roles, and also allows passing list and dictionary parameters::
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tasks:
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- { include: wordpress.yml, user: timmy, ssh_keys: [ 'keys/one.txt', 'keys/two.txt' ] }
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- { include: wordpress.yml, wp_user: timmy, ssh_keys: [ 'keys/one.txt', 'keys/two.txt' ] }
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Using either syntax, variables passed in can then be used in the included files. We'll cover them in :doc:`playbooks_variables`.
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You can reference them like this::
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{{ user }}
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{{ wp_user }}
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(In addition to the explicitly passed-in parameters, all variables from
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the vars section are also available for use here as well.)
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@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ which also supports structured variables::
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- include: wordpress.yml
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vars:
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remote_user: timmy
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wp_user: timmy
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some_list_variable:
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- alpha
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- beta
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