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9245acbf44
3 changed files with 35 additions and 19 deletions
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@ -335,25 +335,6 @@ Let's run a playbook using a parallelism level of 10::
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml -f 10
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml -f 10
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Playbooks can also be executed interactively with ``--step``::
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml --step
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This will cause ansible to stop on each task, and ask if it should execute that task.
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Say you had a task called "configure ssh", the playbook run will stop and ask::
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Perform task: configure ssh (y/n/c):
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Answering "y" will execute the task, answering "n" will skip the task, and answering "c"
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will continue executing all the remaining tasks without asking.
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If you want to start executing your playbook at a particular task, you can do so
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with the ``--start-at`` option::
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml --start-at="install packages"
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The above will start executing your playbook at a task named "install packages".
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.. _ansible-pull:
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.. _ansible-pull:
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Ansible-Pull
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Ansible-Pull
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@ -17,3 +17,4 @@ and adopt these only if they seem relevant or useful to your environment.
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playbooks_prompts
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playbooks_prompts
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playbooks_tags
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playbooks_tags
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playbooks_vault
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playbooks_vault
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playbooks_startnstep
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34
docsite/rst/playbooks_startnstep.rst
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34
docsite/rst/playbooks_startnstep.rst
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@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
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Start and Step
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======================
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This shows a few alternative ways to run playbooks. These modes are very useful for testing new plays or debugging.
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.. _start_at_task
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Start-at-task
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`````````````
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If you want to start executing your playbook at a particular task, you can do so with the ``--start-at`` option::
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml --start-at="install packages"
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The above will start executing your playbook at a task named "install packages".
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.. _step
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Step
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````
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Playbooks can also be executed interactively with ``--step``::
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ansible-playbook playbook.yml --step
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This will cause ansible to stop on each task, and ask if it should execute that task.
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Say you had a task called "configure ssh", the playbook run will stop and ask::
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Perform task: configure ssh (y/n/c):
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Answering "y" will execute the task, answering "n" will skip the task, and answering "c"
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will continue executing all the remaining tasks without asking.
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