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add example of hosts in multiple inventory groups (#50895)
* add example of hosts in multiple groups * fixed spacing * added nested group example
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@ -59,10 +59,94 @@ A YAML version would look like:
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two.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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.. _host_multiple_groups:
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It is ok to put systems in more than one group, for instance a server could be both a webserver and a dbserver.
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If you do, note that variables will come from all of the groups they are a member of. Variable precedence is detailed in a later chapter.
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Hosts in multiple groups
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------------------------
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You can put systems in more than one group, for instance a server could be both a webserver and in a specific datacenter. For example, you could create groups that track:
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* What - An application, stack or microservice. (For example, database servers, web servers, etc).
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* Where - A datacenter or region, to talk to local DNS, storage, etc. (For example, east, west).
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* When - The development stage, to avoid testing on production resources. (For example, prod, test).
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Extending the previous YAML inventory to include what, when, and where would look like:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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all:
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hosts:
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mail.example.com:
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children:
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webservers:
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hosts:
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foo.example.com:
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bar.example.com:
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dbservers:
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hosts:
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one.example.com:
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two.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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east:
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hosts:
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foo.example.com:
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one.example.com:
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two.example.com:
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west:
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hosts:
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bar.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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prod:
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hosts:
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foo.example.com:
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one.example.com:
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two.example.com:
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test:
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hosts:
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bar.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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You can see that ``one.example.com`` exists in the ``dbservers``, ``east``, and ``prod`` groups.
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You could also use nested groups to simplify ``prod`` and ``test`` in this inventory, for the same result:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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all:
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hosts:
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mail.example.com:
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children:
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webservers:
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hosts:
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foo.example.com:
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bar.example.com:
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dbservers:
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hosts:
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one.example.com:
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two.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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east:
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hosts:
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foo.example.com:
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one.example.com:
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two.example.com:
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west:
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hosts:
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bar.example.com:
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three.example.com:
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prod:
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children:
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east:
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test:
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children:
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west:
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If you do have systems in multiple groups, note that variables will come from all of the groups they are a member of. Variable precedence is detailed in :ref:`ansible_variable_precedence`.
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Hosts and non-standard ports
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-----------------------------
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If you have hosts that run on non-standard SSH ports you can put the port number after the hostname with a colon.
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Ports listed in your SSH config file won't be used with the `paramiko` connection but will be used with the `openssh` connection.
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@ -110,7 +194,7 @@ In INI:
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[webservers]
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www[01:50].example.com
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In YAML:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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@ -360,9 +444,9 @@ In this example, if both groups have the same priority, the result would normall
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Using multiple inventory sources
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================================
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As an advanced use case you can target multiple inventory sources (directories, dynamic inventory scripts
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or files supported by inventory plugins) at the same time by giving multiple inventory parameters from the command
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line or by configuring :envvar:`ANSIBLE_INVENTORY`. This can be useful when you want to target normally
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As an advanced use case you can target multiple inventory sources (directories, dynamic inventory scripts
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or files supported by inventory plugins) at the same time by giving multiple inventory parameters from the command
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line or by configuring :envvar:`ANSIBLE_INVENTORY`. This can be useful when you want to target normally
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separate environments, like staging and production, at the same time for a specific action.
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Target two sources from the command line like this::
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