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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
This commit is contained in:
Sandra McCann 2019-01-22 11:49:51 -05:00 committed by Alicia Cozine
parent fdcc2c233e
commit b023b89ec9

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