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331 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
Playbook Roles and Include Statements
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=====================================
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.. contents::
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:depth: 2
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Introduction
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````````````
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While it is possible to write a playbook in one very large file (and you might start out learning playbooks this way),
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eventually you'll want to reuse files and start to organize things.
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At a basic level, including task files allows you to break up bits of configuration policy into smaller files. Taks includes
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pull in tasks from other files. Since handlers are tasks too, you can also include handler files from the 'handlers:' section.
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See :doc:`playbooks` if you need a review of these concepts.
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Playbooks can also include plays from other playbook files. When that is done, the plays will be inserted into the playbook to form
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a longer list of plays.
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When you start to think about it -- tasks, handlers, variables, and so -- begin to form larger concepts. You start to think about modelling
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what something is, rather than how to make something look like something. It's no longer "apply this handful of THINGS" to these hosts, you say "these hosts are a dbservers" or "these hosts are webservers". In programming, we might call that 'encapsulating' how things work. For instance,
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you can drive a car without knowing how the engine works.
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Roles in Ansible build on the idea of include files and combine them to form clean, reusable abstractions -- they allow you to focus
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more on the big picture and only dive down into the details when needed.
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We'll start with understanding includes so roles make more sense, but our ultimate goal should be understanding roles -- roles
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are great and you should use them every time you write playbooks.
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See the `ansible-examples repository on github <https://github.com/ansible/ansible-examples>`_ for lots of examples of all of this
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put together. You may wish to have this open in a seperate tab as you dive in.
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Task Include Files And Encouraging Reuse
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````````````````````````````````````````
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Suppose you want to reuse lists of tasks between plays or playbooks. You can use
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include files to do this. Use of included task lists is a great way to define a role
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that system is going to fulfill. Remember, the goal of a play in a playbook is to map
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a group of systems into multiple roles. Let's see what this looks like...
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A task include file simply contains a flat list of tasks, like so::
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---
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# possibly saved as tasks/foo.yml
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- name: placeholder foo
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command: /bin/foo
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- name: placeholder bar
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command: /bin/bar
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Include directives look like this, and can be mixed in with regular tasks in a playbook::
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tasks:
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- include: tasks/foo.yml
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You can also pass variables into includes. We call this a 'parameterized include'.
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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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Variables passed in can then be used in the included files. We've already covered them a bit in :doc:`intro_variables`.
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You can reference them like this::
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{{ 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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Starting in 1.0, variables can also be passed to include files using an alternative syntax,
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which also supports structured variables::
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tasks:
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- include: wordpress.yml
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vars:
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remote_user: timmy
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some_list_variable:
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- alpha
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- beta
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- gamma
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Playbooks can include other playbooks too, but that's mentioned in a later section.
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.. note::
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As of 1.0, task include statements can be used at arbitrary depth.
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They were previously limited to a single level, so task includes
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could not include other files containing task includes.
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Includes can also be used in the 'handlers' section, for instance, if you
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want to define how to restart apache, you only have to do that once for all
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of your playbooks. You might make a handlers.yml that looks like::
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---
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# this might be in a file like handlers/handlers.yml
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- name: restart apache
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service: name=apache state=restarted
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And in your main playbook file, just include it like so, at the bottom
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of a play::
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handlers:
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- include: handlers/handlers.yml
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You can mix in includes along with your regular non-included tasks and handlers.
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Includes can also be used to import one playbook file into another. This allows
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you to define a top-level playbook that is composed of other playbooks.
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For example::
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- name: this is a play at the top level of a file
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hosts: all
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remote_user: root
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tasks:
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- name: say hi
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tags: foo
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shell: echo "hi..."
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- include: load_balancers.yml
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- include: webservers.yml
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- include: dbservers.yml
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Note that you cannot do variable substitution when including one playbook
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inside another.
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.. note::
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You can not conditionally path the location to an include file,
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like you can with 'vars_files'. If you find yourself needing to do
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this, consider how you can restructure your playbook to be more
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class/role oriented. This is to say you cannot use a 'fact' to
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decide what include file to use. All hosts contained within the
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play are going to get the same tasks. ('*when*' provides some
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ability for hosts to conditionally skip tasks).
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.. _roles:
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Roles
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`````
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.. versionadded:: 1.2
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Now that you have learned about vars_files, tasks, and handlers, what is the best way to organize your playbooks?
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The short answer is to use roles! Roles are ways of automatically loading certain vars_files, tasks, and
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handlers based on a known file structure. Grouping content by roles also allows easy sharing of roles with other users.
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Roles are just automation around 'include' directives as redescribed above, and really don't contain much
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additional magic beyond some improvements to search path handling for referenced files. However, that can be a big thing!
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Example project structure::
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site.yml
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webservers.yml
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fooservers.yml
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roles/
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common/
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files/
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templates/
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tasks/
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handlers/
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vars/
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meta/
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webservers/
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files/
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templates/
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tasks/
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handlers/
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vars/
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meta/
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In a playbook, it would look like this::
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---
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- hosts: webservers
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roles:
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- common
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- webservers
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This designates the following behaviors, for each role 'x':
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- If roles/x/tasks/main.yml exists, tasks listed therein will be added to the play
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- If roles/x/handlers/main.yml exists, handlers listed therein will be added to the play
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- If roles/x/vars/main.yml exists, variables listed therein will be added to the play
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- If roles/x/meta/main.yml exists, any role dependencies listed therein will be added to the list of roles (1.3 and later)
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- Any copy tasks can reference files in roles/x/files/ without having to path them relatively or absolutely
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- Any script tasks can reference scripts in roles/x/files/ without having to path them relatively or absolutely
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- Any template tasks can reference files in roles/x/templates/ without having to path them relatively or absolutely
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.. note::
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Role dependencies are discussed below.
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If any files are not present, they are just ignored. So it's ok to not have a 'vars/' subdirectory for the role,
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for instance.
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Note, you are still allowed to list tasks, vars_files, and handlers "loose" in playbooks without using roles,
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but roles are a good organizational feature and are highly recommended. if there are loose things in the playbook,
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the roles are evaluated first.
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Also, should you wish to parameterize roles, by adding variables, you can do so, like this::
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---
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- hosts: webservers
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roles:
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- common
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- { role: foo_app_instance, dir: '/opt/a', port: 5000 }
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- { role: foo_app_instance, dir: '/opt/b', port: 5001 }
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While it's probably not something you should do often, you can also conditionally apply roles like so::
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---
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- hosts: webservers
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roles:
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- { role: some_role, when: "ansible_os_family == 'RedHat'" }
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This works by applying the conditional to every task in the role. Conditionals are covered later on in
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the documentation.
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Finally, you may wish to assign tags to the roles you specify. You can do so inline:::
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---
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- hosts: webservers
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roles:
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- { role: foo, tags: ["bar", "baz"] }
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If the play still has a 'tasks' section, those tasks are executed after roles are applied.
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If you want to define certain tasks to happen before AND after roles are applied, you can do this::
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---
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- hosts: webservers
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pre_tasks:
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- shell: echo 'hello'
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roles:
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- { role: some_role }
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tasks:
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- shell: echo 'still busy'
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post_tasks:
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- shell: echo 'goodbye'
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.. note::
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If using tags with tasks (described later as a means of only running part of a playbook),
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be sure to also tag your pre_tasks and post_tasks and pass those along as well, especially if the pre
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and post tasks are used for monitoring outage window control or load balancing.
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Role Default Variables
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``````````````````````
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.. versionadded:: 1.3
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Role default variables allow you to set default variables for included or dependent roles (see below). To create
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defaults, simply add a `defaults/main.yml` file in your role directory. These variables will have the lowest priority
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of any variables available, and can be easily overridden by any other variable, including inventory variables.
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Role Dependencies
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`````````````````
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.. versionadded:: 1.3
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Role dependencies allow you to automatically pull in other roles when using a role. Role dependencies are stored in the
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`meta/main.yml` file contained within the role directory. This file should contain
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a list of roles and parameters to insert before the specified role, such as the following in an example
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`roles/myapp/meta/main.yml`::
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---
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dependencies:
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- { role: common, some_parameter: 3 }
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- { role: apache, port: 80 }
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- { role: postgres, dbname: blarg, other_parameter: 12 }
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Role dependencies can also be specified as a full path, just like top level roles::
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---
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dependencies:
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- { role: '/path/to/common/roles/foo', x: 1 }
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Roles dependencies are always executed before the role that includes them, and are recursive. By default,
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roles can also only be added as a dependency once - if another role also lists it as a dependency it will
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not be run again. This behavior can be overridden by adding `allow_duplicates: yes` to the `meta/main.yml` file.
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For example, a role named 'car' could add a role named 'wheel' to its dependencies as follows::
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---
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dependencies:
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- { role: wheel, n: 1 }
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- { role: wheel, n: 2 }
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- { role: wheel, n: 3 }
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- { role: wheel, n: 4 }
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And the `meta/main.yml` for wheel contained the following::
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---
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allow_duplicates: yes
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dependencies:
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- { role: tire }
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- { role: brake }
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The resulting order of execution would be as follows::
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tire(n=1)
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brake(n=1)
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wheel(n=1)
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tire(n=2)
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brake(n=2)
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wheel(n=2)
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...
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car
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.. note::
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Variable inheritance and scope are detailed in the :doc:`playbooks_variables`.
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.. seealso::
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:doc:`YAMLSyntax`
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Learn about YAML syntax
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:doc:`playbooks`
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Review the basic Playbook language features
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:doc:`playbooks_best_practices`
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Various tips about managing playbooks in the real world
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:doc:`modules`
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Learn about available modules
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:doc:`developing_modules`
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Learn how to extend Ansible by writing your own modules
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`Github examples directory <https://github.com/ansible/ansible/tree/devel/examples/playbooks>`_
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Complete playbook files from the github project source
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`Mailing List <http://groups.google.com/group/ansible-project>`_
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Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups
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