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216 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
216 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
Ansible
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=======
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Ansible is a extra-simple tool/API for doing 'parallel remote things' over SSH -- whether
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executing commands, running "modules", or executing larger 'playbooks' that
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can serve as a configuration management or deployment system.
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While [Func](http://fedorahosted.org/func), which I co-wrote,
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aspired to avoid using SSH and have it's own daemon infrastructure,
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Ansible aspires to be quite different and more minimal, but still able
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to grow more modularly over time. This is based on talking to a lot of
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users of various tools and wishing to eliminate problems with connectivity
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and long running daemons, or not picking tool X because they preferred to
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code in Y. Further, playbooks take things a whole step further, building the config
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and deployment system I always wanted to build.
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Why use Ansible versus something else? (Fabric, Capistrano, mCollective,
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Func, SaltStack, etc?) It will have far less code, it will be more correct,
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and it will be the easiest thing to hack on and use you'll ever see --
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regardless of your favorite language of choice. Want to only code plugins
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in bash or clojure? Ansible doesn't care. The docs will fit on one page
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and the source will be blindingly obvious.
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Design Principles
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=================
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* Dead simple setup
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* Super fast & parallel by default
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* No server or client daemons; use existing SSHd
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* No additional software required on client boxes
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* Modules can be written in ANY language
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* Awesome API for creating very powerful distributed scripts
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* Be usable as non-root
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* Create the easiest config management system to use, ever.
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Requirements
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============
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For the server the tool is running from, *only*:
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* paramiko
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* python 2.6 (or the 2.4/2.5 backport of the multiprocessing module)
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* PyYAML (only if using playbooks)
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Optional -- If you want to push templates, the nodes need a template library,
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which for bonus points you can install with ansible! Easy enough.
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* python-jinja2
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Inventory file
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==============
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To use ansible you must have a list of hosts somewhere. The default inventory file (override with -H) is /etc/ansible/hosts and is a list of all hostnames to manage with ansible, one per line. These can be hostnames or IPs.
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Example:
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abc.example.com
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def.example.com
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192.168.10.50
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192.168.10.51
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This list is further filtered by the pattern wildcard (-p) to target
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specific hosts. This is covered below. You can also organize groups of systems by having multiple inventory files (i.e. keeping webservers different from dbservers, etc)
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Massive Parallelism, Pattern Matching, and a Usage Example
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==========================================================
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Reboot all web servers in Atlanta, 10 at a time:
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ssh-agent bash
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ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
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ansible -p "atlanta-web*" -f 10 -n command -a "/sbin/reboot"
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Other than the comamnd module, though, ansible modules are not scripts. They make
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the remote system look like you state, and run the commands neccessary to get it
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there.
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[Read the manpage](https://github.com/mpdehaan/ansible/blob/master/docs/man/man1/ansible.1.asciidoc)
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File Transfer
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=============
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Ansible can SCP lots of files to lots of places in parallel.
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ansible -p "web-*.acme.net" -f 10 -n copy -a "/etc/hosts /tmp/hosts"
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Templating
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==========
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JSON files can be placed for template metadata using Jinja2. Variables
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placed by 'setup' can be reused between ansible runs.
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ansible -p "*" -n setup -a "favcolor=red ntp_server=192.168.1.1"
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ansible -p "*" -n template /srv/motd.j2 /etc/motd
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ansible -p "*" -n template /srv/ntp.j2 /etc/ntp.conf
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Need something like the fqdn in a template? If facter or ohai are installed, data from these projects
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will also be made available to the template engine, using 'facter_' and 'ohai_'
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prefixes for each.
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Git Deployments
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===============
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Deploy your webapp straight from git
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ansible -p "web*" -n git -a "repo=git://foo dest=/srv/myapp version=HEAD"
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Take Inventory
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==============
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Run popular open-source data discovery tools across a wide number of hosts.
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This is best used from API scripts that want to learn about remote systems.
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ansible -p "dbserver*" -n facter
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ansible -p "dbserver"" -n ohai
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Other Modules
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=============
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See the library directory for lots of extras. There's also a manpage,
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[ansible-modules(5)](https://github.com/mpdehaan/ansible/blob/master/docs/man/man5/ansible-modules.5.asciidoc) that covers all the options they take. You can
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read the asciidoc in github in the 'docs' directory.
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Playbooks
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=========
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Playbooks are particularly awesome. Playbooks can batch ansible commands
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together, and can even fire off triggers when certain commands report changes.
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They are the basis for a really simple configuration management system, unlike
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any that already exist, and one that is very well suited to deploying complex
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multi-machine applications.
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An example showing just once pattern in a playbook is below. Playbooks can contain
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multple patterns in a single file.
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---
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- pattern: 'webservers*'
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comment: webserver setup steps
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hosts: '/etc/ansible/hosts'
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tasks:
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- name: configure template & module variables for future template calls
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action: setup http_port=80 max_clients=200
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- name: write the apache config file
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action: template src=/srv/templates/httpd.j2 dest=/etc/httpd/conf
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notify:
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- restart apache
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- name: ensure apache is running
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action: service name=httpd state=started
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handlers:
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- name: restart apache
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- action: service name=httpd state=restarted
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See the playbook format manpage -- [ansible-playbook(5)](https://github.com/mpdehaan/ansible/blob/master/docs/man/man5/ansible-playbook.5.asciidoc) for more details.
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To run a playbook:
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ansible -r playbook.yml
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API
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===
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The Python API is pretty powerful.
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import ansible.runner
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runner = ansible.runner.Runner(
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module_name='ping',
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module_args='',
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pattern='web*',
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forks=10
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)
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datastructure = runner.run()
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And returns results per host, for hosts we could contact
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and also ones that we failed to contact.
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{
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"dark" : {
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"web1.example.com" : "failure message"
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}
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"contacted" : {
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"web2.example.com" : 1
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}
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}
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A module can return any type of JSON data it wants, so Ansible can
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be used as a framework to build arbitrary applications and very powerful
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scripts.
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Future plans
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============
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See github's issue tracker for what we're thinking about
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License
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=======
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MIT
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Mailing List
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============
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Join the mailing list to talk about Ansible!
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[ansible-project](http://groups.google.com/group/ansible-project)
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Author
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======
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Michael DeHaan -- michael.dehaan@gmail.com
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[http://michaeldehaan.net](http://michaeldehaan.net/)
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