2020-10-07 17:07:27 +02:00
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#!/usr/bin/python
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2020-08-18 21:56:43 +02:00
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# Copyright: (c) 2018, Terry Jones <terry.jones@example.org>
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# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
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from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function)
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__metaclass__ = type
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DOCUMENTATION = r'''
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---
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module: my_test
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short_description: This is my test module
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# If this is part of a collection, you need to use semantic versioning,
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# i.e. the version is of the form "2.5.0" and not "2.4".
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version_added: "1.0.0"
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description: This is my longer description explaining my test module.
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options:
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name:
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description: This is the message to send to the test module.
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required: true
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type: str
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new:
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description:
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- Control to demo if the result of this module is changed or not.
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- Parameter description can be a list as well.
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required: false
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type: bool
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# Specify this value according to your collection
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# in format of namespace.collection.doc_fragment_name
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extends_documentation_fragment:
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- my_namespace.my_collection.my_doc_fragment_name
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author:
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- Your Name (@yourGitHubHandle)
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'''
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EXAMPLES = r'''
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# Pass in a message
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- name: Test with a message
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my_namespace.my_collection.my_test:
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name: hello world
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# pass in a message and have changed true
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- name: Test with a message and changed output
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my_namespace.my_collection.my_test:
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name: hello world
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new: true
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# fail the module
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- name: Test failure of the module
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my_namespace.my_collection.my_test:
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name: fail me
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'''
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RETURN = r'''
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# These are examples of possible return values, and in general should use other names for return values.
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original_message:
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description: The original name param that was passed in.
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type: str
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returned: always
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sample: 'hello world'
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message:
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description: The output message that the test module generates.
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type: str
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returned: always
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sample: 'goodbye'
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'''
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from ansible.module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule
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def run_module():
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# define available arguments/parameters a user can pass to the module
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module_args = dict(
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name=dict(type='str', required=True),
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new=dict(type='bool', required=False, default=False)
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)
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# seed the result dict in the object
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# we primarily care about changed and state
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# changed is if this module effectively modified the target
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# state will include any data that you want your module to pass back
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# for consumption, for example, in a subsequent task
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result = dict(
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changed=False,
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original_message='',
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message=''
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)
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# the AnsibleModule object will be our abstraction working with Ansible
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# this includes instantiation, a couple of common attr would be the
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# args/params passed to the execution, as well as if the module
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# supports check mode
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module = AnsibleModule(
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argument_spec=module_args,
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supports_check_mode=True
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)
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# if the user is working with this module in only check mode we do not
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# want to make any changes to the environment, just return the current
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# state with no modifications
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if module.check_mode:
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module.exit_json(**result)
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# manipulate or modify the state as needed (this is going to be the
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# part where your module will do what it needs to do)
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result['original_message'] = module.params['name']
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result['message'] = 'goodbye'
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# use whatever logic you need to determine whether or not this module
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# made any modifications to your target
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if module.params['new']:
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result['changed'] = True
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# during the execution of the module, if there is an exception or a
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# conditional state that effectively causes a failure, run
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# AnsibleModule.fail_json() to pass in the message and the result
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if module.params['name'] == 'fail me':
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module.fail_json(msg='You requested this to fail', **result)
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# in the event of a successful module execution, you will want to
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# simple AnsibleModule.exit_json(), passing the key/value results
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module.exit_json(**result)
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def main():
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run_module()
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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main()
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