Here are some tips for making the most of Ansible.
A system can be in multiple groups. See Inventory & Patterns. Having groups named after things like ‘webservers’ and ‘dbservers’ is repeated in the examples because it’s a very powerful concept.
This allows playbooks to target machines based on role, as well as to assign role specific variables using the group variable system.
Playbooks should be organized like this:
(root of source control repository)
acme/ # each playbook has a directory
setup.yml # playbook to manage the service
stop.yml # playbook to halt the service (optional)
files/
some_file_path_foo.conf
templates/
etc_acme_conf_acme.conf
etc_other_conf_other.conf
vars/
main.yml
handlers/
main.yml
tasks/
setup.yml
stop.yml
Any directories or files not needed can be omitted. Not all modules may require vars or files sections, though most will require handlers, tasks, and templates. To review what each of these sections do, see Playbooks and Advanced Playbooks.
The acme/setup.yml playbook would be as simple as:
----
- hosts: webservers
user: root
vars_files
- vars/main.yml
tasks:
- include: tasks/setup.yml
handlers:
- include: handlers/main.yml
The tasks are individually broken out in ‘acme/tasks/setup.yml’, and handlers, which are common to all task files, are contained in ‘acme/handlers/main.yml’. As a reminder, handlers are mostly just used to notify services to restart when things change, and these are described in Playbooks.
Including more than one setup file or more than one handlers file is of course legal.
Having playbooks be able to include other playbooks is coming in release 0.5.
Until then, to manage your entire site, simply execute all of your playbooks together, in the order desired. You don’t have to do this though. It’s fine to select sections of your infrastructure to manage at a single time. You may wish to construct simple shell scripts to wrap calls to ansible-playbook.
When you can do something simply, do something simply. Do not reach to use every feature of Ansible together, all at once. Use what works for you. For example, you should probably not need vars, vars_files, vars_prompt and --extra-vars all at once, while also using an external inventory file.
Optimize for readability. Whitespace between sections of YAML documents and in between tasks is strongly encouraged, as is usage of YAML comments, which start with “#”. It is also useful to comment at the top of each file the purpose of the individual file and the author, including email address.
It is possible to leave off the “name” for a given task, though it is recommended to provide a descriptive comment about why something is being done instead.
Use version control. Keep your playbooks and inventory file in git (or another version control system), and commit when you make changes to them. This way you have an audit trail describing when and why you changed the rules automating your infrastructure.
Resist the urge to write the same playbooks and configuration files for heterogeneous distributions. While lots of software packages claim to make this easy on you, the configuration files are often quite different, to the point where it would be easier to treat them as different playbooks. This is why, for example, Ansible has a seperate ‘yum’ and ‘apt’ module. Yum and apt have different capabilities, and we don’t want to code for the least common denominator.
Use variables for user tunable settings versus having constants in the tasks file or templates, so that it is easy to reconfigure a playbook. Think about this as exposing the knobs to things you would like to tweak.
Since a system can be in more than one group, if you have multiple datacenters or sites, consider putting systems into groups by role, but also different groups by geography. This allows you to assign different variables to different geographies.
See also