c2469648e4
* Add docs/docsite/rst/reference_appendices/general_precedence.rst Co-Authored-By: Sandra McCann <samccann@redhat.com>
140 lines
8.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
140 lines
8.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _general_precedence_rules:
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Controlling how Ansible behaves: precedence rules
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=================================================
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To give you maximum flexibility in managing your environments, Ansible supports many ways to control how Ansible behaves: how it connects to managed nodes, how it works once it has connected.
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If you use Ansible to manage a large number of servers, network devices, and cloud resources, you may define Ansible behavior in several different places and pass that information to Ansible in several different ways.
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This flexibility is convenient, but it can backfire if you do not understand the precedence rules.
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These precedence rules apply to any setting that can be defined in multiple ways (by configuration settings, command-line options, playbook keywords, variables).
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Precedence categories
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---------------------
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Ansible supports four sources for controlling its behavior. In order of precedence from lowest (most easily overridden) to highest (overrides all others), the categories are:
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* Configuration settings
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* Command-line options
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* Playbook keywords
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* Variables
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Each category overrides any information from all lower-precedence categories. For example, a playbook keyword will override any configuration setting.
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Within each precedence category, specific rules apply. However, generally speaking, 'last defined' wins and overrides any previous definitions.
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Configuration settings
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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:ref:`Configuration settings<ansible_configuration_settings>` include both values from the ``ansible.cfg`` file and environment variables. Within this category, values set in configuration files have lower precedence. Ansible uses the first ``ansible.cfg`` file it finds, ignoring all others. Ansible searches for ``ansible.cfg`` in these locations in order:
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* ``ANSIBLE_CONFIG`` (environment variable if set)
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* ``ansible.cfg`` (in the current directory)
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* ``~/.ansible.cfg`` (in the home directory)
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* ``/etc/ansible/ansible.cfg``
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Environment variables have a higher precedence than entries in ``ansible.cfg``. If you have environment variables set on your control node, they override the settings in whichever ``ansible.cfg`` file Ansible loads. The value of any given environment variable follows normal shell precedence: the last value defined overwrites previous values.
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Command-line options
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Any command-line option will override any configuration setting.
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When you type something directly at the command line, you may feel that your hand-crafted values should override all others, but Ansible does not work that way. Command-line options have low precedence - they override configuration only. They do not override playbook keywords, variables from inventory or variables from playbooks.
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You can override all other settings from all other sources in all other precedence categories at the command line by :ref:`general_precedence_extra_vars`, but that is not a command-line option, it is a way of passing a :ref:`variable<general_precedence_variables>`.
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At the command line, if you pass multiple values for a parameter that accepts only a single value, the last defined value wins. For example, this :ref:`ad-hoc task<intro_adhoc>` will connect as ``carol``, not as ``mike``::
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ansible -u mike -m ping myhost -u carol
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Some parameters allow multiple values. In this case, Ansible will append all values from the hosts listed in inventory files inventory1 and inventory2::
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ansible -i /path/inventory1 -i /path/inventory2 -m ping all
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The help for each :ref:`command-line tool<command_line_tools>` lists available options for that tool.
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Playbook keywords
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Any :ref:`playbook keyword<playbook_keywords>` will override any command-line option and any configuration setting.
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Within playbook keywords, precedence flows with the playbook itself; the more specific wins against the more general:
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- play (most general)
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- blocks/includes/imports/roles (optional and can contain tasks and each other)
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- tasks (most specific)
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A simple example::
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- hosts: all
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connection: ssh
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tasks:
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- name: This task uses ssh.
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ping:
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- name: This task uses paramiko.
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connection: paramiko
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ping:
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In this example, the ``connection`` keyword is set to ``ssh`` at the play level. The first task inherits that value, and connects using ``ssh``. The second task inherits that value, overrides it, and connects using ``paramiko``.
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The same logic applies to blocks and roles as well. All tasks, blocks, and roles within a play inherit play-level keywords; any task, block, or role can override any keyword by defining a different value for that keyword within the task, block, or role.
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Remember that these are KEYWORDS, not variables. Both playbooks and variable files are defined in YAML but they have different significance.
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Playbooks are the command or 'state description' structure for Ansible, variables are data we use to help make playbooks more dynamic.
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.. _general_precedence_variables:
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Variables
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^^^^^^^^^
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Any variable will override any playbook keyword, any command-line option, and any configuration setting.
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Variables that have equivalent playbook keywords, command-line options, and configuration settings are known as :ref:`connection_variables`. Originally designed for connection parameters, this category has expanded to include other core variables like the temporary directory and the python interpreter.
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Connection variables, like all variables, can be set in multiple ways and places. You can define variables for hosts and groups in :ref:`inventory<intro_inventory>`. You can define variables for tasks and plays in ``vars:`` blocks in :ref:`playbooks<about_playbooks>`. However, they are still variables - they are data, not keywords or configuration settings. Variables that override playbook keywords, command-line options, and configuration settings follow the same rules of :ref:`variable precedence <ansible_variable_precedence>` as any other variables.
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When set in a playbook, variables follow the same inheritance rules as playbook keywords. You can set a value for the play, then override it in a task, block, or role::
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- hosts: cloud
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gather_facts: false
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become: yes
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vars:
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ansible_become_user: admin
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tasks:
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- name: This task uses admin as the become user.
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dnf:
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name: some-service
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state: latest
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- block:
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- name: This task uses service-admin as the become user.
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# a task to configure the new service
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- name: This task also uses service-admin as the become user, defined in the block.
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# second task to configure the service
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vars:
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ansible_become_user: service-admin
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- name: This task (outside of the block) uses admin as the become user again.
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service:
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name: some-service
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state: restarted
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Variable scope: how long is a value available?
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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Variable values set in a playbook exist only within the playbook object that defines them. These 'playbook object scope' variables are not available to subsequent objects, including other plays.
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Variable values associated directly with a host or group, including variables defined in inventory, by vars plugins, or using modules like :ref:`set_fact<set_fact_module>` and :ref:`include_vars<include_vars_module>`, are available to all plays. These 'host scope' variables are also available via the ``hostvars[]`` dictionary.
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.. _general_precedence_extra_vars:
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Using ``-e`` extra variables at the command line
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To override all other settings in all other categories, you can use extra variables: ``--extra-vars`` or ``-e`` at the command line. Values passed with ``-e`` are variables, not command-line options, and they will override configuration settings, command-line options, and playbook keywords as well as variables set elsewhere. For example, this task will connect as ``brian`` not as ``carol``::
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ansible -u carol -e 'ansible_user=brian' -a whoami all
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You must specify both the variable name and the value with ``--extra-vars``.
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