Co-authored-by: Alicia Cozine <acozine@users.noreply.github.com>
10 KiB
Tests
Tests in Jinja are a way of evaluating template expressions and returning True or False. Jinja ships with many of these. See builtin tests in the official Jinja template documentation.
The main difference between tests and filters are that Jinja tests
are used for comparisons, whereas filters are used for data
manipulation, and have different applications in jinja. Tests can also
be used in list processing filters, like map()
and
select()
to choose items in the list.
Like all templating, tests always execute on the Ansible controller, not on the target of a task, as they test local data.
In addition to those Jinja2 tests, Ansible supplies a few more and users can easily create their own.
Test syntax
Test
syntax varies from filter
syntax (variable | filter
). Historically Ansible has
registered tests as both jinja tests and jinja filters, allowing for
them to be referenced using filter syntax.
As of Ansible 2.5, using a jinja test as a filter will generate a warning.
The syntax for using a jinja test is as follows:
variable is test_name
Such as:
result is failed
Testing strings
To match strings against a substring or a regular expression, use the
match
, search
or regex
tests:
vars:
url: "http://example.com/users/foo/resources/bar"
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "matched pattern 1"
when: url is match("http://example.com/users/.*/resources/")
- debug:
msg: "matched pattern 2"
when: url is search("/users/.*/resources/.*")
- debug:
msg: "matched pattern 3"
when: url is search("/users/")
- debug:
msg: "matched pattern 4"
when: url is regex("example.com/\w+/foo")
match
succeeds if it finds the pattern at the beginning
of the string, while search
succeeds if it finds the
pattern anywhere within string. By default, regex
works
like search
, but regex
can be configured to
perform other tests as well.
Testing truthiness
2.10
As of Ansible 2.10, you can now perform Python like truthy and falsy checks.
- debug:
msg: "Truthy"
when: value is truthy
vars:
value: "some string"
- debug:
msg: "Falsy"
when: value is falsy
vars:
value: ""
Additionally, the truthy
and falsy
tests
accept an optional parameter called convert_bool
that will
attempt to convert boolean indicators to actual booleans.
- debug:
msg: "Truthy"
when: value is truthy(convert_bool=True)
vars:
value: "yes"
- debug:
msg: "Falsy"
when: value is falsy(convert_bool=True)
vars:
value: "off"
Comparing versions
1.6
Note
In 2.5 version_compare
was renamed to
version
To compare a version number, such as checking if the
ansible_facts['distribution_version']
version is greater
than or equal to '12.04', you can use the version
test.
The version
test can also be used to evaluate the
ansible_facts['distribution_version']
:
{{ ansible_facts['distribution_version'] is version('12.04', '>=') }}
If ansible_facts['distribution_version']
is greater than
or equal to 12.04, this test returns True, otherwise False.
The version
test accepts the following operators:
<, lt, <=, le, >, gt, >=, ge, ==, =, eq, !=, <>, ne
This test also accepts a 3rd parameter, strict
which
defines if strict version parsing as defined by
distutils.version.StrictVersion
should be used. The default
is False
(using
distutils.version.LooseVersion
), True
enables
strict version parsing:
{{ sample_version_var is version('1.0', operator='lt', strict=True) }}
When using version
in a playbook or role, don't use
{{ }}
as described in the FAQ:
vars:
my_version: 1.2.3
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "my_version is higher than 1.0.0"
when: my_version is version('1.0.0', '>')
Set theory tests
2.1
Note
In 2.5 issubset
and issuperset
were renamed
to subset
and superset
To see if a list includes or is included by another list, you can use 'subset' and 'superset':
vars:
a: [1,2,3,4,5]
b: [2,3]
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "A includes B"
when: a is superset(b)
- debug:
msg: "B is included in A"
when: b is subset(a)
Testing if a list contains a value
2.8
Ansible includes a contains
test which operates
similarly, but in reverse of the Jinja2 provided in
test.
The contains
test is designed to work with the
select
, reject
, selectattr
, and
rejectattr
filters:
vars:
lacp_groups:
- master: lacp0
network: 10.65.100.0/24
gateway: 10.65.100.1
dns4:
- 10.65.100.10
- 10.65.100.11
interfaces:
- em1
- em2
- master: lacp1
network: 10.65.120.0/24
gateway: 10.65.120.1
dns4:
- 10.65.100.10
- 10.65.100.11
interfaces:
- em3
- em4
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "{{ (lacp_groups|selectattr('interfaces', 'contains', 'em1')|first).master }}"
2.4
Testing if a list value is True
You can use any and all to check if any or all elements in a list are true or not:
vars:
mylist:
- 1
- "{{ 3 == 3 }}"
- True
myotherlist:
- False
- True
tasks:
- debug:
msg: "all are true!"
when: mylist is all
- debug:
msg: "at least one is true"
when: myotherlist is any
Testing paths
Note
In 2.5 the following tests were renamed to remove the
is_
prefix
The following tests can provide information about a path on the controller:
- debug:
msg: "path is a directory"
when: mypath is directory
- debug:
msg: "path is a file"
when: mypath is file
- debug:
msg: "path is a symlink"
when: mypath is link
- debug:
msg: "path already exists"
when: mypath is exists
- debug:
msg: "path is {{ (mypath is abs)|ternary('absolute','relative')}}"
- debug:
msg: "path is the same file as path2"
when: mypath is same_file(path2)
- debug:
msg: "path is a mount"
when: mypath is mount
Testing size formats
The human_readable
and human_to_bytes
functions let you test your playbooks to make sure you are using the
right size format in your tasks, and that you provide Byte format to
computers and human-readable format to people.
Human readable
Asserts whether the given string is human readable or not.
For example:
- name: "Human Readable"
assert:
that:
- '"1.00 Bytes" == 1|human_readable'
- '"1.00 bits" == 1|human_readable(isbits=True)'
- '"10.00 KB" == 10240|human_readable'
- '"97.66 MB" == 102400000|human_readable'
- '"0.10 GB" == 102400000|human_readable(unit="G")'
- '"0.10 Gb" == 102400000|human_readable(isbits=True, unit="G")'
This would result in:
{ "changed": false, "msg": "All assertions passed" }
Human to bytes
Returns the given string in the Bytes format.
For example:
- name: "Human to Bytes"
assert:
that:
- "{{'0'|human_to_bytes}} == 0"
- "{{'0.1'|human_to_bytes}} == 0"
- "{{'0.9'|human_to_bytes}} == 1"
- "{{'1'|human_to_bytes}} == 1"
- "{{'10.00 KB'|human_to_bytes}} == 10240"
- "{{ '11 MB'|human_to_bytes}} == 11534336"
- "{{ '1.1 GB'|human_to_bytes}} == 1181116006"
- "{{'10.00 Kb'|human_to_bytes(isbits=True)}} == 10240"
This would result in:
{ "changed": false, "msg": "All assertions passed" }
Testing task results
The following tasks are illustrative of the tests meant to check the status of tasks:
tasks:
- shell: /usr/bin/foo
register: result
ignore_errors: True
- debug:
msg: "it failed"
when: result is failed
# in most cases you'll want a handler, but if you want to do something right now, this is nice
- debug:
msg: "it changed"
when: result is changed
- debug:
msg: "it succeeded in Ansible >= 2.1"
when: result is succeeded
- debug:
msg: "it succeeded"
when: result is success
- debug:
msg: "it was skipped"
when: result is skipped
Note
From 2.1, you can also use success, failure, change, and skip so that the grammar matches, for those who need to be strict about it.
playbooks_intro
-
An introduction to playbooks
playbooks_conditionals
-
Conditional statements in playbooks
playbooks_variables
-
All about variables
playbooks_loops
-
Looping in playbooks
playbooks_reuse_roles
-
Playbook organization by roles
playbooks_best_practices
-
Best practices in playbooks
- User Mailing List
-
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