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Connection methods and details
This section shows you how to expand and refine the connection methods Ansible uses for your inventory.
ControlPersist and paramiko
By default, Ansible uses native OpenSSH, because it supports
ControlPersist (a performance feature), Kerberos, and options in
~/.ssh/config
such as Jump Host setup. If your control
machine uses an older version of OpenSSH that does not support
ControlPersist, Ansible will fallback to a Python implementation of
OpenSSH called 'paramiko'.
Setting a remote user
By default, Ansible connects to all remote devices with the user name
you are using on the control node. If that user name does not exist on a
remote device, you can set a different user name for the connection. If
you just need to do some tasks as a different user, look at become
. You can set the
connection user in a playbook:
---
- name: update webservers
hosts: webservers
remote_user: admin
tasks:
- name: thing to do first in this playbook
. . .
as a host variable in inventory:
other1.example.com ansible_connection=ssh ansible_user=myuser
other2.example.com ansible_connection=ssh ansible_user=myotheruser
or as a group variable in inventory:
cloud:
hosts:
cloud1: my_backup.cloud.com
cloud2: my_backup2.cloud.com
vars:
ansible_user: admin
Setting up SSH keys
By default, Ansible assumes you are using SSH keys to connect to
remote machines. SSH keys are encouraged, but you can use password
authentication if needed with the --ask-pass
option. If you
need to provide a password for privilege escalation <become>
(sudo, pbrun,
etc.), use --ask-become-pass
.
To set up SSH agent to avoid retyping passwords, you can do:
$ ssh-agent bash
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Depending on your setup, you may wish to use Ansible's
--private-key
command line option to specify a pem file
instead. You can also add the private key file:
$ ssh-agent bash
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/keypair.pem
Another way to add private key files without using ssh-agent is using
ansible_ssh_private_key_file
in an inventory file as
explained here: intro_inventory
.
Running against localhost
You can run commands against the control node by using "localhost" or "127.0.0.1" for the server name:
$ ansible localhost -m ping -e 'ansible_python_interpreter="/usr/bin/env python"'
You can specify localhost explicitly by adding this to your inventory file:
localhost ansible_connection=local ansible_python_interpreter="/usr/bin/env python"
Managing host key checking
Ansible enables host key checking by default. Checking host keys guards against server spoofing and man-in-the-middle attacks, but it does require some maintenance.
If a host is reinstalled and has a different key in 'known_hosts', this will result in an error message until corrected. If a new host is not in 'known_hosts' your control node may prompt for confirmation of the key, which results in an interactive experience if using Ansible, from say, cron. You might not want this.
If you understand the implications and wish to disable this behavior,
you can do so by editing /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg
or
~/.ansible.cfg
:
[defaults]
host_key_checking = False
Alternatively this can be set by the ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING
environment variable:
$ export ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING=False
Also note that host key checking in paramiko mode is reasonably slow, therefore switching to 'ssh' is also recommended when using this feature.
Other connection methods
Ansible can use a variety of connection methods beyond SSH. You can select any connection plugin, including managing things locally and managing chroot, lxc, and jail containers. A mode called 'ansible-pull' can also invert the system and have systems 'phone home' via scheduled git checkouts to pull configuration directives from a central repository.