183 lines
9.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
183 lines
9.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
Frequently Asked Questions
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==========================
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What inspired Ansible?
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----------------------
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Back when I worked for Red Hat and working on `Cobbler <http://cobbler.github.com/>`_, several of us identified a gap between
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provisioning (Cobbler) and configuration management solutions (cfengine, Puppet, etc).
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There was a need for a way to do ad-hoc tasks efficiently, and various parallel
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SSH scripts were not API based enough for us. So we (Adrian Likins, Seth Vidal, and I)
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created `Func <http://fedorahosted.org/func>`_ -- a secure distributed command framework.
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I always wanted to have a configuration management system built on Func, but never
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built it due to needing to spend time on Cobbler and other projects.
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In the meantime, a John Eckersberg developed Taboot,
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a deployment framework of sorts that sat on top of Func, using a YAML syntax very
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much like what Ansible now has in :doc:`playbooks`.
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After trying to get Func running again recently at a new company, I got tired
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of some SSL and DNS issues and decided to create something a bit simpler, taking
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all of the good ideas from Func, and merging them with experience I learned from
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working at Puppet Labs. I wanted something that was easy to pick up and was installable
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without any bootstrapping, and didn't suffer from the "I don't want to learn X" mentality
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that often impacted adoption of tools like Puppet and Chef among certain ops teams.
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I also spent some time working with a couple of sites that needed to do large webapp deployments,
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and noticed how complex various configuration management and deployment tools were to these
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companies, compared with what they actually needed. Release processes were too complex
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and needed something simple to straighten them out -- but I really didn't want to train
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all the dev(ops) on Puppet or Chef, and they really didn't want to learn them either.
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I kept thinking, is there a reason for these programs to be so large and complicated?
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Well, systems management is a little complicated, but no. Not really.
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Can I build something that a sysadmin can
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figure out in 15 minutes and get going, and then extend in any language he knows?
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That's how Ansible was born. It sheds 'best practices' for 'you know your infrastructure
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best', and distills all of the ideas behind all of these other tools to the core.
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Not only is Ansible very simple and easy to learn/extend, it's configuration management, deployment, and ad-hoc tasks all in one app. And I think that makes it pretty powerful. It hasn't really been done before.
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I'd like to know what you think of it. Hop by the mailing list and say hi.
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Comparisons
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-----------
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vs Func?
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++++++++
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Ansible uses SSH by default instead of SSL and custom daemons, and requires
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no extra software to run on managed machines. You can also write modules
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in any language as long as they return JSON. Ansible's API, of course, is
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heavily inspired by Func. Some features, like delegation hierarchies, are
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not supported, but Ansible does have an async mode. Ansible also adds
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a configuration management and multinode orchestration layer (:doc:`playbooks`)
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that Func didn't have.
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vs Puppet?
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++++++++++
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First off, Ansible wouldn't have happened without Puppet. Puppet took configuration
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management ideas from cfengine and made them sane. However, I still think they can
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be simpler.
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Ansible playbooks ARE a complete configuration management system. Unlike Puppet, playbooks
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are implicitly ordered (more like Chef), but still retain the ability to signal
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notification events (like Puppet). This is kind of a 'best of both worlds' thing.
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There is no central server to promote scaling, and Ansible is
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also designed with multi-node deployment in mind from day-one -- something that is difficult
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for Puppet because of the pull architecture. Ansible is push based,
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so you can do things in an ordered fashion, addressing batches of servers
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at one time, and you do not have to contend with the DAG. It's also extensible in any language
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and the source is designed so that you don't have to be an expert programmer to submit a patch.
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Ansible's resources are heavily inspired by Puppet, with the "state" keyword being a more or less
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direct port of "ensure" from Puppet. Unlike Puppet, Ansible can be extended in any language,
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even bash ... just return some output in JSON format. You don't need to know Ruby.
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Unlike Puppet, hosts are taken out of playbooks when they have a failure. It encourages
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'fail first', so you can correct the error, instead of configuring as much of the system
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as it can. A system shouldn't be half correct, especially if we're planning on configuring
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other systems that depend on that system.
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Ansible also has a VERY short learning curve -- but it also has less language constructs and
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does not create it's own programming language. What constructs Ansible does have should be enough to cover 80% or so of the cases of most Puppet users, and it should scale equally well (not having a server is
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almost like cheating).
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I also suspect some Ansible users will actually use Ansible to trigger Puppet -- using the git
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module to checkout a Puppet module hierachy from source, and the command module to run
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'puppet apply'. That's ok too, but you may find playbooks do all you need.
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Ansible does support gathering variables from 'facter', if installed, and Ansible templates
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in jinja2 in a way just like Puppet does with erb.
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vs Chef?
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++++++++
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Much in the ways Ansible is different from Puppet. Chef is notoriously hard
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to set up on the server, and requires that you know how to program in Ruby to
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use the language. As such, it seems to have a pretty good following mainly
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among Rails coders.
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Like Chef (and unlike Puppet), Ansible executes configuration tasks in the order
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given, rather than having to manually specify a dependency graph. Ansible extends
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this though, by allowing triggered notifiers, so Apache can, be restarted if needed,
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only once, at the end of a configuration run.
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Unlike Chef, Ansible's playbooks are not a programming language. This means
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that you can parse Ansible's playbooks and treat the instructions as data. It also
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means working on your infrastructure is not a development task and testing is easier.
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Ansible can be used regardless of your programming language experience. Both
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Chef and Puppet are around 60k+ lines of code, while Ansible is a much simpler
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program. I believe this strongly leads to more reliable software and a richer
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open source community -- the code is kept simple so it is easy for anyone to
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submit a patch or module.
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Just like with puppet, some users may wish to use Ansible to trigger chef-solo to
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avoid using the server, after checking out some chef content using Ansible's git
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support.
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Ansible does support gathering variables from 'ohai', if installed.
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vs Capistrano/Fabric?
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+++++++++++++++++++++
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These tools aren't really well suited to doing idempotent configuration and are
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typically about pushing software out for web deployment and automating steps.
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Meanwhile Ansible is designed for other types of configuration management, and contains some
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advanced scaling features.
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The ansible playbook syntax is documented within a page of text and also has a MUCH lower learning curve. And because Ansible is designed for more than pushing webapps, it's more generally
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useful for sysadmins (not just web developers), and can also be used for firing off ad-hoc tasks.
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Other Questions
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---------------
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How does Ansible scale?
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+++++++++++++++++++++++
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Whether in single-execution mode or using ansible playbooks, ansible can
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run multiple commands in seperate forks, thanks to the magic behind
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Python's multiprocessing module.
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If you need to address 500 machines you can decide if you want to try
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to contact 5 at a time, or 50 at a time.
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It's up to you and how much power you can throw at it, but it's heritage
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is about handling those kinds of use cases.
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There are no daemons so it's entirely up to you. When you are aren't using
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Ansible, it is not consuming any resources.
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If you have 10,000 systems, running a single ansible playbook against all of
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them probably isn't always appropriate, but most users shouldn't have any problems.
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If you want to kick off an async task/module, it's probably fine.
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If you'd like to discuss scaling, please hop on the mailing list.
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Are transports other than SSH supported?
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Currently SSH is the only one, though the intent is to make this entirely
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pluggable very soon so if you wanted to build a message bus or XMPP (or even
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sneaker net?) adapter ansible will let you do that. Stay tuned!
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What are some ideal uses for Ansible?
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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One of the best use cases? Complex multi-node cloud deployments using playbooks. Another good
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example is for configuration management where you
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are starting from a clean OS with no extra software installed, adopting systems
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that are already deployed.
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Ansible is also great for running ad-hoc tasks across a wide variety of Linux, Unix, and *BSDs.
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Because it just uses the basic tools available on the system, it is exceptionally cross platform
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without needing to install management packages on each node.
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It also excels for writing distributed
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scripts and ad-hoc applications that need to gather data or perform arbitrary
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tasks -- whether for a QA sytem, build system, or anything you can think of.
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