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Ansible Community Information
The purpose of the Ansible community is to unite developers, system administrators, operations, and IT managers to share and build great automation solutions. This document contains all sorts of information about how to contribute and interact with Ansible. Welcome!
Ways to Interact
There are a lot of ways to join and be a part of the Ansible community, such as:
Sharing Ansible with Others
You can help share Ansible with others by telling friends and colleagues, writing a blog post, or presenting at user groups (like DevOps groups or the local LUG or BUG). You are also welcome to share slides on speakerdeck, sign up for a free account and tag it “Ansible”. On Twitter, you can also share things with #ansible and may wish to follow @AnsibleWorks.
Sharing Content and Tips
Join the Ansible project mailing list and you can share playbooks you may have written and other interesting implementation stories. Put your Ansible content up on places like github to share with others.
Sharing A Feature Idea
If you have an idea for a new feature, you can open a new ticket at github.com/ansible/ansible, though in general we like to talk about feature ideas first and bring in lots of people into the discussion. Consider stopping by the Ansible project mailing list or #ansible on irc.freenode.net.
Helping with Documentation
Ansible documentation is a community project too! If you would like to help with the documentation, whether correcting a typo or improving a section, or maybe even documenting a new feature, submit a github pull request to the code that lives in the “docsite/latest/rst” subdirectory of the project. Docs are in restructured text format. If you aren’t comfortable with restructured text, you can also open a ticket on github about any errors you spot or sections you would like to see added. For more information on creating pull requests, please refer to the github help guide.
Contributing Code (Features or Bugfixes)
The Ansible project keeps it’s source on github at github.com/ansible/ansible and takes contributions through github pull requests.
It is usually a good idea to join the ansible-devel list to discuss any large features prior to submission, and this especially helps in avoiding duplicate work or efforts where we decide, upon seeing a pull request for the first time, that revisions are needed. (This is not usually needed for module development)
When submitting patches, be sure to run the unit tests first “make tests” and always use “git rebase” vs “git merge” (aliasing git pull to git pull --rebase is a great idea) to avoid merge commits in your submissions. We will require resubmission of pull requests that contain merge commits.
We’ll then review your contributions and engage with you about questions and so on. Please be advised we have a very large and active community, so it may take awhile to get your contributions in! Patches should be made against the 'devel' branch.
Contributions can be for new features like modules, or to fix bugs you or others have found. If you are interested in writing new modules to be included in the core Ansible distribution, please refer to the Module Developers documentation on our website.
Ansible's aesthetic encourages simple, readable code and consistent, conservatively extending, backwards-compatible improvements. Code developed for Ansible needs to support Python 2.6+, while code in modules must run under Python 2.4 or higher. Please also use a 4-space indent and no tabs.
Tip: To easily run from a checkout, source "./hacking/env-setup" and that's it -- no install required. You're now live!
Reporting A Bug
Bugs should be reported to github.com/ansible/ansible after signing up for a free github account. Before reporting a bug, please use the bug/issue search to see if the issue has already been reported.
When filing a bug, the following information is always required:
- A good name for the bug ("Foo module raises exception when xyz=glork is used", vs "foo doesn't work")
- A succint description of the problem
- What version of ansible you are using (ansible --version)
- Steps to reproduce the problem, including commands or playbook snippets as relevant
- Expected results
- Actual results, and as full/complete output as possible
Do not use the issue tracker for "how do I do this" type questions. These are great candidates for IRC or the mailing list instead where things are likely to be more of a discussion.
To be respectful of reviewers time and allow us to help everyone efficiently, please provide minimal well-reduced and well-commented examples versus sharing your entire production playbook. Include playbook snippets and output where possible.
Content in the GitHub bug tracker can be indented four spaces to preserve formatting.
For multiple-file content, we encourage use of gist.github.com. Online pastebin content can expire.
If you are not sure if something is a bug yet, you are welcome to ask about something on the mailing list or IRC first. As we are a very high volume project, if you determine that you do have a bug, please be sure to open the issue yourself to ensure we have a record of it. Don’t rely on someone else in the community to file the bug report for you.
Online Resources
Documentation
The main ansible documentation can be found at ansibleworks.com/docs. As mentioned above this is an open source project, so we accept contributions to the documentation. You can also find some best practices examples that we recommend reading at ansible-examples.
Mailing lists
Ansible has several mailing lists. Your first post to the mailing list will be moderated (to reduce spam), so please allow a day or less for your first post.
ansible-announce is for release announcements and major news. It is a low traffic read-only list and you should only get a few emails a month.
ansible-project is the main list, and is used for sharing cool projects you may have built, talking about Ansible ideas, and for users to ask questions or to help other users.
ansible-devel is a technical list for developers working on Ansible and Ansible modules. Join here to discuss how to build modules, prospective feature implementations, or technical challenges.
To subscribe to a group from a non-google account, you can email the subscription address, for example ansible-devel+subscribe@googlegroups.com.
IRC
Ansible has a general purpose IRC channel available at #ansible on irc.freenode.net. Use this channel for all types of conversations, including sharing tips, coordinating development work, or getting help from other users.
Miscellaneous Information
AnsibleWorks Staff
AnsibleWorks is a company supporting Ansible and building additional solutions based on Ansible. We also do services and support for those that are interested. Our most important task however is enabling all the great things that happen in the Ansible community, including organizing software releases of Ansible. For more information about any of these things, contact info@ansibleworks.com
On IRC, you can find us as mdehaan, jimi_c, Tybstar, and others. On the mailing list, we post with an @ansibleworks.com address.
Community Code of Conduct
Ansible’s community welcomes users of all types, backgrounds, and skill levels. Please treat others as you expect to be treated, keep discussions positive, and avoid discrimination or engaging in controversial debates (except vi vs emacs is cool). Posts to mailing lists should remain focused around Ansible and IT automation. Abuse of these community guidelines will not be tolerated and may result in banning from community resources.
Contributors License Agreement
By contributing you agree that these contributions are your own (or approved by your employer) and you grant a full, complete, irrevocable copyright license to all users and developers of the project, present and future, pursuant to the license of the project.