66fb7fd9de
At the moment Ansible prefers yes/no for module booleans, however booleans in playbooks are still using True/False, rather than yes/no. This changes modifies boolean uses in playbooks (and man pages) to favor yes/no rather than True/False. This change includes: - Adaptation of documentation and examples to favor yes/no - Modification to manpage output to favor yes/no (the docsite output already favors yes/no)
28 lines
1.1 KiB
YAML
28 lines
1.1 KiB
YAML
# here's a cool advanced topic about how to perform conditional logic in ansible without resorting
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# to writing your own module that defines facts. You can do that too, and it's easy to do, but
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# often you just want to run a command and then decide whether to run some steps or not. That's
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# easy to do, and here we'll show you how.
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- name: test playbook
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user: root
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hosts: all
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tasks:
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# it is possible to save the result of any command in a named register. This variable will be made
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# available to tasks and templates made further down in the execution flow.
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- action: shell grep hi /etc/motd
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ignore_errors: yes
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register: motd_result
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# and here we access the register. Note that variable is structured data because
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# it is a return from the command module. The shell module makes available variables such as
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# as 'stdout', 'stderr', and 'rc'.
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# here we run the next action only if the previous grep returned true
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- action: shell echo "motd contains the word hi"
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only_if: "${motd_result.rc} == 0"
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