ec3920cef1
Call out the trailing comma when specifying a single host. Small snag that took me a while to notice.
171 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
171 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _intro_patterns:
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Patterns: targeting hosts and groups
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====================================
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When you execute Ansible through an ad-hoc command or by running a playbook, you must choose which managed nodes or groups you want to execute against. Patterns let you run commands and playbooks against specific hosts and/or groups in your inventory. An Ansible pattern can refer to a single host, an IP address, an inventory group, a set of groups, or all hosts in your inventory. Patterns are highly flexible - you can exclude or require subsets of hosts, use wildcards or regular expressions, and more. Ansible executes on all inventory hosts included in the pattern.
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Using patterns
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--------------
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You use a pattern almost any time you execute an ad-hoc command or a playbook. The pattern is the only element of an :ref:`ad-hoc command<intro_adhoc>` that has no flag. It is usually the second element::
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ansible <pattern> -m <module_name> -a "<module options>"
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For example::
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ansible webservers -m service -a "name=httpd state=restarted"
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In a playbook the pattern is the content of the ``hosts:`` line for each play:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- name: <play_name>
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hosts: <pattern>
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For example::
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- name: restart webservers
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hosts: webservers
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Since you often want to run a command or playbook against multiple hosts at once, patterns often refer to inventory groups. Both the ad-hoc command and the playbook above will execute against all machines in the ``webservers`` group.
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.. _common_patterns:
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Common patterns
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---------------
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This table lists common patterns for targeting inventory hosts and groups.
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.. table::
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:class: documentation-table
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====================== ================================ ===================================================
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Description Pattern(s) Targets
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====================== ================================ ===================================================
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All hosts all (or \*)
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One host host1
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Multiple hosts host1:host2 (or host1,host2)
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One group webservers
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Multiple groups webservers:dbservers all hosts in webservers plus all hosts in dbservers
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Excluding groups webservers:!atlanta all hosts in webservers except those in atlanta
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Intersection of groups webservers:&staging any hosts in webservers that are also in staging
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====================== ================================ ===================================================
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.. note:: You can use either a comma (``,``) or a colon (``:``) to separate a list of hosts. The comma is preferred when dealing with ranges and IPv6 addresses.
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Once you know the basic patterns, you can combine them. This example::
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webservers:dbservers:&staging:!phoenix
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targets all machines in the groups 'webservers' and 'dbservers' that are also in
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the group 'staging', except any machines in the group 'phoenix'.
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You can use wildcard patterns with FQDNs or IP addresses, as long as the hosts are named in your inventory by FQDN or IP address::
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192.0.\*
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\*.example.com
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\*.com
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You can mix wildcard patterns and groups at the same time::
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one*.com:dbservers
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Limitations of patterns
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-----------------------
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Patterns depend on inventory. If a host or group is not listed in your inventory, you cannot use a pattern to target it. If your pattern includes an IP address or hostname that does not appear in your inventory, you will see an error like this:
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.. code-block:: text
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[WARNING]: No inventory was parsed, only implicit localhost is available
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[WARNING]: Could not match supplied host pattern, ignoring: *.not_in_inventory.com
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Your pattern must match your inventory syntax. If you define a host as an :ref:`alias<inventory_aliases>`:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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atlanta:
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host1:
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http_port: 80
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maxRequestsPerChild: 808
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host: 127.0.0.2
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you must use the alias in your pattern. In the example above, you must use ``host1`` in your pattern. If you use the IP address, you will once again get the error::
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[WARNING]: Could not match supplied host pattern, ignoring: 127.0.0.2
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Advanced pattern options
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------------------------
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The common patterns described above will meet most of your needs, but Ansible offers several other ways to define the hosts and groups you want to target.
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Using variables in patterns
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can use variables to enable passing group specifiers via the ``-e`` argument to ansible-playbook::
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webservers:!{{ excluded }}:&{{ required }}
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Using group position in patterns
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can define a host or subset of hosts by its position in a group. For example, given the following group::
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[webservers]
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cobweb
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webbing
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weber
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you can use subscripts to select individual hosts or ranges within the webservers group::
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webservers[0] # == cobweb
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webservers[-1] # == weber
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webservers[0:2] # == webservers[0],webservers[1]
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# == cobweb,webbing
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webservers[1:] # == webbing,weber
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webservers[:3] # == cobweb,webbing,weber
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Using regexes in patterns
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can specify a pattern as a regular expression by starting the pattern with ``~``::
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~(web|db).*\.example\.com
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Patterns and ansible-playbook flags
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-----------------------------------
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You can change the behavior of the patterns defined in playbooks using command-line options. For example, you can run a playbook that defines ``hosts: all`` on a single host by specifying ``-i 127.0.0.2,`` (note the trailing comma). This works even if the host you target is not defined in your inventory. You can also limit the hosts you target on a particular run with the ``--limit`` flag::
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ansible-playbook site.yml --limit datacenter2
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Finally, you can use ``--limit`` to read the list of hosts from a file by prefixing the file name with ``@``::
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ansible-playbook site.yml --limit @retry_hosts.txt
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If :ref:`RETRY_FILES_ENABLED` is set to ``True``, a ``.retry`` file will be created after the ``ansible-playbook`` run containing a list of failed hosts from all plays. This file is overwritten each time ``ansible-playook`` finishes running.
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ansible-playbook site.yml --limit @site.retry
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To apply your knowledge of patterns with Ansible commands and playbooks, read :ref:`intro_adhoc` and :ref:`playbooks_intro`.
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.. seealso::
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:ref:`intro_adhoc`
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Examples of basic commands
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:ref:`working_with_playbooks`
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Learning the Ansible configuration management language
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`Mailing List <https://groups.google.com/group/ansible-project>`_
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Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups
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`irc.freenode.net <http://irc.freenode.net>`_
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#ansible IRC chat channel
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