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Ansible

Ansible is a extra-simple tool/API for doing 'parallel remote things' over SSH -- whether executing commands, running declarative 'modules', or executing larger 'playbooks' that can serve as a configuration management or deployment system.

While Func, which I co-wrote, aspired to avoid using SSH and have it's own daemon infrastructure, Ansible aspires to be quite different and more minimal, but still able to grow more modularly over time. This is based on talking to a lot of users of various tools and wishing to eliminate problems with connectivity and long running daemons, or not picking tool X because they preferred to code in Y.

Why use Ansible versus something else? (Fabric, Capistrano, mCollective, Func, SaltStack, etc?) It will have far less code, it will be more correct, and it will be the easiest thing to hack on and use you'll ever see -- regardless of your favorite language of choice. Want to only code plugins in bash or clojure? Ansible doesn't care. The docs will fit on one page and the source will be blindingly obvious.

Design Principles

* Dead simple setup
* Super fast & parallel by default
* No server or client daemons, uses existing SSHd
* No additional software required on client boxes
* Everything is self updating on the clients  
* Plugins can be written in ANY language
* API usage is an equal citizen to CLI usage
* Can be controlled/installed/used as non-root

Requirements

For the server the tool is running from, only:

* python 2.6 -- or the 2.4/2.5 backport of the multiprocessing module
* PyYAML (install on 'overlord' if using playbooks)
* paramiko

Optional -- If you want to push templates, the nodes need:

* python-jinja2 

Inventory file

To use ansible you must have a list of hosts somewhere.

The default inventory file (-H) is /etc/ansible/hosts and is a list of all hostnames to manage with ansible, one per line. These can be hostnames or IPs

Example:

abc.example.com
def.example.com
192.168.10.50
192.168.10.51

This list is further filtered by the pattern wildcard (-P) to target specific hosts. This is covered below.

You can organize groups of systems by having multiple inventory files (i.e. keeping webservers different from dbservers, etc)

Massive Parallelism, Pattern Matching, and a Usage Example

Reboot all web servers in Atlanta, 10 at a time:

  • ssh-agent bash
  • ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
  • ansible -p "atlanta-web*" -f 10 -n command -a "/sbin/reboot"

File Transfer

Ansible can SCP lots of files to lots of places in parallel.

  • ansible -p "web-*.acme.net" -f 10 -n copy -a "/etc/hosts /tmp/hosts"

Templating

JSON files can be placed for template metadata using Jinja2. Variables placed by 'setup' can be reused between ansible runs.

  • ansible -p "*" -n setup -a "ntp_server=192.168.1.1"
  • ansible -p "*" -n template /srv/motd.j2 /etc/motd
  • ansible -p "*" -n template /srv/foo.j2 /etc/foo

Git Deployments

Deploy your webapp straight from git

  • ansible -p "web*" -n git -a "repo=git://foo dest=/srv/myapp version=HEAD"

Take Inventory

Run popular open-source data discovery tools across a wide number of hosts. This is best used from API scripts.

  • ansible -p "dbserver*" -n facter
  • ansible -p "dbserver"" -n ohai

Other Modules

See the library directory for lots of extras. There's also a manpage, ansible-modules(5).

Playbooks

Playbooks are particularly awesome. Playbooks can batch ansible commands together, and can even fire off triggers when certain commands report changes. They are the basis for a really simple configuration management system, unlike any that already exist. Powerful, concise, but dead simple.

See examples/playbook.yml for what the syntax looks like.

To run a playbook:

ansible -r playbook.yml

Read ansible-playbook(5) for more details.

Future plans

  • see github's issue tracker for what we're thinking about

License

  • MIT

Mailing List

Author

Michael DeHaan -- michael.dehaan@gmail.com

http://michaeldehaan.net