Ansible/Directory Layout/Details: Difference between revisions
From charlesreid1
No edit summary |
(→Hosts) |
||
| Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
==Hosts== | ==Hosts== | ||
The hosts file will contain information about different hosts. | |||
If you need to separate production and staging host files, you can split <code>hosts</code> into <code>production</code> and <code>staging</code>, and use the <code>-i</code> flag when running ansible to specify an inventory file. | |||
==Group Variables== | ==Group Variables== | ||
Revision as of 20:16, 7 December 2018
Example Playbooks Directory
This covers the details of the default/recommended directory layout from the Ansible documentation.
Here is the example directory layout for an Ansible playbooks/ directory:
hosts # inventory file
group_vars/
group1.yml # here we assign variables to particular groups
group2.yml
host_vars/
hostname1.yml # here we assign variables to particular systems
hostname2.yml
library/ # if any custom modules, put them here (optional)
module_utils/ # if any custom module_utils to support modules, put them here (optional)
filter_plugins/ # if any custom filter plugins, put them here (optional)
site.yml # master playbook
webservers.yml # playbook for webservers role
dbservers.yml # playbook for dbservers role
fooapp.yml # playbook for foo app
roles/
common/ # this hierarchy represents defaults for a "role"
tasks/ #
main.yml # <-- tasks file can include smaller files if warranted
handlers/ #
main.yml # <-- handlers file
templates/ # <-- files for use with the template resource
ntp.conf.j2 # <------- templates end in .j2
files/ #
bar.txt # <-- files for use with the copy resource
foo.sh # <-- script files for use with the script resource
vars/ #
main.yml # <-- variables associated with this role
defaults/ #
main.yml # <-- default lower priority variables for this role
meta/ #
main.yml # <-- role dependencies
library/ # roles can also include custom modules
module_utils/ # roles can also include custom module_utils
lookup_plugins/ # or other types of plugins, like lookup in this case
webservers/ # same kind of structure as "common" was above, done for the webservers role
dbservers/ # ""
fooapp/ # ""
We will go through this step by step.
Hosts
The hosts file will contain information about different hosts.
If you need to separate production and staging host files, you can split hosts into production and staging, and use the -i flag when running ansible to specify an inventory file.
Group Variables
Start with how you define defaults for group variables: create an all file in the group_vars folder
--- # file: group_vars/all ntp: ntp-boston.example.com backup: backup-boston.example.com
If we have a group called webservers, any hosts in the webservers group will load the variables in the file group_vars/webservers. Here is an example:
--- # file: group_vars/webservers apacheMaxRequestsPerChild: 3000 apacheMaxClients: 900
If using a group to denote geographic regions, can use that to set information about how to reach other servers (nearby ones):
--- # file: group_vars/atlanta ntp: ntp-atlanta.example.com backup: backup-atlanta.example.com
Host Variables
It is not encouraged to use host-specific variables - use groups when possible - but sometimes you must (e.g., changing port numbers to get around site-specific restrictions).
Example host variables file:
--- # file: host_vars/db-bos-1.example.com foo_agent_port: 86 bar_agent_port: 99