Book Image

Practical Ansible 2

By : Daniel Oh, James Freeman, Fabio Alessandro Locati
Book Image

Practical Ansible 2

By: Daniel Oh, James Freeman, Fabio Alessandro Locati

Overview of this book

Ansible enables you to automate software provisioning, configuration management, and application roll-outs, and can be used as a deployment and orchestration tool. While Ansible provides simple yet powerful features to automate multi-layer environments using agentless communication, it can also solve other critical IT challenges, such as ensuring continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) with zero downtime. In this book, you'll work with Ansible 2.9 and learn to solve complex issues quickly with the help of task-oriented scenarios. You'll start by installing and configuring Ansible on Linux and macOS to automate monotonous and repetitive IT tasks and get to grips with concepts such as playbooks, inventories, and network modules. As you progress, you'll gain insight into the YAML syntax and learn how to port between Ansible versions. In addition to this, you'll also understand how Ansible enables you to orchestrate multi-layer environments such as networks, containers, and the cloud. By the end of this Ansible book, you'll be well - versed in writing playbooks and other related Ansible code to overcome just about all of your IT challenges, from infrastructure-as-code provisioning to application deployments, and even handling the mundane day-to-day maintenance tasks that take up so much valuable time.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Section 1: Learning the Fundamentals of Ansible
6
Section 2: Expanding the Capabilities of Ansible
11
Section 3: Using Ansible in an Enterprise

Defining Your Inventory

As we have already discussed in the first two chapters, Ansible cannot do anything until you tell it what hosts it is responsible for. This is, of course, logical—you wouldn't want any automation tool, regardless of how easy it is to use and set up, to simply go out and take control of every single device on your network. Hence, at the bare minimum, you must tell Ansible what hosts it is going to automate tasks on, and this, in the most fundamental terms, is what an inventory is.

However, there is so much more to inventories than just a list of automation targets. Ansible inventories can be provided in several formats; they can be either static or dynamic, and they can contain important variables that define how Ansible interacts with each host (or groups of hosts). Hence, they deserve a chapter to themselves, and in this chapter, we shall perform...