Book Image

Mastering Ansible, 4th Edition - Fourth Edition

By : James Freeman, Jesse Keating
Book Image

Mastering Ansible, 4th Edition - Fourth Edition

By: James Freeman, Jesse Keating

Overview of this book

Ansible is a modern, YAML-based automation tool (built on top of Python, one of the world’s most popular programming languages) with a massive and ever-growing user base. Its popularity and Python underpinnings make it essential learning for all in the DevOps space. This fourth edition of Mastering Ansible provides complete coverage of Ansible automation, from the design and architecture of the tool and basic automation with playbooks to writing and debugging your own Python-based extensions. You'll learn how to build automation workflows with Ansible’s extensive built-in library of collections, modules, and plugins. You'll then look at extending the modules and plugins with Python-based code and even build your own collections — ultimately learning how to give back to the Ansible community. By the end of this Ansible book, you'll be confident in all aspects of Ansible automation, from the fundamentals of playbook design to getting under the hood and extending and adapting Ansible to solve new automation challenges.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Section 1: Ansible Overview and Fundamentals
7
Section 2: Writing and Troubleshooting Ansible Playbooks
13
Section 3: Orchestration with Ansible

Chapter 13: Network Automation

Historically, a network consisted of mostly hardware with just a modicum of software involvement. Changing the topology of it involved installing and configuring new switches or blades in a chassis or, at the very least, re-patching some cables. Now, the scenario has changed, and the complex infrastructures built to cater for multi-tenant environments such as cloud hosting, or microservice-based deployments, require a network that is more agile and flexible. This has led to the emergence of Software-Defined Networking (SDN), an approach that centralizes the network configuration (where historically it was configured on a per-device basis) and results in a network topology being defined as a whole, rather than as a series of component parts. It is, if you like, an abstraction layer for the network itself and thus implies that just like infrastructure as a service, networks can now be defined in code.

Since the previous edition...