Book Image

Learning Ansible 2.7 - Third Edition

By : Fabio Alessandro Locati
Book Image

Learning Ansible 2.7 - Third Edition

By: Fabio Alessandro Locati

Overview of this book

Ansible is an open source automation platform that assists organizations with tasks such as application deployment, orchestration, and task automation. With the release of Ansible 2.7, even complex tasks can be handled much more easily than before. Learning Ansible 2.7 will help you take your first steps toward understanding the fundamentals and practical aspects of Ansible by introducing you to topics such as playbooks, modules, and the installation of Linux, Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), and Windows support. In addition to this, you will focus on various testing strategies, deployment, and orchestration to build on your knowledge. The book will then help you get accustomed to features including cleaner architecture, task blocks, and playbook parsing, which can help you to streamline automation processes. Next, you will learn how to integrate Ansible with cloud platforms such as Amazon Web Services (AWS) before gaining insights into the enterprise versions of Ansible, Ansible Tower and Ansible Galaxy. This will help you to use Ansible to interact with different operating systems and improve your working efficiency. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with the Ansible skills you need to automate complex tasks for your organization.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Creating a Web Server Using Ansible
4
Section 2: Deploying Playbooks in a Production Environment
9
Section 3: Deploying an Application with Ansible
13
Section 4: Deploying an Application with Ansible

Debugging and Error Handling

Like software code, testing infrastructure code is an all-important task. There should ideally be no code floating around in production that has not been tested, especially when you have strict customer SLAs to meet, and this is true even for the infrastructure. In this chapter, we'll look at syntactic checks, testing without applying the code on the machines (the no-op mode), and functional testing for playbooks, which are at the core of Ansible and trigger the various tasks you want to perform on the remote hosts. It is recommended that you integrate some of these into your Continuous Integration (CI) system that you have for Ansible to better test your playbooks. We'll be looking at the following points:

  • Syntax checking
  • Checking mode with and without --diff
  • Functional testing

As part of functional testing, we will be looking at the following...