Book Image

Implementing DevOps with Ansible 2

By : Jonathan McAllister
Book Image

Implementing DevOps with Ansible 2

By: Jonathan McAllister

Overview of this book

Thinking about adapting the DevOps culture for your organization using a very simple, yet powerful automation tool, Ansible 2? Then this book is for you! In this book, you will start with the role of Ansible in the DevOps module, which covers fundamental DevOps practices and how Ansible is leveraged by DevOps organizations to implement consistent and simplified configuration management and deployment. You will then move on to the next module, Ansible with DevOps, where you will understand Ansible fundamentals and how Ansible Playbooks can be used for simple configuration management and deployment tasks. After simpler tasks, you will move on to the third module, Ansible Syntax and Playbook Development, where you will learn advanced configuration management implementations, and use Ansible Vault to secure top-secret information in your organization. In this module, you will also learn about popular DevOps tools and the support that Ansible provides for them (MYSQL, NGINX, APACHE and so on). The last module, Scaling Ansible for the enterprise, is where you will integrate Ansible with CI and CD solutions and provision Docker containers using Ansible. By the end of the book you will have learned to use Ansible to leverage your DevOps tasks.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Using Ansible to Create Docker Images


Docker provides an out-of-box solution to build Docker images using a Docker domain-specific language. Docker files are created in order to provide spin-up instructions that Docker can execute in order to build an image. After learning to create Docker files, one may ask why we would advocate for leveraging Ansible to create Docker containers in conjunction with a Dockerfile. The answer is quite simple-idempotency. An idempotent operation is one where the operation, once executed, can be executed repeatedly without any change. This is precisely what Ansible does.

Once Ansible has effected a change in a given system, it will automatically skip that change if the change is already present. So for example, if an Ansible playbook runs against a target system and makes, say, four changes to that system, it will automatically skip trying to make that change again if the change is found already present or if the system is already in the desired state.

In terms...