Book Image

Learn Ansible

By : Russ McKendrick
Book Image

Learn Ansible

By: Russ McKendrick

Overview of this book

Ansible has grown from a small, open source orchestration tool to a full-blown orchestration and configuration management tool owned by Red Hat. Its powerful core modules cover a wide range of infrastructures, including on-premises systems and public clouds, operating systems, devices, and services—meaning it can be used to manage pretty much your entire end-to-end environment. Trends and surveys say that Ansible is the first choice of tool among system administrators as it is so easy to use. This end-to-end, practical guide will take you on a learning curve from beginner to pro. You'll start by installing and configuring the Ansible to perform various automation tasks. Then, we'll dive deep into the various facets of infrastructure, such as cloud, compute and network infrastructure along with security. By the end of this book, you'll have an end-to-end understanding of Ansible and how you can apply it to your own environments.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)

Deploying WordPress

In the previous chapter, we worked on building a playbook that installs and configures a basic LAMP stack. In this chapter, we are going to be building on top of the techniques we used there in order to create a playbook that installs a LEMP stack and WordPress.

We will be covering the following topics:

  • Preparing our initial playbook
  • Downloading and installing the WordPress CLI
  • Installing and configuring WordPress
  • Logging in to your WordPress installation

Before we start, we should quickly cover what WordPress is. It is likely that at some point in the last 48 hours, you have visited a website that is powered by WordPress. It is an open source content management system (CMS) that is powered by PHP and MySQL and is used by around 19,545,516 websites according to the CMS usage statistics provided by BuiltWith.