Obscene ansible runner
Project description
Bigsudo is an opinionated command line wrapper to ansible-playbook.
Features
It accepts as first argument: role name, path or url, or playbook path or url:
bigsudo role.name # download role and run tasks/main.yml on localhost bigsudo role.name update # do tasks/update.yml bigsudo role.name user@host update # do tasks/update.yml on host bigsudo role.name @host update # with current user bigsudo role.name @host update foo=bar # custom variable bigsudo role.name {"foo":"bar"} # also accepts json without space bigsudo role.name --become # forwards any ansible-playbook argument
Note that bigsudo will automatically call ansible-galaxy install on requirements.yml it finds in any role, recursively on each role that it got galaxy to install. This means that yourlabs.docker/requirements.yml will also be installed by bigsudo if your repo has this requirements.yml:
- src: git+https://yourlabs.io/oss/yourlabs.docker
The gotcha is that you cannot pass values to a short-written argument (because it’s my opinion that ansible commands are more readable as such), ie:
# works: $ ./example/playbook.yml --tags=foo ansible-playbook --tags=foo -c local -i localhost, -e apply_tasks='["main"]' ./example/playbook.yml # does NOT work: parser doesn't detect that foo is the value of -t: $ ./example/playbook.yml -t foo ansible-playbook -t -c local -i localhost, -e apply_tasks='["foo"]' ./example/playbook.yml # does NOT work: parser doesn't detect that foo is the value of --tags: $ ./example/playbook.yml --tags foo ansible-playbook --tags -c local -i localhost, -e apply_tasks='["foo"]' ./example/playbook.yml
Using gitlab-ci you can define multiline env vars, ie a with $STAGING_HOST=deploy@yourstaging and json string for $STAGING_VARS:
{ "security_salt": "yoursecretsalf", "mysql_password": "...", // .... }
Then you can define a staging deploy job as such in .gitlab-ci.yml:
image: yourlabs/python # example running tasks/update.yml, using the repo as role script: bigsudo . update $staging_host $staging_vars # example running playbook update.yml script: bigsudo ./update.yml $staging_host $staging_vars
Continuous Deployment with Gitlab-CI
This chapter describes the steps to setup the following deploy job in your .gitlab-ci.yml:
deploy-staging: image: yourlabs/python stage: deploy script: - mkdir -p ~/.ssh; echo $staging_key > ~/.ssh/id_ed25519; echo $staging_fingerprint > ~/.ssh/known_hosts; chmod 700 ~/.ssh; chmod 600 ~/.ssh/* - bigsudo . $staging_host --extra-vars=$staging_vars only: refs: [master] environment: name: staging url: https://staging.example.com
Create an ed25519 deploy key with the following command:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -a 100 -f deploy.key
Upload the deployment key to your target:
ssh-copy-id -i deploy.key user@staging.host
Add it to the enviromnent variable $staging_key
cat deploy.key
Also add your host fingerprint in $staging_fingerprint:
ssh-keyscan staging.host
Add all the variables you need for your tasks in the $staging_vars env var as a JSON dict, as described in the previous chapter.
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