Plugin to integrate Ansible with ploy.
Project description
Overview
The ploy_ansible plugin provides integration of Ansible with ploy. It automatically builds an inventory and provides a custom connection plugin.
Installation
ploy_ansible is best installed with easy_install, pip or with zc.recipe.egg in a buildout.
Commands
The plugin adds the following commands to ploy.
- configure
Configures an instance. There are three ways to specify how to configure an instance. Applying the roles given by the roles option of an instance, a playbook set by the playbook option or a playbook with the unique name of the instance found in the playbooks-directory. Using roles or a playbook is mutually exclusive. If you specify a playbook and there is also a playbook in the default location, you will get a warning.
- ansible
Runs an Ansible command. This basically reflects the ansible script of Ansible.
- playbook
Applies a playbook. This basically reflects the ansible-playbook script of Ansible.
- vault
Manages file encryption. This basically reflects the ansible-vault script of Ansible, but handles the encryption key source via ploy.conf.
- vault-key
Manages the vault key.
Options
Global
playbooks-directory
The playbooks-directory option of the ansible section allows you to specify the directory where playbooks, roles, host_vars etc are looked up. If you specify a relative path, then it’s always relative to the ploy.conf directory. If you have a structure like this:
project |-- deployment | |-- roles | |-- host_vars | |-- etc |-- ploy.conf
Then you would put the following into your ploy.conf:
[ansible] playbooks-directory = ../deployment
By default it is set to the parent directory of the directory the ploy.conf is located at like this:
project |-- roles |-- host_vars |-- etc |-- ploy.conf
vault-password-source
Using the keyring library, you can store the encryption key for the Ansible vault in your keychain.
The vault-password-source option is the id used in your keychain. The id must be unique among all people who have to use the feature, as it is used as an identifier in their keychain. If in doubt, use a speaking prefix and add a guid by running python -c "import uuid; print(uuid.uuid4().hex)".
If you want to rekey your files, you have to put the old id into the vault-password-old-source option and set a new id in vault-password-source. Just incrementing a number or appending a new guid is best.
Example:
[ansible]
vault-password-old-source = my-domain-deployment-0da2c8296f744c90a236721486dbd258
vault-password-source = my-domain-deployment-042a98b666ec4e4e8e06de7d42688f3b
You can manage your key with the vault-key command. For easy exchange with other developers, you can also export and import the key via gpg using the vault-key export and vault-key import commands.
Per instance
- roles
Used by the configure command. This allows you to configure an instance by applying the whitespace separated roles. This is like creating a playbook which only specifies a host and a list of roles names.
- playbook
Allows you to explicitly specify a playbook to use for this instance.
Any option starting with ansible_ is passed through to Ansible as is. This can be used for settings like ansible_python_interpreter.
Any option starting with ansible- is stripped of the ansible- prefix and then passed through to Ansible. This is the main way to set Ansible variables for use in playbooks and roles.
All other options are prefixed with ploy_ and made available to Ansible.
Ansible inventory
All instances in ploy.conf are available to Ansible via their unique id.
The variables for each instance are gathered from group_vars, host_vars and the ploy.conf.
Ansible lookup plugins
The ploy_crypted lookup plugin can be used in playbooks to read the content of encrypted files. This is another way to access encrypted data where you don’t have to move that data into yml files. An added benefit is, that the file is only decrypted when it is actually accessed. If you run tasks filtered by tags and those tasks don’t access the encrypted data, then it’s not decrypted at all.
API usage
On the Python side, each ploy instance gains the following methods:
- apply_playbook(self, playbook, *args, **kwargs)
Applies the playbook to the instance.
- has_playbook
Return True if the instance has either of the roles or a playbook option set.
- get_playbook(*args, **kwargs)
Returns an instance of the Ansible internal PlayBook class. This is either from a file (from playbook option or the playbook kwarg), or dynamically generated from the roles option.
- configure(*args, **kwargs)
Configures the instance with the same semantics as the configure command.
- get_ansible_variables
Returns the Ansible variables from the inventory. This does not include facts, as it doesn’t connect to the instance. This is particularly useful in Fabric scripts.
- get_vault_lib
Returns a readily usable Ansible VaultLib class. Use the encrypt and decrypt methods do encrypt/decrypt strings.
Changelog
1.2.0 - 2014-10-27
Always set ansible_ssh_user in inventory. [fschulze]
Clear host and pattern cache after calling original Inventory.__init__ method. [fschulze]
Add --extra-vars option to configure command. [witsch (Andreas Zeidler)]
Provide ploy_crypted lookup plugin to load encrypted files into Ansible variables. Only ascii and utf8 encoded files will work. [fschulze]
Expand Ansible variables in get_ansible_variables method. [fschulze]
Support Ansible vault with safe key storage via keyring library, so you don’t have to type it in or have it in an unprotected file. [fschulze]
1.1.0 - 2014-08-13
Test and fixes for changes in ansible 1.7. [fschulze]
Add verbosity argument to configure command. [fschulze]
1.0.0 - 2014-07-19
Added documentation. [fschulze]
1.0b8 - 2014-07-15
Add ansible as dependency if it can’t be imported already. [fschulze]
1.0b7 - 2014-07-08
Packaging and test fixes. [fschulze]
1.0b6 - 2014-07-04
Use unique instance id to avoid issues. [fschulze]
Renamed mr.awsome to ploy and mr.awsome.ansible to ploy_ansible. [fschulze]
1.0b5 - 2014-06-16
Set user in playbook to the one from the config if it’s not set already. [fschulze]
Change default playbook directory from the aws.conf directory to it’s parent. [fschulze]
1.0b4 - 2014-06-11
Added playbook and roles config options for instances. [fschulze]
Added has_playbook and configure methods to instances. [fschulze]
Added before/after_ansible_configure hooks. [fschulze]
1.0b3 - 2014-06-09
Use execnet for connections. There is only one ssh connection per host and it’s reused for all commands. [fschulze]
Make sure the playbook directory is always absolute. [fschulze]
Prevent use of persistent ssh connections, as that easily results in connections to wrong jails because of the proxying. This makes ansible a lot slower at the moment. [fschulze]
Add support for su and vault (ansible 1.5) as well as --force-handlers (ansible 1.6). [fschulze]
Removed ansible from install requirements. It won’t install in a buildout so it needs to be installed in a virtualenv or via a system package. [fschulze]
1.0b2 - 2014-05-15
Add configure command which is a stripped down variant of the playbook command with assumptions about the location of the yml file. [fschulze]
Warn if a playbook is requested for a host that is not configured in the playbook hosts list. [fschulze]
Allow mr.awsome plugins to add ansible variables. [fschulze]
Inject the ansible paths sooner as they may not apply in some cases otherwise. [fschulze]
Moved setuptools-git from setup.py to .travis.yml, it’s only needed for releases and testing. [fschulze]
1.0b1 - 2014-03-24
Initial release [fschulze]
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