159 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
159 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
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# Conventions
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## Roles
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We can use the `ansible-galaxy init` command to bootstrap a new role :
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$ ansible-galaxy init foo
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- foo was created successfully
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$ tree foo
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foo
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├── defaults
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│ └── main.yml
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├── files
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├── handlers
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│ └── main.yml
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├── meta
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│ └── main.yml
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├── README.md
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├── tasks
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│ └── main.yml
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├── templates
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├── tests
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│ ├── inventory
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│ └── test.yml
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└── vars
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└── main.yml
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All `main.yml` file will be picked up by Ansible automatically, with respect to their own responsibility.
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The main directory is `tasks`. It will contains tasks, either all in the `main.yml` file, or grouped in files that can be included in the main file.
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`defaults/main.yml` is the place to put the list of all variables for the role with a default value.
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`vars` will hold files with variables definitions. Those differ from the defaults because of a much higher precedence (see below).
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`files` is the directory where we'll put files to copy on hosts. They will be copied "as-is". When a role has multiple logical groups of tasks, it's best to create a sub-directroy for each group that needs files. The name of files in these directories doesn't have to be the same as the destination name. Example :
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copy:
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src: apt/jessie_backports_preferences
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dest: /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/backports
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`templates` is the twin brother of `files`, but differs in that it contains files that can be pre-processed by the Jinja2 templating language. It can contain variables that will be extrapolated before copying the file to its destination.
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`handlers` is the place to put special tasks that can be triggered by the `notify` argument of modules. For example an `nginx -s reload` command.
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`meta/main.yml` contains … well … "meta" information. There we can define role dependencies, but also some "galaxy" information like the desired Ansible version, supported OS and distributions, a destription, author/ownership, license…
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`tests` and `.travis.yml` are here to help testing with a test matrix, a test inventory and a test playbook.
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We can delete parts we don't need.
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### How much goes into a role
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We create roles (instead of a plain tasks files) when it makes sense as a whole, and it is more that a series of tasks. It often has variables, files/templates, handlers…
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## Syntax
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### Pure YAML
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It's possible to use a compact (Ansible specific) syntax,
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- name: Add evomaintenance trap for '{{ user.name }}'
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lineinfile: state=present dest='/home/{{ user.name }}/.profile' insertafter=EOF line='trap "sudo /usr/share/scripts/evomaintenance.sh" 0'
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when: evomaintenance_script.stat.exists
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but we prefer the pure-YAML syntax
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- name: Add evomaintenance trap for '{{ user.name }}'
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lineinfile:
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state: present
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dest: '/home/{{ user.name }}/.profile'
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insertafter: EOF
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line: 'trap "sudo /usr/share/scripts/evomaintenance.sh" 0'
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when: evomaintenance_script.stat.exists
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Here are some reasons :
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* when lines get long, it's easier to read ;
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* it's a pure YAML syntax, so there is no Ansible-specific preprocessing
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* … with means that IDE can show the proper syntax highligthing ;
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* each argument stands on its own.
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## Variables
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### defaults
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When a role is using variables, they must be defined (for example in the `defaults/main.yml`) with a default value (possibly Ǹull). That way, there will never be an "foo is undefined" situation.
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### progressive specificity
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In many roles, we use a *progressive specificity* pattern for some variables.
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The most common is for "alert_email" ; we want to have a default email address where all alerts or message will be sent, but it can be customized globally, and also customized per task/role.
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For the *evolinux-base* role we have those defaults :
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general_alert_email: "root@localhost"
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reboot_alert_email: Null
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log2mail_alert_email: Null
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raid_alert_email: Null
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In the *log2mail* template, we set the email address like this :
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mailto = {{ log2mail_alert_email or general_alert_email | mandatory }}
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if nothing is customize, the mail will be sent to root@localhost, if geeral_alert_email is changed, it will be use, but if log2mail_alert_email is set to a non-null value, it will have precedence.
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## precedence
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There are multiple places where we can define variables ans there is a specific precedence order for the resolution. Here is [the (ascending) order](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/playbooks_variables.html#variable-precedence-where-should-i-put-a-variable) :
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* role defaults
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* inventory vars
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* inventory group_vars
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* inventory host_vars
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* playbook group_vars
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* playbook host_vars
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* host facts
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* play vars
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* play vars_prompt
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* play vars_files
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* registered vars
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* set_facts
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* role and include vars
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* block vars (only for tasks in block)
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* task vars (only for the task)
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* extra vars (always win precedence)
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## Configuration patterns
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### lineinfile vs. blockinfile vs. copy/template
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When possible, we prefer using the [lineinfile](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/lineinfile_module.html) module to make very specific changes.
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If a `regexp` argument is specified, every line that matches the pattern will be updated. It's a good way to comment/uncomment variable, of add a piece inside a line.
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When it's not possible (multi-line changes, for example), we can use the [blockinfile](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/blockinfile_module.html) module. It managed blocs of text with begin/end markers. The marker can be customized, mostly to use the proper comment syntax, but also to prevent collisions within a file.
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If none of the previous ca be used, we can use [copy](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/copy_module.html) or [template](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/template_module.html) modules to copy an entire file.
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### defaults and custom files
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We try not to alter configuration files managed by packages. It makes upgrading easier, so when a piece of software has a "foo.d" configuration directory, we add custom files there.
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We usually put a `z-evolinux-defaults` with our core configuration. This file can be changed later via Ansible and must not be edited by hand. Example :
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copy:
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src: evolinux-defaults.cnf
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dest: /etc/mysql/conf.d/z-evolinux-defaults.cnf
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force: yes
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We also create a blank `zzz-evolinux-custom` file, with commented examples, to allow custom configuration that will never be reverted by Ansible. Example :
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copy:
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src: evolinux-custom.cnf
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dest: /etc/mysql/conf.d/zzz-evolinux-custom.cnf
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force: no
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The source file or template shouldn't to be prefixed for ordering (eg. `z-` or `zzz-`). It's the task's responsibility to choose how destination files must be ordered.
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