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Before you get started, please join us on slack! Click here to join the ansiblenetwork slack. This will allow you to chat with other network automation engineers and get help after the workshops concludes.
Explore and understand the lab environment.
These first few lab exercises will be exploring the command-line utilities of the Ansible Automation Platform. This includes
- ansible-navigator - a command line utility and text-based user interface (TUI) for running and developing Ansible automation content.
- ansible-core - the base executable that provides the framework, language and functions that underpin the Ansible Automation Platform. It also includes various cli tools like
ansible
,ansible-playbook
andansible-doc
. Ansible Core acts as the bridge between the upstream community with the free and open source Ansible and connects it to the downstream enterprise automation offering from Red Hat, the Ansible Automation Platform. - Execution Environments - not specifically covered in this workshop because the built-in Ansible Execution Environments already included all the Red Hat supported collections which includes all the network collections we use for this workshop. Execution Environments are container images that can be utilized as Ansible execution.
- ansible-builder - not specifically covered in this workshop,
ansible-builder
is a command line utility to automate the process of building Execution Environments.
If you need more information on new Ansible Automation Platform components bookmark this landing page https://red.ht/AAP-20
Before you get started, please join us on slack! Click here to join the ansiblenetwork slack. This will allow you to chat with other network automation engineers and get help after the workshops concludes. If the link goes stale please email Ansible Technical Marketing |
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It is highly encouraged to use Visual Studio Code to complete the workshop exercises. Visual Studio Code provides:
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Connect to Visual Studio Code from the Workshop launch page (provided by your instructor). The password is provided below the WebUI link.
-
Type in the provided password to connect.
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Open the
f5-workshop
directory in Visual Studio Code: -
From here on the left pane you can click on the individual exercise folders and then click on the
yaml
files to check the content of the files.
Navigate to the f5-workshop
directory on the Ansible control node terminal.
[student1@ansible-1 ~]$ cd ~/f5-workshop/
[student1@ansible-1 f5-workshop]$ pwd
/home/student1/f5-workshop
[student1@ansible-1 f5-workshop]$
~
- the tilde in this context is a shortcut for the home directory, i.e./home/student1
cd
- Linux command to change directorypwd
- Linux command for print working directory. This will show the full path to the current working directory.
Run the ansible-navigator
command with the images
argument to look at execution environments configured on the control node:
$ ansible-navigator images
Note: The output you see might differ from the above output
This command gives you information about all currently installed Execution Environments or EEs for short. Investigate an EE by pressing the corresponding number. For example pressing 2 with the above example will open the ee-supported-rhel8
execution environment:
Selecting 2
for Ansible version and collections
will show us all Ansible Collections installed on that particular EE, and the version of ansible-core
:
Either use Visual Studio Code to open or use the cat
command to view the contents of the ansible-navigator.yml
file. The file is located in the home directory:
$ cat ~/.ansible-navigator.yml
---
ansible-navigator:
ansible:
inventories:
- /home/student1/lab_inventory/hosts
execution-environment:
image: quay.io/acme_corp/f5_ee:latest
enabled: true
container-engine: podman
pull-policy: missing
volume-mounts:
- src: "/etc/ansible/"
dest: "/etc/ansible/"
Note the following parameters within the ansible-navigator.yml
file:
inventories
: shows the location of the ansible inventory being usedexecution-environment
: where the default execution environment is set
For a full listing of every configurable knob checkout the documentation
The scope of a play
within a playbook
is limited to the groups of hosts declared within an Ansible inventory. Ansible supports multiple inventory types. An inventory could be a simple flat file with a collection of hosts defined within it or it could be a dynamic script (potentially querying a CMDB backend) that generates a list of devices to run the playbook against.
In this lab you will work with a file based inventory written in the ini format. Either use Visual Studio Code to open or use the cat
command to view the contents of the ~/lab_inventory/hosts
file.
$ cat ~/lab_inventory/hosts
[all:vars]
ansible_user=student2
ansible_password=ansible
ansible_port=22
[lb]
f5 ansible_host=34.199.128.69 ansible_user=admin private_ip=172.16.26.136 ansible_password=admin
[control]
ansible ansible_host=107.23.192.217 ansible_user=ec2-user private_ip=172.16.207.49
[web]
node1 ansible_host=107.22.141.4 ansible_user=ec2-user private_ip=172.16.170.190
node2 ansible_host=54.146.162.192 ansible_user=ec2-user private_ip=172.16.160.13
In the above output every [ ]
defines a group. For example [web]
is a group that contains the hosts node1
and node2
.
Note: A group called all always exists and contains all groups and hosts defined within an inventory.
We can associate variables to groups and hosts. Host variables are declared/defined on the same line as the host themselves. For example for the host f5
:
f5 ansible_host=34.199.128.69 ansible_user=admin private_ip=172.16.26.136 ansible_password=admin
f5
- The name that Ansible will use. This can but does not have to rely on DNSansible_host
- The IP address that ansible will use, if not configured it will default to DNSansible_user
- The user ansible will use to login to this host, if not configured it will default to the user the playbook is run fromprivate_ip
- This value is not reserved by ansible so it will default to a host variable. This variable can be used by playbooks or ignored completely.ansible_password
- The password ansible will use to login to this host, if not configured it will assume the user the playbook ran from has access to this host through SSH keys.
Does the password have to be in plain text? No, Red Hat Ansible Tower can take care of credential management in an easy to use web GUI or a user may use ansible-vault
We can also use the ansible-navigator
TUI to explore inventory.
Run the ansible-navigator inventory
command to bring up inventory in the TUI:
Pressing 0 or 1 on your keyboard will open groups or hosts respectively.
Press the Esc key to go up a level, or you can zoom in to an individual host:
## Complete
You have completed lab exercise 1!
You now understand:
* How to connect to the lab environment with Visual Studio Code
* How to explore **execution environments** with `ansible-navigator`
* Where the Ansible Navigator Configuration (`ansible-navigator.yml`) is located
* Where the inventory is stored for command-line exercises
* How to use ansible-navigator TUI (Text-based user interface)
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[Click here to return to the lab guide](../README.md)