- Best Practices
- Content Organization
- Directory Layout
- Alternative Directory Layout
- Use Dynamic Inventory With Clouds
- How to Differentiate Staging vs Production
- Group And Host Variables
- Top Level Playbooks Are Separated By Role
- Task And Handler Organization For A Role
- What This Organization Enables (Examples)
- Deployment vs Configuration Organization
- Staging vs Production
- Rolling Updates
- Always Mention The State
- Group By Roles
- Operating System and Distribution Variance
- Bundling Ansible Modules With Playbooks
- Whitespace and Comments
- Always Name Tasks
- Keep It Simple
- Version Control
- Variables and Vaults
- Content Organization
Best Practices
Here are some tips for making the most of Ansible and Ansible playbooks.
You can find some example playbooks illustrating these best practices in our ansible-examples repository. (NOTE: These may not use all of the features in the latest release, but are still an excellent reference!).
Content Organization
The following section shows one of many possible ways to organize playbook content.
Your usage of Ansible should fit your needs, however, not ours, so feel free to modify this approach and organize as you see fit.
One crucial way to organize your playbook content is Ansible’s “roles” organization feature, which is documented as partof the main playbooks page. You should take the time to read and understand the roles documentation which is available here: Roles.
Directory Layout
The top level of the directory would contain files and directories like so:
- production # inventory file for production servers
- staging # inventory file for staging environment
- group_vars/
- group1.yml # here we assign variables to particular groups
- group2.yml
- host_vars/
- hostname1.yml # here we assign variables to particular systems
- hostname2.yml
- library/ # if any custom modules, put them here (optional)
- module_utils/ # if any custom module_utils to support modules, put them here (optional)
- filter_plugins/ # if any custom filter plugins, put them here (optional)
- site.yml # master playbook
- webservers.yml # playbook for webserver tier
- dbservers.yml # playbook for dbserver tier
- roles/
- common/ # this hierarchy represents a "role"
- tasks/ #
- main.yml # <-- tasks file can include smaller files if warranted
- handlers/ #
- main.yml # <-- handlers file
- templates/ # <-- files for use with the template resource
- ntp.conf.j2 # <------- templates end in .j2
- files/ #
- bar.txt # <-- files for use with the copy resource
- foo.sh # <-- script files for use with the script resource
- vars/ #
- main.yml # <-- variables associated with this role
- defaults/ #
- main.yml # <-- default lower priority variables for this role
- meta/ #
- main.yml # <-- role dependencies
- library/ # roles can also include custom modules
- module_utils/ # roles can also include custom module_utils
- lookup_plugins/ # or other types of plugins, like lookup in this case
- webtier/ # same kind of structure as "common" was above, done for the webtier role
- monitoring/ # ""
- fooapp/ # ""
Alternative Directory Layout
Alternatively you can put each inventory file with its group_vars
/host_vars
in a separate directory. This is particularly useful if your group_vars
/host_vars
don’t have that much in common in different environments. The layout could look something like this:
- inventories/
- production/
- hosts # inventory file for production servers
- group_vars/
- group1.yml # here we assign variables to particular groups
- group2.yml
- host_vars/
- hostname1.yml # here we assign variables to particular systems
- hostname2.yml
- staging/
- hosts # inventory file for staging environment
- group_vars/
- group1.yml # here we assign variables to particular groups
- group2.yml
- host_vars/
- stagehost1.yml # here we assign variables to particular systems
- stagehost2.yml
- library/
- module_utils/
- filter_plugins/
- site.yml
- webservers.yml
- dbservers.yml
- roles/
- common/
- webtier/
- monitoring/
- fooapp/
This layout gives you more flexibility for larger environments, as well as a total separation of inventory variables between different environments. The downside is that it is harder to maintain, because there are more files.
Use Dynamic Inventory With Clouds
If you are using a cloud provider, you should not be managing your inventory in a static file. See Working With Dynamic Inventory.
This does not just apply to clouds – If you have another system maintaining a canonical list of systemsin your infrastructure, usage of dynamic inventory is a great idea in general.
How to Differentiate Staging vs Production
If managing static inventory, it is frequently asked how to differentiate different types of environments. The following exampleshows a good way to do this. Similar methods of grouping could be adapted to dynamic inventory (for instance, consider applying the AWStag “environment:production”, and you’ll get a group of systems automatically discovered named “ec2_tag_environment_production”.
Let’s show a static inventory example though. Below, the production file contains the inventory of all of your production hosts.
It is suggested that you define groups based on purpose of the host (roles) and also geography or datacenter location (if applicable):
- # file: production
- [atlanta-webservers]
- www-atl-1.example.com
- www-atl-2.example.com
- [boston-webservers]
- www-bos-1.example.com
- www-bos-2.example.com
- [atlanta-dbservers]
- db-atl-1.example.com
- db-atl-2.example.com
- [boston-dbservers]
- db-bos-1.example.com
- # webservers in all geos
- [webservers:children]
- atlanta-webservers
- boston-webservers
- # dbservers in all geos
- [dbservers:children]
- atlanta-dbservers
- boston-dbservers
- # everything in the atlanta geo
- [atlanta:children]
- atlanta-webservers
- atlanta-dbservers
- # everything in the boston geo
- [boston:children]
- boston-webservers
- boston-dbservers
Group And Host Variables
This section extends on the previous example.
Groups are nice for organization, but that’s not all groups are good for. You can also assign variables to them! For instance, atlanta has its own NTP servers, so when setting up ntp.conf, we should use them. Let’s set those now:
- ---
- # file: group_vars/atlanta
- ntp: ntp-atlanta.example.com
- backup: backup-atlanta.example.com
Variables aren’t just for geographic information either! Maybe the webservers have some configuration that doesn’t make sense for the database servers:
- ---
- # file: group_vars/webservers
- apacheMaxRequestsPerChild: 3000
- apacheMaxClients: 900
If we had any default values, or values that were universally true, we would put them in a file called group_vars/all:
- ---
- # file: group_vars/all
- ntp: ntp-boston.example.com
- backup: backup-boston.example.com
We can define specific hardware variance in systems in a host_vars file, but avoid doing this unless you need to:
- ---
- # file: host_vars/db-bos-1.example.com
- foo_agent_port: 86
- bar_agent_port: 99
Again, if we are using dynamic inventory sources, many dynamic groups are automatically created. So a tag like “class:webserver” would load invariables from the file “group_vars/ec2_tag_class_webserver” automatically.
Top Level Playbooks Are Separated By Role
In site.yml, we import a playbook that defines our entire infrastructure. This is a very short example, because it’s just importingsome other playbooks:
- ---
- # file: site.yml
- - import_playbook: webservers.yml
- - import_playbook: dbservers.yml
In a file like webservers.yml (also at the top level), we map the configuration of the webservers group to the roles performed by the webservers group:
- ---
- # file: webservers.yml
- - hosts: webservers
- roles:
- - common
- - webtier
The idea here is that we can choose to configure our whole infrastructure by “running” site.yml or we could just choose to run a subset by runningwebservers.yml. This is analogous to the “–limit” parameter to ansible but a little more explicit:
- ansible-playbook site.yml --limit webservers
- ansible-playbook webservers.yml
Task And Handler Organization For A Role
Below is an example tasks file that explains how a role works. Our common role here just sets up NTP, but it could do more if we wanted:
- ---
- # file: roles/common/tasks/main.yml
- - name: be sure ntp is installed
- yum:
- name: ntp
- state: installed
- tags: ntp
- - name: be sure ntp is configured
- template:
- src: ntp.conf.j2
- dest: /etc/ntp.conf
- notify:
- - restart ntpd
- tags: ntp
- - name: be sure ntpd is running and enabled
- service:
- name: ntpd
- state: started
- enabled: yes
- tags: ntp
Here is an example handlers file. As a review, handlers are only fired when certain tasks report changes, and are run at the endof each play:
- ---
- # file: roles/common/handlers/main.yml
- - name: restart ntpd
- service:
- name: ntpd
- state: restarted
See Roles for more information.
What This Organization Enables (Examples)
Above we’ve shared our basic organizational structure.
Now what sort of use cases does this layout enable? Lots! If I want to reconfigure my whole infrastructure, it’s just:
- ansible-playbook -i production site.yml
To reconfigure NTP on everything:
- ansible-playbook -i production site.yml --tags ntp
To reconfigure just my webservers:
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml
For just my webservers in Boston:
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml --limit boston
For just the first 10, and then the next 10:
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml --limit boston[0:9]
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml --limit boston[10:19]
And of course just basic ad-hoc stuff is also possible:
- ansible boston -i production -m ping
- ansible boston -i production -m command -a '/sbin/reboot'
And there are some useful commands to know:
- # confirm what task names would be run if I ran this command and said "just ntp tasks"
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml --tags ntp --list-tasks
- # confirm what hostnames might be communicated with if I said "limit to boston"
- ansible-playbook -i production webservers.yml --limit boston --list-hosts
Deployment vs Configuration Organization
The above setup models a typical configuration topology. When doing multi-tier deployments, there are goingto be some additional playbooks that hop between tiers to roll out an application. In this case, ‘site.yml’may be augmented by playbooks like ‘deploy_exampledotcom.yml’ but the general concepts can still apply.
Consider “playbooks” as a sports metaphor – you don’t have to just have one set of plays to use against your infrastructureall the time – you can have situational plays that you use at different times and for different purposes.
Ansible allows you to deploy and configure using the same tool, so you would likely reuse groups and justkeep the OS configuration in separate playbooks from the app deployment.
Staging vs Production
As also mentioned above, a good way to keep your staging (or testing) and production environments separate is to use a separate inventory file for staging and production. This way you pick with -i what you are targeting. Keeping them all in one file can lead to surprises!
Testing things in a staging environment before trying in production is always a great idea. Your environments need not be the samesize and you can use group variables to control the differences between those environments.
Rolling Updates
Understand the ‘serial’ keyword. If updating a webserver farm you really want to use it to control how many machines you areupdating at once in the batch.
See Delegation, Rolling Updates, and Local Actions.
Always Mention The State
The ‘state’ parameter is optional to a lot of modules. Whether ‘state=present’ or ‘state=absent’, it’s always best to leave thatparameter in your playbooks to make it clear, especially as some modules support additional states.
Group By Roles
We’re somewhat repeating ourselves with this tip, but it’s worth repeating. A system can be in multiple groups. See Working with Inventory and Working with Patterns. Having groups named after things likewebservers and dbservers is repeated in the examples because it’s a very powerful concept.
This allows playbooks to target machines based on role, as well as to assign role specific variablesusing the group variable system.
See Roles.
Operating System and Distribution Variance
When dealing with a parameter that is different between two different operating systems, a great way to handle this isby using the group_by module.
This makes a dynamic group of hosts matching certain criteria, even if that group is not defined in the inventory file:
- ---
- - name: talk to all hosts just so we can learn about them
- hosts: all
- tasks:
- - name: Classify hosts depending on their OS distribution
- group_by:
- key: os_{{ ansible_facts['distribution'] }}
- # now just on the CentOS hosts...
- - hosts: os_CentOS
- gather_facts: False
- tasks:
- - # tasks that only happen on CentOS go here
This will throw all systems into a dynamic group based on the operating system name.
If group-specific settings are needed, this can also be done. For example:
- ---
- # file: group_vars/all
- asdf: 10
- ---
- # file: group_vars/os_CentOS
- asdf: 42
In the above example, CentOS machines get the value of ‘42’ for asdf, but other machines get ‘10’.This can be used not only to set variables, but also to apply certain roles to only certain systems.
Alternatively, if only variables are needed:
- - hosts: all
- tasks:
- - name: Set OS distribution dependant variables
- include_vars: "os_{{ ansible_facts['distribution'] }}.yml"
- - debug:
- var: asdf
This will pull in variables based on the OS name.
Bundling Ansible Modules With Playbooks
If a playbook has a ./library
directory relative to its YAML file, this directory can be used to add ansible modules that willautomatically be in the ansible module path. This is a great way to keep modules that go with a playbook together. This is shownin the directory structure example at the start of this section.
Whitespace and Comments
Generous use of whitespace to break things up, and use of comments (which start with ‘#’), is encouraged.
Always Name Tasks
It is possible to leave off the ‘name’ for a given task, though it is recommended to provide a descriptionabout why something is being done instead. This name is shown when the playbook is run.
Keep It Simple
When you can do something simply, do something simply. Do not reachto use every feature of Ansible together, all at once. Use what worksfor you. For example, you will probably not need vars
,vars_files
, vars_prompt
and —extra-vars
all at once,while also using an external inventory file.
If something feels complicated, it probably is, and may be a good opportunity to simplify things.
Version Control
Use version control. Keep your playbooks and inventory file in git(or another version control system), and commit when you make changesto them. This way you have an audit trail describing when and why youchanged the rules that are automating your infrastructure.
Variables and Vaults
For general maintenance, it is often easier to use grep
, or similar tools, to find variables in your Ansible setup. Since vaults obscure these variables, it is best to work with a layer of indirection. When running a playbook, Ansible finds the variables in the unencrypted file and all sensitive variables come from the encrypted file.
A best practice approach for this is to start with a groupvars/
subdirectory named after the group. Inside of this subdirectory, create two files named vars
and vault
. Inside of the vars
file, define all of the variables needed, including any sensitive ones. Next, copy all of the sensitive variables over to the vault
file and prefix these variables with vault
. You should adjust the variables in the vars
file to point to the matching vault_
variables using jinja2 syntax, and ensure that the vault
file is vault encrypted.
This best practice has no limit on the amount of variable and vault files or their names.
See also
- YAML Syntax
- Learn about YAML syntax
- Working With Playbooks
- Review the basic playbook features
- All modules
- Learn about available modules
- Should you develop a module?
- Learn how to extend Ansible by writing your own modules
- Working with Patterns
- Learn about how to select hosts
- GitHub examples directory
- Complete playbook files from the github project source
- Mailing List
- Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups