An Ansible role for preparing a linux system to be managed by ansible.
This role uses the ansible.builtin.raw
module
in combination with an own-implemented "Operating System determination system"
to install the minimum required set of packages (python
and sudo
)
in order to allow Ansible to manage a system.
This role also ensures an up-to-date package cache for most systems.
In most cases, you will want to use this role in combination with my
core_dependencies
-role.
Note
|
DISCLAIMER
This role is a fork of robertdebock/ansible-role-bootstrap v5.2.12 (27 January, 2022)
(Apache License 2.0, Copyright Robert de Bock ([email protected]))
with various changes/fixes.
|
Below you can find information on…
-
the role’s required Ansible version
-
the role’s supported platforms
-
the role’s role dependencies
---
galaxy_info:
role_name: bootstrap
description: An ansible role for preparing a linux system to be managed by ansible. Based on robertdebock's role.
author: jonaspammer
license: "MIT"
min_ansible_version: "2.9"
platforms:
# note: text after "actively tested: " represent the docker image name
- name: EL # (Enterprise Linux)
versions:
- "9" # actively tested: rockylinux9
- name: Fedora
versions:
- "38" # actively tested: fedora38
- "39" # actively tested: fedora39
- name: Debian
versions:
- bullseye # actively tested: debian11
- bookworm # actively tested: debian12
- name: Ubuntu
versions:
- focal # actively tested: ubuntu2004
- jammy # actively tested: ubuntu2204
galaxy_tags:
- bootstrap
- python
- sudo
dependencies: []
bootstrap_user: root
Username
used to connect to the machine for the primary raw
tasks of gathering simple facts / installing.
bootstrap_become: false
bootstrap_become_user: root
become
and become_user
variables passed to most actual tasks.
The default value of bootstrap_become
was set to false
because of the assumption that sudo
is not available
before bootstrapping.
bootstrap_wait_for_host: false
Whether to wait for the host to be available on ansible_port
(22).
bootstrap_timeout: 3
Maximum number of seconds to wait for the remote system to be reachable/usable before failing.
Each variable listed in this section
is dynamically defined when executing this role (and can only be overwritten using ansible.builtin.set_facts
) and
is meant to be used not just internally.
Tasks are tagged with the following tags:
Tag | Purpose |
---|---|
This role does not have officially documented tags yet. |
You can use Ansible to skip tasks, or only run certain tasks by using these tags. By default, all tasks are run when no tags are specified.
Important
|
You must disable the No tasks must come before this role. |
---
- hosts: servers:&provisioned
name: Bootstrap linux machines to be managed by Ansible.
become: false
gather_facts: false
roles:
- role: jonaspammer.bootstrap
---
- hosts: servers:&provisioned
name: Bootstrap linux machines to be managed by Ansible.
become: false
gather_facts: false
vars:
bootstrap_user: "{{ ansible_user }}"
roles:
- role: jonaspammer.bootstrap
---
- hosts: servers:&provisioned
name: Bootstrap linux machines to be managed by Ansible.
become: true
gather_facts: false
vars:
bootstrap_user: "{{ ansible_user }}"
bootstrap_become: true
roles:
- role: jonaspammer.bootstrap
A role may work on different distributions, like Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), even though there is no test for this exact distribution.
OS Family | Distribution | Distribution Release Date | Distribution End of Life | Accompanying Docker Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rocky |
Rocky Linux 8 (RHEL/CentOS 8 in disguise) |
2021-06 |
2029-05 |
|
Rocky |
Rocky Linux 9 |
2022-07 |
2032-05 |
|
RedHat |
Fedora 39 |
2023-11 |
2024-12 |
|
Debian |
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS |
2021-04 |
2025-04 |
|
Debian |
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS |
2022-04 |
2027-04 |
|
Debian |
Debian 11 |
2021-08 |
2024-06 (2026-06 LTS) |
|
Debian |
Debian 12 |
2023-06 |
2026-06 (2028-06 LTS) |
The tested ansible versions try to stay equivalent with the
support pattern of Ansible’s community.general
collection.
As of writing this is:
-
2.13 (Ansible 6)
-
2.14 (Ansible 7)
-
2.15 (Ansible 8)
-
2.16 (Ansible 9)
Development Dependencies are defined in a
pip requirements file
named requirements-dev.txt
.
Example Installation Instructions for Linux are shown below:
# "optional": create a python virtualenv and activate it for the current shell session $ python3 -m venv venv $ source venv/bin/activate $ python3 -m pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Please take a look at my Ansible Role Development Guidelines.
If interested, I’ve also written down some General Ansible Role Development (Best) Practices.
Versions are defined using Tags, which in turn are recognized and used by Ansible Galaxy.
Versions must not start with v
.
When a new tag is pushed, a GitHub CI workflow () takes care of importing the role to my Ansible Galaxy Account.
Automatic Tests are run on each Contribution using GitHub Workflows.
The Tests primarily resolve around running Molecule on a varying set of linux distributions and using various ansible versions.
The molecule test also includes a step which lints all ansible playbooks using
ansible-lint
to check for best practices and behaviour that could potentially be improved.
To run the tests, simply run tox
on the command line.
You can pass an optional environment variable to define the distribution of the
Docker container that will be spun up by molecule:
$ MOLECULE_DISTRO=ubuntu2204 tox
For a list of possible values fed to MOLECULE_DISTRO
,
take a look at the matrix defined in .github/workflows/ci.yml.
-
Run your molecule tests with the option
MOLECULE_DESTROY=never
, e.g.:$ MOLECULE_DESTROY=never MOLECULE_DISTRO=ubuntu1604 tox -e py3-ansible-5 ... TASK [ansible-role-pip : (redacted).] ************************ failed: [instance-py3-ansible-9] => changed=false ... ___________________________________ summary ____________________________________ pre-commit: commands succeeded ERROR: py3-ansible-9: commands failed
-
Find out the name of the molecule-provisioned docker container:
$ docker ps 30e9b8d59cdf geerlingguy/docker-debian12-ansible:latest "/lib/systemd/systemd" 8 minutes ago Up 8 minutes instance-py3-ansible-9
-
Get into a bash Shell of the container, and do your debugging:
$ docker exec -it 30e9b8d59cdf /bin/bash root@instance-py3-ansible-2:/#
TipIf the failure you try to debug is part of your
verify.yml
step and not the actualconverge.yml
, you may want to know that the output of ansible’s modules (vars
), hosts (hostvars
) and environment variables have been stored into files on both the provisioner and inside the docker machine under:-
/var/tmp/vars.yml
(contains host variables under thehostvars
key) -
/var/tmp/environment.yml
grep
,cat
or transfer these as you wish! -
-
After you finished your debugging, exit it and destroy the container:
root@instance-py3-ansible-2:/# exit $ docker stop 30e9b8d59cdf $ docker container rm 30e9b8d59cdf or $ docker container prune
Although a standard feature in tox 3, this now only happens when tox recognizes the presence of a CI variable. For example:
$ CI=true tox
This Project offers a definition for a "1-Click Containerized Development Environment".
This Container even enables one to run docker containers inside of it (Docker-In-Docker, dind), allowing for molecule execution.
To use it:
-
Ensure you fullfill the the System requirements of Visual Studio Code Development Containers, optionally following the Installation-Section of the linked page section.
This includes: Installing Docker, Installing Visual Studio Code itself, and Installing the necessary Extension. -
Clone the project to your machine
-
Open the folder of the repo in Visual Studio Code (File - Open Folder…).
-
If you get a prompt at the lower right corner informing you about the presence of the devcontainer definition, you can press the accompanying button to enter it. Otherwise, you can also execute the Visual Studio Command
Remote-Containers: Open Folder in Container
yourself (View - Command Palette → type in the mentioned command).
Tip
|
I recommend using |
Note
|
You may need to configure your host system to enable the container to use your SSH/GPG Keys. The procedure is described in the official devcontainer docs under "Sharing Git credentials with your container". |
This Project shall be kept in sync with the CookieCutter it was originally templated from using cruft (if possible) or manual alteration (if needed) to the best extend possible.
General Linting and Styling Conventions are
automatically held up to Standards
by various pre-commit
hooks, at least to some extend.
Automatic Execution of pre-commit is done on each Contribution using
pre-commit.ci
*.
Pull Requests even automatically get fixed by the same tool,
at least by hooks that automatically alter files.
Note
|
Not to confuse: Although some pre-commit hooks may be able to warn you about script-analyzed flaws in syntax or even code to some extend (for which reason pre-commit’s hooks are part of the test suite), pre-commit itself does not run any real Test Suites. For Information on Testing, see 🧪 Testing. |
Tip
|
Nevertheless, I recommend you to integrate pre-commit into your local development workflow yourself. This can be done by cd’ing into the directory of your cloned project and running You can also, for example, execute pre-commit’s hooks at any time by running |
The following sections are generic in nature and are used to help new contributors. The actual "Development Documentation" of this project is found under 📝 Development.
First off, thank you for considering contributing to this Project.
Following these guidelines helps to communicate that you respect the time of the developers managing and developing this open source project. In return, they should reciprocate that respect in addressing your issue, assessing changes, and helping you finalize your pull requests.
This Project owns many of its files to the CookieCutter it was originally templated from.
Please check if the edit you have in mind is actually applicable to the template and if so make an appropriate change there instead. Your change may also be applicable partly to the template as well as partly to something specific to this project, in which case you would be creating multiple PRs.
A casual contributor does not have to worry about following the spec by definition, as pull requests are being squash merged into one commit in the project. Only core contributors, i.e. those with rights to push to this project’s branches, must follow it (e.g. to allow for automatic version determination and changelog generation to work).
Contributions are made to this repo via Issues and Pull Requests (PRs). A few general guidelines that cover both:
-
Search for existing Issues and PRs before creating your own.
-
If you’ve never contributed before, see the first timer’s guide on Auth0’s blog for resources and tips on how to get started.
Issues should be used to report problems, request a new feature, or to discuss potential changes before a PR is created. When you create a new Issue, a template will be loaded that will guide you through collecting and providing the information we need to investigate.
If you find an Issue that addresses the problem you’re having, please add your own reproduction information to the existing issue rather than creating a new one. Adding a reaction can also help be indicating to our maintainers that a particular problem is affecting more than just the reporter.
PRs to this Project are always welcome and can be a quick way to get your fix or improvement slated for the next release. In general, PRs should:
-
Only fix/add the functionality in question OR address wide-spread whitespace/style issues, not both.
-
Add unit or integration tests for fixed or changed functionality (if a test suite already exists).
-
Address a single concern
-
Include documentation in the repo
-
Be accompanied by a complete Pull Request template (loaded automatically when a PR is created).
For changes that address core functionality or would require breaking changes (e.g. a major release), it’s best to open an Issue to discuss your proposal first.
In general, we follow the "fork-and-pull" Git workflow
-
Fork the repository to your own Github account
-
Clone the project to your machine
-
Create a branch locally with a succinct but descriptive name
-
Commit changes to the branch
-
Following any formatting and testing guidelines specific to this repo
-
Push changes to your fork
-
Open a PR in our repository and follow the PR template so that we can efficiently review the changes.
Please refer to the Release Page of this Repository for a human changelog of the corresponding Tags (Versions) of this Project.
Note that this Project adheres to Semantic Versioning. Please report any accidental breaking changes of a minor version update.
MIT License Copyright (c) 2022, Jonas Pammer Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.