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Late last year, we introduced a Red Hat Ansible Certified Collection Collection for Terraform. This was an important step in automation, as these two tools really are great together and leveraging Ansible\'s ability to orchestrate other tools in the enterprise made this a no-brainer. Terraform with its infrastructure as code (IaC) provisioning and Ansible's strength in configuration as code are a
Experiment, learn, and solve real-world problems with pre-configured Ansible environments that run in your browser and at your convenience.
Red Hat® Summit and AnsibleFest, together again May 6-9. Register now Version 3.0.0 of the Ansible community package marks the end of the restructuring of the Ansible ecosystem. This work culminates what began in 2019 to restructure the Ansible project and shape how Ansible content was delivered. Starting with Ansible 3.0.0, the versioning and naming reflects the new structure of the project in th
Kubernetes Operators with Ansible Deep Dive, Part 1 This deep dive series assumes the reader has access to a Kubernetes test environment. A tool like minikube is an acceptable platform for the purposes of this article. If you are an existing Red Hat customer, another option is spinning up an OpenShift cluster through cloud.redhat.com. This SaaS portal makes trying OpenShift a turnkey operation. In
Red Hat Ansible Engine 2.7 is now available, featuring improved stability, speed and performance. Preparing for the Future Ansible Engine 2.7 continues to improve compatibility with modern versions of Python. As a result of changes to support newer versions of Python, support for running Ansible Engine with Python 2.6 has been removed. Management of systems with Python 2.6 installed is still possi
Rebooting Linux systems with Ansible has always been possible, but was often tricky and error-prone. In Ansible 2.7, I am happy to say that rebooting Linux hosts with Ansible is now easier and can be done with a single task using the newly minted reboot plugin. Some History The win_reboot module was written by Matt Davis and included with Ansible 2.1. Rebooting Windows hosts is a much more common
tl;dr We condensed the Python Kubernetes/OpenShift client from 400,000 lines of code to 500, while adding features and closing nearly all known bugs. The new Kubernetes modules shipping in Ansible 2.6 support all resources the Kubernetes server supports, and fix nearly all the bugs that were in the 2.5 k8s_raw and openshift_raw modules. If you want to control your Kubernetes infrastructure with An
Guess what!? Another release has come upon us! Your time has come to upgrade to Ansible 2.6-”Heartbreaker.” Utilize some great updates to automate to your heart’s desire, and avoid being heartbroken. See what I did there? Let’s dive right into some of the changes. Deprecation One little bit of house cleaning before getting into the rest of the fun. The deprecated task option always_run has been re
Welcome to the first installment of our Windows-specific Getting Started series! Would you like to automate some of your Windows hosts with Red Hat Ansible Tower, but don't know how to set everything up? Are you worried that Red Hat Ansible Engine won't be able to communicate with your Windows servers without installing a bunch of extra software? Do you want to easily automate everyone's best frie
Welcome to another Ansible release! Version 2.5–“Kashmir”–has a lot of great stuff to play around with, and we're excited to get it in your hands so you can try it out. Some of the items in this release have been covered in depth in previous Feature Spotlights: AWS EC2 Dynamic inventory plugin, the new Loop keyword, and the all-new ec2_instance module. But those are just appetizers for all of the
The Ansible Way When I talk about how to develop automation solutions with Ansible, I begin by highlighting the philosophy behind its design. All Ansible best practices relate back to this thinking in one way or another. Complexity kills productivity That’s not just a marketing slogan. We really mean it and believe it. We strive to reduce complexity in how we’ve designed Ansible tools and encourag
Ansible Role for the DISA STIG Ansible and our security partner, the MindPoint Group have teamed up to provide a tested and trusted Ansible Role for the DISA STIG. With this Role, IT admins can easily: Deploy new systems that are compliant to the DISA STIG Audit and validate DISA STIG compliance on existing systems Coupled with Ansible Tower, schedule routine checks across entire server inventori
Containers are popular for many reasons. One key reason: container images are easy to build and, once built, don't change. When Developer A says, "Hey, check out this new application, just download this container image and run it," Developer B doesn't have to ask the question, "How do I configure it?" Developer B can just download the image and run the container, and enjoy a high likelihood that
Background When you first start using Ansible, you go from writing bash scripts that you upload and run on machines to running desired end state playbooks. You go from a write-once read-never set of scripts to an easily readable and updatable yaml. Life is good. Fast forward to when you become an Ansible power user. You’re now: Writing playbooks that run on multiple distros Breaking down your comp
After a year of work, we are extremely proud to announce that Ansible 2.0 ("Over the Hills and Far Away") has been released and is now generally available. This is by far one of the most ambitious Ansible releases to date, and it reflects an enormous amount of work by the community, which continues to amaze me. Approximately 300 users have contributed code to what has been known as “v2” for some t
Ansible is about simple, yet powerful automation. We want to make automation easy for everyone to learn, use, and deploy, for developers, system administrators, and operators of every skill level. Every day we hear the success stories of people who have been able to take Ansible’s powerful automation and use it to cut their IT costs, stabilize their deployments, and allow them to get back to their
We're sitting out a few days from Thanksgiving in the U.S., and it's time once again to give thanks to people in our free software community. On a related note, a while back James Martin and I were having a conversation about what the collective noun for Ansible-using-people was. We came up with "Ansiblings" - somewhat because it reminds me of Starcraft zerglings, because we are numerous, aggressi
Get a free preview of Ansible Up & Running by Lorin Hochstein. Preview includes: Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Playbooks, a Beginning Chapter 3 Inventory: Describing Your Servers "Lorin has been a long-time member of the Ansible community, and I'm really happy to see this book come out for those looking for a detailed introduction and overview of all things Ansible." Michael DeHaan, Founder o
Ansible is frequently used with Docker as an advanced format for describing what goes into a container, to set up container hosts, and also to orchestrate Docker deployments and upgrades. In order to make construction of containers even easier, today we’re announcing new Ansible sponsored content on Docker Hub. If you’re using Docker, these base images can help you more rapidly describe and build
As discussed in the previous blog post, there are multiple ways to use AWS AutoScaling groups with Ansible. Previously we showed how you can use Ansible Tower's provisioning callback mechanism to provision freshly provisioned AutoScale instances as soon as they come online. In this blog post, you will learn how to use Ansible to build and deploy AMIs to AutoScale groups. Advantages of deploying
These Ansible modules are part of Ansible core today and will be used extensively in our examples. We'll be using Ansible to manage each one of these components. Stock AMI provisioning The idea behind provisioning a stock AMI to your ASG is very appealing. You don't have to manage an ever-growing list of "Golden AMIs" or the environment to actually build one. You simply rely on Ansible Tower to co
Ansible is a simple but feature complete way to automate IT workflow on systems without installing any management agents on them. Many people who have not tried Ansible will think an SSH-based system can't move as fast as Ansible actually does (leading to some occasional FUD until people try it - particularly with tuning settings). But we have spend a lot of time tuning the underlying implementati
One of the lesser discussed things about Ansible is, strangely enough, how to classify it. It's often referred to as a "configuration management" system, but is that an accurate-enough description? Pure Configuration management systems work by describing a rigid model of remote machines. They are largely derived today from CFEngine 2, started some fifteen years ago. Whether used in a pull or push
Ansible is an open source, command-line IT automation software application written in Python. It can configure systems, deploy software, and orchestrate advanced workflows to support application deployment, system updates, and more. Ansible’s main strengths are simplicity and ease of use. It also has a strong focus on security and reliability, featuring minimal moving parts. It uses OpenSSH for tr
Today we are happy to release Ansible 1.6, which adds over 30+ new core modules to the open source automation system, in addition to incorporating numerous new options, upgrades, fixes, and improvements. The highlights of the 1.6 release are without a doubt a slew of great new module additions, including many new additions for Amazon, Rackspace, and Digital Ocean. These are complemented by tons mo
By Matthew Jones, Chief Architect, Ansible Automation at Red Hat Back in 2013, a small team of engineers worked for over a year to make the first commercial release of Ansible Tower (before we expanded and evolved to Ansible Automation Platform) and during that time we put down the foundation of an application that I’m immensely proud of. We, the original architects of Tower, were trying to find t
There's been a lot of interest in using Ansible and Docker together recently, so I thought it might be nice to highlight a few tricks. First off, installing Docker. If you have an Ansible installation, Paul Durivage has written a rather brilliant role for installing Docker on a Ubuntu host that is quite easier, even in internal implementation, than the official install instructions. If we start fr
A gathering space to build automation skills and success Welcome to the Ansible® Collaborative, a destination for Ansible users, customers, partners, and vendors to learn and share automation content. No matter your role, or your automation goals, Ansible can help you connect teams and deliver efficiencies. Ansible is an open source IT automation engine that automates provisioning, configuration m
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