/postgresql

Ansible role for PostgreSQL

Primary LanguageShellMIT LicenseMIT

ANXS - PostgreSQL Build Status

Ansible role which installs and configures PostgreSQL, extensions, databases and users.

Installation

This has been tested on Ansible 1.9.4 and higher.

To install:

ansible-galaxy install ANXS.postgresql

Dependencies

  • ANXS.monit (Galaxy/GH) if you want monit protection (in that case, you should set monit_protection: true)

Variables

# Basic settings
postgresql_version: 9.3
postgresql_encoding: 'UTF-8'
postgresql_locale: 'en_US.UTF-8'

postgresql_admin_user: "postgres"
postgresql_default_auth_method: "trust"

postgresql_cluster_name: "main"
postgresql_cluster_reset: false

# List of databases to be created (optional)
# Note: for more flexibility with extensions use the postgresql_database_extensions setting.
postgresql_databases:
  - name: foobar
    owner: baz          # optional; specify the owner of the database
    hstore: yes         # flag to install the hstore extension on this database (yes/no)
    uuid_ossp: yes      # flag to install the uuid-ossp extension on this database (yes/no)
    citext: yes         # flag to install the citext extension on this database (yes/no)

# List of database extensions to be created (optional)
postgresql_database_extensions:
  - db: foobar
    extensions:
      - hstore
      - citext

# List of users to be created (optional)
postgresql_users:
  - name: baz
    pass: pass
    encrypted: no       # denotes if the password is already encrypted.

# List of user privileges to be applied (optional)
postgresql_user_privileges:
  - name: baz                   # user name
    db: foobar                  # database
    priv: "ALL"                 # privilege string format: example: INSERT,UPDATE/table:SELECT/anothertable:ALL
    role_attr_flags: "CREATEDB" # role attribute flags

There's a lot more knobs and bolts to set, which you can find in the defaults/main.yml

Testing

This project comes with a Vagrantfile, this is a fast and easy way to test changes to the role, fire it up with vagrant up

See vagrant docs for getting setup with vagrant

Once your VM is up, you can reprovision it using either vagrant provision, or ansible-playbook tests/playbook.yml -i vagrant-inventory

If you want to toy with the test play, see tests/playbook.yml, and change the variables in tests/vars.yml

If you are contributing, please first test your changes within the vagrant environment, (using the targeted distribution), and if possible, ensure your change is covered in the tests found in .travis.yml

License

Licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

Thanks

To the contributors:

Feedback, bug-reports, requests, ...

Are welcome!