/controller_configuration

A collection of roles to manage Ansible Controller and previously Ansible Tower

Primary LanguageYAML

Red Hat Communities of Practice Controller Configuration Collection

pre-commit tests Galaxy Release

This Ansible collection allows for easy interaction with an AWX or Ansible Controller server via Ansible roles using the AWX/Controller collection modules.

Requirements

The awx.awx or ansible.controller collections MUST be installed in order for this collection to work. It is recommended they be invoked in the playbook in the following way.

---
- name: Playbook to configure ansible controller post installation
  hosts: localhost
  connection: local
  vars:
    controller_validate_certs: false
  collections:
    - awx.awx

Red Hat Communities of Practice Configuration Collections Suite

Collection Name Purpose
Controller Configuration Automation controller configuration
Hub Configuration Automation hub configuration
EE Utilities Execution Environment creation utilities
AAP installation Utilities Ansible Automation Platform Utilities
AAP Configuration Template Configuration Template for this suite

Included content

Click the Content button to see the list of content included in this collection.

Installing this collection

You can install the infra.controller_configuration.collection with the Ansible Galaxy CLI:

ansible-galaxy collection install infra.controller_configuration

You can also include it in a requirements.yml file and install it with ansible-galaxy collection install -r requirements.yml, using the format:

---
collections:
  - name: infra.controller_configuration
    # If you need a specific version of the collection, you can specify like this:
    # version: ...

Conversion from tower_configuration

If you were using a version of redhat_cop.tower_configuration, please refer to our Conversion Guide here: Conversion Guide

Using this collection

The awx.awx or ansible.controller collection must be invoked in the playbook in order for Ansible to pick up the correct modules to use.

The following command will invoke the collection playbook. This is considered a starting point for the collection.

ansible-playbook infra.controller_configuration.configure_controller.yml

Otherwise it will look for the modules only in your base installation. If there are errors complaining about "couldn't resolve module/action" this is the most likely cause.

- name: Playbook to configure ansible controller post installation
  hosts: localhost
  connection: local
  vars:
    controller_validate_certs: false
  collections:
    - awx.awx

Define following vars here, or in controller_configs/controller_auth.yml controller_hostname: ansible-controller-web-svc-test-project.example.com

You can also specify authentication by a combination of either:

  • controller_hostname, controller_username, controller_password
  • controller_hostname, controller_oauthtoken

The OAuth2 token is the preferred method. You can obtain the token through the preferred controller_token module, or through the AWX CLI login command.

These can be specified via (from highest to lowest precedence):

  • direct role variables as mentioned above
  • environment variables (most useful when running against localhost)
  • a config file path specified by the controller_config_file parameter
  • a config file at ~/.controller_cli.cfg
  • a config file at /etc/controller/controller_cli.cfg

Config file syntax looks like this:

[general]
host = https://localhost:8043
verify_ssl = true
oauth_token = LEdCpKVKc4znzffcpQL5vLG8oyeku6

Controller token module would be invoked with this code:

    - name: Create a new token using controller username/password
      awx.awx.token:
        description: 'Creating token to test controller jobs'
        scope: "write"
        state: present
        controller_host: "{{ controller_hostname }}"
        controller_username: "{{ controller_username }}"
        controller_password: "{{ controller_password }}"

Automate the Automation

Every Ansible Controller instance has it's own particularities and needs. Every administrator team has it's own practices and customs. This collection allows adaptation to every need, from small to large scale, having the objects distributed across multiple environments and leveraging Automation Webhook that can be used to link a Git repository and Ansible automation natively.

A complete example of how to use all of the roles present in the collection is available at the following README.md, where all the phases to allow CI/CD for the Controller Configuration are provided.

Scale at your needs

The input data can be organized in a very flexible way, letting the user use anything from a single file to an entire file tree to store the controller objects definitions, which could be used as a logical segregation of different applications, as needed in real scenarios.

Controller Export

The awx command line can export json that is compatible with this collection. More details can be found here

Template Example

A Template to use in order to start using the collections can be found here

See Also

Release and Upgrade Notes

For details on changes between versions, please see the changelog for this collection.

Releasing, Versioning and Deprecation

This collection follows Semantic Versioning. More details on versioning can be found in the Ansible docs.

We plan to regularly release new minor or bugfix versions once new features or bugfixes have been implemented.

Releasing the current major version happens from the devel branch.

Roadmap

Adding the ability to use direct output from the awx export command in the roles along with the current data model.

Contributing to this collection

We welcome community contributions to this collection. If you find problems, please open an issue or create a PR against the Controller Configuration collection repository. More information about contributing can be found in our Contribution Guidelines.

We have a community meeting every 4 weeks. Find the agenda in the issues and the calendar invitation below:

Code of Conduct

This collection follows the Ansible project's Code of Conduct. Please read and familiarize yourself with this document.

Licensing

GNU General Public License v3.0 or later.

See LICENSE to see the full text.