Role to manage users on a system.
- users_create_per_user_group (default: true) - when creating users, also create a group with the same username and make that the user's primary group.
- users_group (default: users) - if users_create_per_user_group is not set, then this is the primary group for all created users.
- users_default_shell (default: /bin/bash) - the default shell if none is specified for the user.
- users_create_homedirs (default: true) - create home directories for new users. Set this to false is you manage home directories separately.
Add a users variable containing the list of users to add. A good place to put
this is in group_vars/all
or group_vars/groupname
if you only want the
users to be on certain machines.
The following attributes are required for each user:
- username - The user's username.
- name - The full name of the user (gecos field)
- home - the home directory of the user to create (optional, defaults to /home/username)
- uid - The numeric user id for the user. This is required for uid consistency across systems.
- gid - The numeric group id for the group (optional). Otherwise, the uid will be used
- password - If a hash is provided then that will be used, but otherwise the account will be locked
- groups - a list of supplementary groups for the user.
- profile - a string block for setting custom shell profiles
- ssh-key - This should be a list of ssh keys for the user. Each ssh key should be included directly and should have no newlines.
In addition, the following items are optional for each user:
- shell - The user's shell. This defaults to /bin/bash. The default is configurable using the users_default_shell variable if you want to give all users the same shell, but it is different than /bin/bash.
Example:
---
users:
- username: foo
name: Foo Barrington
groups: ['wheel','systemd-journal']
uid: 1001
home: /local/home/foo
profile: |
alias ll='ls -lah'
ssh_key:
- "ssh-rsa AAAAA.... foo@machine"
- "ssh-rsa AAAAB.... foo2@machine"
groups_to_create:
- name: developers
gid: 10000
users_deleted:
- username: bar
name: Bar User
uid: 1002
The users_deleted
variable contains a list of users who should no longer be
in the system, and these will be removed on the next ansible run. The format
is the same as for users to add, but the only required field is username
.
However, it is recommended that you also keep the uid
field for reference so
that numeric user ids are not accidentally reused.