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    Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working

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    • matteo nunziatiM
      matteo nunziati @stacksofplates
      last edited by

      @stacksofplates said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

      @scottalanmiller said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

      @stacksofplates said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

      @scottalanmiller said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

      @stacksofplates said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

      Also 2.4.2 is kind of old. Some things are being deprecated soon, so you will want to either install from EPEL or use pip to pull in a newer version.

      Another "CentOS problem" that "doesn't exist" 😉

      Well it's weird. Idk if CentOS hasn't caught up with RHEL yet. Ansible is at 2.7 in RHEL. I have no idea why it's lagging so far behind in CentOS.

      oh, weird.

      But even Fedora lags behind a little. It's getting better but I've seen it as far as 2 releases behind before.

      I always download it from upstream

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • wirestyle22W
        wirestyle22
        last edited by wirestyle22

        @stacksofplates How are you organizing? I have playbooks and inventory together in the same directory right now. Seems bad. Also, are you using an IDE?

        black3dynamiteB stacksofplatesS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • wirestyle22W
          wirestyle22
          last edited by

          Another way to do this ping test:

          pingtest.yml

          -
            name: Test connectivity to target servers
            hosts: all
            tasks:
             - name: Ping test
               ping:
          

          0_1540684076126_pingtest.PNG

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • black3dynamiteB
            black3dynamite @wirestyle22
            last edited by

            @wirestyle22 said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

            @stacksofplates How are you organizing? I have playbooks and inventory together in the same directory right now. Seems bad. Also, are you using an IDE?

            Here are some best practices for directory layouts.

            https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_best_practices.html#directory-layout

            https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_best_practices.html#alternative-directory-layout

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • stacksofplatesS
              stacksofplates @wirestyle22
              last edited by stacksofplates

              @wirestyle22 said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

              @stacksofplates How are you organizing? I have playbooks and inventory together in the same directory right now. Seems bad. Also, are you using an IDE?

              I'll give you a layout this afternoon. I keep my inventory with my playbooks but roles have their own repositories.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • stacksofplatesS
                stacksofplates @wirestyle22
                last edited by stacksofplates

                @wirestyle22 said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

                @stacksofplates How are you organizing? I have playbooks and inventory together in the same directory right now. Seems bad. Also, are you using an IDE?

                So I have my playbooks set up like this (for stuff at home). I've seen people put playbooks in a directory which is fine as well. It's just annoying because your ansible.cfg has to be in relation to your playbooks so you had to mess around with softlinks to get it to work that way.

                0_1540763586555_ansible-layout.png

                Roles (ones I've written) are in their own directory:

                0_1540763644755_ansible-roles-layout.png

                Here's my default ansible.cfg which I store with the playbooks:

                [defaults]
                inventory           = inventory
                roles_path          = roles
                retry_files_enabled = False
                pipelining          = True
                library             = library
                forks               = 50
                callback_whitelist = profile_roles
                

                And then in the inventory directory I have a prod and dev file that contain all of the groups and hosts.

                Also, are you using an IDE?

                I switch between VS Code and Vim. However I always turn on Vim mode in anything. I also have things like jj mapped to Esc and AA mapped to drop me to the end of a line in insert mode to make things easier.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • stacksofplatesS
                  stacksofplates
                  last edited by

                  So to clarify, playbooks is it's own private repository. Then the roles are public repos. In the roles directory in the playbooks repo I have a single file called requirements.yml. This tells Ansible what roles to install for me before it runs.

                  It contains entries like this:

                  - src: https://gitlab.com/hooksie1/ansible-firewalld.git
                    name: firewalld
                    scm: git
                    version: master
                  

                  I've been using Jenkins to run my Ansible stuff so I have a build step that runs ansible-galaxy install -r roles/requirements.yml before it runs the playbook. That installs all of the roles for you. As a side note, if you're using Tower it will download the roles automatically if it sees that file exists.

                  Here's the build steps in Jenkins:

                  0_1540764303785_jenkins-step.png

                  I also have started including a Makefile to do the same thing. That way you can just run make clean and make roles to remove and re-download them.

                  wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • black3dynamiteB
                    black3dynamite
                    last edited by

                    @stacksofplates
                    That’s awesome.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • wirestyle22W
                      wirestyle22 @stacksofplates
                      last edited by wirestyle22

                      @stacksofplates I know this is a huge question, but what specifically are you doing in ansible right now that make it worthwhile? I can think of a lot of things to do with it but idk everything. Would be nice to hear it from someone who has used it over a long time.

                      Also, what modules are you using in VS Code?

                      stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stacksofplatesS
                        stacksofplates @wirestyle22
                        last edited by stacksofplates

                        @wirestyle22 said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

                        @stacksofplates I know this is a huge question, but what specifically are you doing in ansible right now that make it worthwhile? I can think of a lot of things to do with it but idk everything. Would be nice to hear it from someone who has used it over a long time.

                        Also, what modules are you using in VS Code?

                        So I'll answer for my last job since I'm still getting things set up at this one. We literally did everything with it. I mean there were still some things we had to do separately, but 99% of what we did was done with Ansible. You can build in health checks so that Ansible will either rebuild on a failure or like in this example let you know if a build actually fails even though it looks like it passed:

                        ---
                        - name: Set up grafana
                          hosts: monitoring
                          gather_facts: true
                          user: centos
                          become: true
                        
                          roles:
                            - grafana
                        
                          post_tasks:
                            - name: wait for Grafana
                              wait_for:
                                host: "{{ ansible_default_ipv4.address }}"
                                port: 3000
                                state: present
                                delay: 2
                                timeout: 300
                        
                            - name: check if Grafana is up
                              uri:
                                url: "http://{{ ansible_default_ipv4.address }}:3000/login"
                                return_content: yes
                              register: webpage
                              delegate_to: localhost
                              retries: 30
                              delay: 1
                              become: false
                        
                            - name: Fail if page isn't up
                              fail:
                              when: "'Grafana' not in webpage.content"
                        

                        This installs Grafana and then checks to see if the web page is actually available after the install is completed and the service is started.

                        One of the cool things you can do with tools like Tower or Jenkins is set up specific jobs for L1 and L2 people (and yourself as well). So say you need a service restarted on a system. You can set up a job where the help desk can restart a service on a system/systems without manually logging in to them. Here's an example:

                        0_1540775043324_ansible-jenkins-service-ad-hoc.png

                        You can do this from the command line, but this is a little more friendly and easier to manage RBAC.

                        As for VS Code I have a few go to extensions. Ansible (the one from Microsoft, it's really good), AsciiDoc, Go (Microsoft one), Jinja, Markdown, Terraform, Vagrant. Those are the ones I install all of the time.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • stacksofplatesS
                          stacksofplates
                          last edited by stacksofplates

                          And with Jenkins you can do more advanced things like storing your jobs in Groovy. That way your build jobs are also stored in code. Like this one for example (you need the Ansible plugin installed in Jenkins for this to work):

                          pipeline {
                              agent any
                              
                              parameters {
                                  string(description: 'Limit', name: 'Limit')
                              }
                              
                              stages {
                                  stage('Clone Repo') {
                                      steps {
                                          git credentialsId: '766f3db4-319d-4f5b-bbd8-9fe7ba7ce5b4', 
                                          url: 'https://your-git-repo.com/reponame
                                      }
                                  }
                                  stage('Set up roles') {
                                      steps {
                                          sh 'find roles/* ! -name requirements.yml -prune -exec rm -rf {} \\;'
                                          sh 'ansible-galaxy install -r roles/requirements.yml'
                                      }
                                  }
                                  stage('Run playbook') {
                                      steps {
                                          ansiblePlaybook(
                                              playbook: 'hardening.yml',
                                              inventory: 'inventory',
                                              credentialsId: 'c0924012-4666-47ff-98d7-40215742e9f4',
                                              become: true,
                                              becomeUser: 'root',
                                              disableHostKeyChecking: true,
                                              limit: params.Limit)
                                      }
                                  }
                              }
                          }
                          

                          Now that this is stored in Git, you can set up hooks to tell Jenkins that any time you update your playbook (hardening.yml in this case) that it should automatically kick off a run to whatever hosts are defined for your job. You never have to click or run anything manually, it will just do it in your CI/CD pipeline.

                          wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • wirestyle22W
                            wirestyle22 @stacksofplates
                            last edited by

                            @stacksofplates That's pretty incredible. Any advice on things I should attempt to set up right now for learning purposes?

                            stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • stacksofplatesS
                              stacksofplates @wirestyle22
                              last edited by

                              @wirestyle22 said in Ansible 2.4.2.0 on CentOS 7--ping module isn't working:

                              @stacksofplates That's pretty incredible. Any advice on things I should attempt to set up right now for learning purposes?

                              A big benefit is Ansible Galaxy. Look over how everyone sets up their stuff. That will give you good ideas on what to try and how to start writing stuff.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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