Difference between revisions of "OPS435 Sample Ansible Hosts file"
(Created page with "<pre> # This is the default ansible 'hosts' file. # # It should live in /etc/ansible/hosts # # - Comments begin with the '#' character # - Blank lines are ignored # - Gr...") |
|||
Line 57: | Line 57: | ||
## db-[99:101]-node.example.com | ## db-[99:101]-node.example.com | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
+ | [[Category:OPS435]][[Category:rchan]] |
Revision as of 01:15, 26 November 2018
# This is the default ansible 'hosts' file. # # It should live in /etc/ansible/hosts # # - Comments begin with the '#' character # - Blank lines are ignored # - Groups of hosts are delimited by [header] elements # - You can enter hostnames or ip addresses # - A hostname/ip can be a member of multiple groups # Ex 1: Ungrouped hosts, specify before any group headers. ## green.example.com ## blue.example.com ## 192.168.100.1 ## 192.168.100.10 192.168.99.153 # c7-min-ud-co 192.168.99.53 # c7-min-ud-pri 192.168.53.104 192.168.99.25 # c7min-ud-mail 192.168.122.228 192.168.99.150 # 389-ds server 192.168.99.253 # rns - openldap server [ops435vms] 192.168.99.25 192.168.99.53 192.168.99.153 192.168.99.253 # Ex 2: A collection of hosts belonging to the 'webservers' group ## [webservers] ## alpha.example.org ## beta.example.org ## 192.168.1.100 ## 192.168.1.110 # If you have multiple hosts following a pattern you can specify # them like this: ## www[001:006].example.com # Ex 3: A collection of database servers in the 'dbservers' group ## [dbservers] ## ## db01.intranet.mydomain.net ## db02.intranet.mydomain.net ## 10.25.1.56 ## 10.25.1.57 # Here's another example of host ranges, this time there are no # leading 0s: ## db-[99:101]-node.example.com