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Ops535 ansible lab

Revision as of 22:14, 28 January 2021 by Rchan (talk | contribs) (Key Concepts when using Ansible)

Draft - Do not use until this line has been removed.

Objective

  1. Install and configure Ansible on a controller Linux machine
  2. Explore Ansible's ad hoc commands
  3. Explore Ansible's built-in modules
  4. Explore and create Ansible playbooks

Overview

Ansible is an agentless IT automation engine for automating cloud provisioning, configuration management, application deployment, intra-service orchestration, and many other IT system administration tasks.
Ansible uses no additional custom security infrastructure, and it uses a very simple human readable language called 'YAML', to compose an Ansible Playbook which allow you to describes the tasks you want to automate.

Reference

  • By: Daniel Hall, Publisher: Packt Publishing Pub.
  • Date: April 27, 2015,ISBN-13: 978-1-78528-230-0
  • Pages in Print Edition: 122

System requirements

The instruction in this lab has been tested for CentOS 8.3.2011, and

  • You must have at lease two networked machines
    • control machine - run ansible to configure remote node - need Ansible 2.9.16
    • managed machine(s) - to be managed by the control node
  • You should be able to ssh from your control machine as a regular user to any of your remote machines as regular user without supplying a login password.
  • You account on the remote machine should be a sudoer and can run sudo without password.
  • You should also be to ssh from your control machine as a regular user to any of your remote machines as root without supplying a login password
  • Python 3.6+ on all nodes

Investigation I: Introduction to Ansible

In this introduction, we explore the main components of the Ansible configuration management system and its operating environment. we also study a simple playbook for managing the configuration of a CentOS 8.x VM.
You need at least two VMs for this lab: one VM to be used as the control machine and one or more VMs to be used as the managed machines. You only need to install Ansible on the control machine.

Key Concepts when using Ansible

  • YAML - a human-readable data serialization language use by Ansible's playbooks. To know more, your can check out the wikipedia page here
  • Control machine - the host on which you use Ansible to execute tasks on the managed machines
  • Managed machine - a host that is configured by the control machine
  • Hosts file - contains information about machines to be managed - click here for sample hosts file
  • Ad hoc commands - a simple one-off task:
    • shell commands
      • ansible 192.168.99.153 -a 'date'
      • ansible 192.168.99.153 -a 'df'
      • ansible 192.168.99.153 -a 'iptables -L -n -v' -u root
  • Built-in modules - code that performs a particular task such as copy a file, installing a package, etc:
    • copy module
      • ansible 192.168.99.153 -m copy -a "src=/ops435/ansible.txt dest=/tmp/ansible.txt"
    • Package management
      • ansible 192.168.99.153 -m yum -a "name=epel-release state=latest"
  • Playbooks - contains one or multiple plays, each play defines a set of repeatable tasks on one or more managed machines. Playbooks are written in YAML. Every play in the playbook is created with environment-specific parameters for the target machines:
    • ansible-playbook -i 192.168.99.153, setup_webserver.yaml
    • ansible-playbook firstrun.yaml

Part 1: Installing Ansible on CentOS 8

You only need to install the "ansible" package on your control VM.
  • Issue the following command to install the "ansible" package:
     
    sudo yum install ansible -y
  • You may have to install the following dependent packages:
    Dependencies resolved.
    ==========================================================================================
     Package                    Architecture   Version                Repository         Size
    ==========================================================================================
    Installing:
     ansible                    noarch         2.9.17-1.el8           epel               17 M
    Installing dependencies:
     libsodium                  x86_64         1.0.18-2.el8           epel              162 k
     python3-babel              noarch         2.5.1-5.el8            appstream         4.8 M
     python3-bcrypt             x86_64         3.1.6-2.el8.1          epel               44 k
     python3-jinja2             noarch         2.10.1-2.el8_0         appstream         538 k
     python3-jmespath           noarch         0.9.0-11.el8           appstream          45 k
     python3-markupsafe         x86_64         0.23-19.el8            appstream          39 k
     python3-pyasn1             noarch         0.3.7-6.el8            appstream         126 k
     python3-pynacl             x86_64         1.3.0-5.el8            epel              100 k
     sshpass                    x86_64         1.06-9.el8             epel               27 k
    Installing weak dependencies:
     python3-paramiko           noarch         2.4.3-1.el8            epel              289 k
    
    Transaction Summary
    ==========================================================================================
    Install  11 Packages
    
    Total download size: 23 M
    Installed size: 123 M
    Is this ok [y/N]:
To confirm that you have Ansible installed, try the following command:
[rchan@c8 ~]$ ansible --help
usage: ansible [-h] [--version] [-v] [-b] [--become-method BECOME_METHOD]
               [--become-user BECOME_USER] [-K] [-i INVENTORY] [--list-hosts]
               [-l SUBSET] [-P POLL_INTERVAL] [-B SECONDS] [-o] [-t TREE] [-k]
               [--private-key PRIVATE_KEY_FILE] [-u REMOTE_USER]
               [-c CONNECTION] [-T TIMEOUT]
               [--ssh-common-args SSH_COMMON_ARGS]
               [--sftp-extra-args SFTP_EXTRA_ARGS]
               [--scp-extra-args SCP_EXTRA_ARGS]
               [--ssh-extra-args SSH_EXTRA_ARGS] [-C] [--syntax-check] [-D]
               [-e EXTRA_VARS] [--vault-id VAULT_IDS]
               [--ask-vault-pass | --vault-password-file VAULT_PASSWORD_FILES]
               [-f FORKS] [-M MODULE_PATH] [--playbook-dir BASEDIR]
               [-a MODULE_ARGS] [-m MODULE_NAME]
               pattern
...
Take a look of all the available command line options for the "ansible" command. There are a lots of options when running Ansible. Let's move on to try a few simple ones.

Part 2: Sample runs for some of the Ad hoc commands

[rchan@centos7 ansible]$ ansible 192.168.99.153 -m copy -a "src=/home/rchan/ops435/ansible/ansible.txt dest=/tmp/ansible.txt"
192.168.99.153 | SUCCESS => {
    "changed": true, 
    "checksum": "837affc90674fb92cdb0ebac6e49ad31a586b37e", 
    "dest": "/tmp/ansible.txt", 
    "gid": 1001, 
    "group": "rchan", 
    "md5sum": "78ae49d77d28d06173cf2194a3909732", 
    "mode": "0664", 
    "owner": "rchan", 
    "secontext": "unconfined_u:object_r:user_home_t:s0", 
    "size": 106, 
    "src": "/home/rchan/.ansible/tmp/ansible-tmp-1542902119.15-117618539513309/source", 
    "state": "file", 
    "uid": 1001
}
192.168.99.153 is the remote machine's IP address.
"-m copy" tells ansible to use the copy module
after '-a' is the arguments to the copy module, which specify the source file and the destination for the copy action.
If you got the same "SUCCESS" message, login to the remote machine (in this example, it is 192.168.99.153) and check the directory "/tmp" for the file ansible.txt.

Part 3: Sample runs for using some Ansible's built-in modules

"yum" is a built-in ansible module. You can get a complete list of all the ansible modules installed on you system with the following command:
    ansisble-doc --list_files
You can also get the detail information about any ansible module with the following command:
    ansible-doc module_name

    e.g. ansible_doc yum
The following command demonstrates how to install the "epel-release" package with the "yum" module:
[rchan@centos7 ansible]$ ansible 192.168.99.153 -m yum -a "name=epel-release state=present"
192.168.99.153 | SUCCESS => {
    "changed": false, 
    "msg": "", 
    "rc": 0, 
    "results": [
        "epel-release-7-11.noarch providing epel-release is already installed"
    ]
}

[rchan@centos7 ansible]$ ansible 192.168.99.153 -m yum -a "name=epel-release state=present" -u root
192.168.99.153 | SUCCESS => {
    "changed": false, 
    "msg": "", 
    "rc": 0, 
    "results": [
        "epel-release-7-11.noarch providing epel-release is already installed"
    ]
}

[rchan@centos7 ansible]$ ansible 192.168.99.153 -m yum -a "name=epel-release state=latest" -u root
192.168.99.153 | SUCCESS => {
    "changed": false, 
    "msg": "", 
    "rc": 0, 
    "results": [
        "All packages providing epel-release are up to date", 
        ""
    ]
}

Part 4: Gather software and hardware information available on remote machine

One of the main ansible module is called "setup", it is automatically called by ansible playbook to gather useful "facts" about remote hosts that can be used in ansible playbooks. It can also be executed directly by the ansible command (/usr/bin/ansible) to check what "facts" are available to a host.
[rchan@centos7 ansible]$ ansible 192.168.99.153 -m setup
192.168.99.153 | SUCCESS => {
    "ansible_facts": {
        "ansible_all_ipv4_addresses": [
            "192.168.122.99", 
            "192.168.99.153"
        ], 
        "ansible_all_ipv6_addresses": [
            "fe80::5054:ff:fe11:6767", 
            "fe80::5054:ff:fe8c:b67c"
        ], 
        "ansible_architecture": "x86_64", 
        "ansible_bios_date": "04/01/2014", 
        "ansible_bios_version": "1.9.1-5.el7_3.2", 
        "ansible_cmdline": {
            "BOOT_IMAGE": "/vmlinuz-3.10.0-862.14.4.el7.x86_64", 
            "LANG": "en_CA.UTF-8", 
            "console": "ttyS0", 
...
        "ansible_userspace_bits": "64", 
        "ansible_virtualization_role": "guest", 
        "ansible_virtualization_type": "kvm", 
        "module_setup": true
    }, 
    "changed": false
}

Click here for complete contents of the above

Investigation II: Ansible Playbook

What is a playbook?

* Playbook is one of the core features of Ansible.
* Playbook tells Ansible what to execute by which user on the remote machine.
* Playbook is like a to-do list for Ansible
* Playbook is written "YAML".
* Playbook links a task to an ansible module and provide needed arguments to the module which requires them.

Part 1: A playbook to update the /etc/motd file

Name: motd-play.yml

---
- hosts: 192.168.99.153
  user: root
  vars:
    apache_version: 2.6
    motd_warning: 'WARNING: use by ICT faculty/students only.'
    testserver: yes
  tasks:
    - name: setup a MOTD
      copy: 
        dest: /etc/motd
        content: "{{ motd_warning }}"

Sample Run:

[rchan@centos7 playbooks]$ ansible-playbook motd-play.yml

PLAY [192.168.99.153] **********************************************************

TASK [Gathering Facts] *********************************************************
ok: [192.168.99.153]

TASK [setup a MOTD] ************************************************************
changed: [192.168.99.153]

PLAY RECAP *********************************************************************
192.168.99.153             : ok=2    changed=1    unreachable=0    failed=0   

Part 2: A playbook to install and start Apache Server

Name: httpd-play.yml

---
- hosts: 192.168.99.153
  user: root
  vars:
    apache_version: 2.6
    motd_warning: 'WARNING: use by ICT faculty/students only.'
    testserver: yes
  tasks:
    - name: install apache
      action: yum name=httpd state=installed
    
    - name: restart apache
      service: 
        name: httpd
        state: restarted

Sample Run:

[rchan@centos7 playbooks]$ ansible-playbook httpd-play.yml

PLAY [192.168.99.153] **********************************************************

TASK [Gathering Facts] *********************************************************
ok: [192.168.99.153]

TASK [install apache] **********************************************************
changed: [192.168.99.153]

TASK [restart apache] **********************************************************
changed: [192.168.99.153]

PLAY RECAP *********************************************************************
192.168.99.153             : ok=3    changed=2    unreachable=0    failed=0   

Investigation III: Using Playbook to config a OPS435 Linux machine

You have just installed the latest version of CentOS 7.x on a VM with GNOME Desktop. You need to configure it so that you can use it for doing the Labs for OPS435. The following configuration need to be done on that VM:
  • update all the packages installed on the VM
  • install extra packages repository for enterprise Linux
  • install python3 if it is not already installed
  • set the host name to your Seneca user name
  • install the git package
  • create a new user with your Seneca_id with sudo access
  • configure the new user account so that you can ssh to it without password
  • setup a directory structs for completing and organizing labs as shown below:
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab0
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab1
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab2
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab3
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab4
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab5
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab6
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab7
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab8
          /home/[seneca_id]/ops435/lab9
  • create a playbook named "config_ops435.yml" to perform the tasks mentioned above.
  • test your playbook and capture its output when it complete without error.

Lab 9 Sign-off (Show Instructor)

Have the following items ready to show your instructor:

* The Ansible playbook called "config_ops435.yml" for configuring the VM mentioned in Lab 1.
* The result of running the playbook "config_ops435.yml". Save the result in a file called "lab9_[seneca_id].txt"

Upload the following files to blackboard

* config_ops435.yml
* lab9_[seneca_id].txt