Documentation

3. General Installation Notes

  • Ansible Tower on RHEL 8 requires Ansible 2.8 or greater. Older versions of Ansible will not work on RHEL 8.

  • If you need to access a HTTP proxy to install software from your OS vendor, ensure that the environment variable “HTTP_PROXY” is set accordingly before running setup.sh.

  • The Tower installer creates a self-signed SSL certificate and keyfile at /etc/tower/tower.cert and /etc/tower/tower.key for HTTPS communication. These can be replaced after install with your own custom SSL certificates if you desire, but the filenames are required to be the same. See Using custom certificates.

  • Installing Ansible Tower automatically installs the necessary versions of Node.js to run the Tower User Interface.

  • Installing Ansible Tower Version 3.7.0 or later will install a newer version of rsyslog than what shipped with RHEL 7.7. See the Tower Logging and Aggregation section of the Ansible Tower Administration Guide guide for more detail.

  • It is not recommended that you install Tower using service accounts (PostgreSQL, Redis, etc.) that get authenticated through Active Directory (AD) or LDAP.

  • If using Ansible version 1.8 or later, ensure that fact caching using Redis is not enabled in ansible.cfg on the Tower machine.

  • Note that the Tower installation must be run from an internet connected machine that can install software from trusted 3rd-party places such as Ansible’s software repository, and your OS vendor’s software repositories. In some cases, access to the Python Package Index (PyPI) is necessary as well. If you need to be able to install in a disconnected environment and the bundled installation program is not a solution for you (refer to Using the Bundled Tower Installation Program), please contact Ansible via the Red Hat Customer portal at https://access.redhat.com/.

  • If installing Tower on OpenShift, refer to OpenShift Deployment and Configuration.

3.1. Flags and extra vars passed with Tower

Flags and/or extra variables that you can use with the Ansible Tower installer include (but are not limited to) the following:

Usage: setup.sh [Options] [-- Ansible Options]

Options:
  -i INVENTORY_FILE     Path to ansible inventory file (default: inventory)
  -e EXTRA_VARS         Set additional ansible variables as key=value or YAML/JSON
                        i.e. -e bundle_install=false will force an online install

  -b                    Perform a database backup in lieu of installing
  -r                    Perform a database restore in lieu of installing
  -k                    Generate and distribute a new SECRET_KEY

  -h                    Show this help message and exit

Ansible Options:
  Additional options to be passed to ansible-playbook can be added following the -- separator

Use the -- separator to add any Ansible arguments you wish to apply. For example: ./setup.sh -i my_awesome_inventory.yml -e matburt_is_country_gold=True -- -K

The following table shows some extra variables that can be used during the installation of Tower.

Variable

Description

Default

upgrade_ansible_with_tower

When installing Tower make sure Ansible is also up to date

False

create_preload_data

When installing Tower also create the Demo Org, project, credential, Job Template, etc.

True

bundle_install_folder

When installing from a bundle where to put the bundled repos

/var/lib/tower-bundle

nginx_disable_https

Disable HTTPS traffic through nginx, this is useful if offloading HTTPS to a load balancer

False

nginx_http_port

Port to configure nginx to listen to for HTTP

80

nginx_https_port

Port to configure nginx to listen to for HTTPS

443

backup_dest

Where to place the backup from setup.sh -b

{{ playbook_dir }}

backup_dir

A temp location to use when backing up

/var/backups/tower/

restore_backup_file

Specify an alternative backup file to restore from

(None)

required_ram

The minimum RAM required to install Tower (should only be changed for test installation)

3750

min_open_fds

The minimum open file descriptions (should only be changed for test installations)

4096

ignore_preflight_errors

Ignore preflight checks, useful when installing into a template or other non-system image (overrides required_ram and min_open_fds)

False

3.1.1. Examples

The following are examples of common scenarios - be sure to supply your own values appropriate to your specific case.

  • To upgrade core:

    ./setup.sh -e upgrade_ansible_with_tower=1
    
  • To disable https handling at nginx:

    ./setup.sh -e nginx_disable_https=true
    
  • To specify a non-default path when restoring from a backup file:

    ./setup.sh -e 'restore_backup_file=/path/to/nondefault/location' -r
    
  • To override an inventory file used by passing it as an argument to the setup script:

    setup.sh -i <inventory file>
    

3.1.2. Using custom certificates

You may bring your own certificates as part of the default install and therefore, not rely on the self-signed one provided. The Ansible Tower installer provides three variables that allows you to configure the Tower deployment TLS-wise:

web_server_ssl_cert

Path on the installer node to the custom certificate the Tower web server will serve. It will be copied as /etc/tower/tower.cert at install time.

web_server_ssl_key

Path on the installer node to the private key the certificate has been generated with. It will be copied as /etc/tower/tower.key at install time.

custom_ca_cert

Custom Certification Authority to add as trustworthy in the system bundle. It will be loaded into the Tower CA trusted store.

3.2. Additional Installation Tips

You may want to consider how to configure your proxies and websockets as part of the installation of Ansible Tower to align the websocket config with your nginx / load balancer configuration. See ag_proxy_support in the following section of this guide for further detail.

3.2.1. Platform-specific Installation Notes

3.2.1.1. Installing Tower on Systems with FIPS Mode Enabled

Tower can run on systems where FIPS mode is enabled, though there are a few limitations to keep in mind:

  • Only Enterprise Linux 7+ is supported. The standard python that ships with RHEL must be used for Ansible Tower to work in FIPS mode. Using any non-standard, non-system python for Tower is therefore, unsupported.

  • By default, Tower configures PostgreSQL using password-based authentication, and this process relies on the usage of md5 when CREATE USER is run at install time. To run the Tower installer from a FIPS-enabled system, specify pg_password in your inventory file. DO NOT use special characters in pg_password as it may cause the setup to fail:

    pg_password='choose-a-password'
    

    For further detail, see Setting up the Inventory File.

    If you supply a password in the inventory file for the installer (pg_password), that password will be SCRAM-SHA-256 hashed by PostgreSQL as part of the installation process.

  • The ssh-keygen command generates keys in a format (RFC4716) which uses the md5 digest algorithm at some point in the process (as part of a transformation performed on the input passphrase). On a FIPS-enforcing system, md5 is completely disabled, so these types of encrypted SSH keys (RFC4716 private keys protected by a passphrase) will not be usable. When FIPS mode is enabled, any encrypted SSH key you import into Ansible Tower must be a PKCS8-formatted key. Existing AES128 keys can be converted to PKCS8 by running the following openssl command:

    $ openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -v2 aes128 -in <INPUT_KEY> -out <NEW_OUTPUT_KEY>
    
  • Use of Ansible features that use the paramiko library will not be FIPS compliant. This includes setting ansible_connection=paramiko as a transport and using network modules that utilize the ncclient NETCONF library.

  • The TACACS+ protocol uses md5 to obfuscate the content of authorization packets; TACACS+ Authentication is not supported for systems where FIPS mode is enabled.

  • The RADIUS protocol uses md5 to encrypt passwords in Access-Request queries; RADIUS Authentication is not supported for systems where FIPS mode is enabled.

3.2.1.2. Notes for Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS setups

  • In order for Ansible Tower to run on RHEL 8, Ansible 2.8 or greater must be installed. Ansible 2.8 and greater are supported versions for RHEL 8.

  • Starting with Ansible Tower 3.5, Tower runs with Python 3, which is automatically installed on RHEL 8 when installing Tower.

  • PackageKit can frequently interfere with the installation/update mechanism. Consider disabling or removing PackageKit if installed prior to running the setup process.

  • Only the “targeted” SELinux policy is supported. The targeted policy can be set to disabled, permissive, or enforcing.

  • When performing a bundled install, refer to Using the Bundled Tower Installation Program for more information.

  • When installing Ansible Tower, you only need to run setup.sh, any repositories needed by Tower are installed automatically.

  • The latest version of Ansible is installed automatically during the setup process. No additional installation or configuration is required.

3.2.1.3. Notes for Ubuntu setups

Ansible Tower no longer supports Ubuntu. Refer to previous versions of the Ansible Tower Installation and Reference Guide for details on Ubuntu.

3.2.1.4. Configuration and Installation on OpenShift

For OpenShift-based deployments, refer to OpenShift Deployment and Configuration.