Introduction to ad hoc commands

An Ansible ad hoc command uses the /usr/bin/ansible command-line tool to automate a single task on one or more managed nodes. ad hoc commands are quick and easy, but they are not reusable. So why learn about ad hoc commands? ad hoc commands demonstrate the simplicity and power of Ansible. The concepts you learn here will port over directly to the playbook language. Before reading and executing these examples, please read How to build your inventory.

Why use ad hoc commands?

ad hoc commands are great for tasks you repeat rarely. For example, if you want to power off all the machines in your lab for Christmas vacation, you could execute a quick one-liner in Ansible without writing a playbook. An ad hoc command looks like this:

$ ansible [pattern] -m [module] -a "[module options]"

The -a option accepts options either through the key=value syntax or a JSON string starting with { and ending with } for more complex option structure. You can learn more about patterns and modules on other pages.

Use cases for ad hoc tasks

ad hoc tasks can be used to reboot servers, copy files, manage packages and users, and much more. You can use any Ansible module in an ad hoc task. ad hoc tasks, like playbooks, use a declarative model, calculating and executing the actions required to reach a specified final state. They achieve a form of idempotence by checking the current state before they begin and doing nothing unless the current state is different from the specified final state.

Rebooting servers

The default module for the ansible command-line utility is the ansible.builtin.command module. You can use an ad hoc task to call the command module and reboot all web servers in Atlanta, 10 at a time. Before Ansible can do this, you must have all servers in Atlanta listed in a group called [atlanta] in your inventory, and you must have working SSH credentials for each machine in that group. To reboot all the servers in the [atlanta] group:

$ ansible atlanta -a "/sbin/reboot"

By default, Ansible uses only five simultaneous processes. If you have more hosts than the value set for the fork count, it can increase the time it takes for Ansible to communicate with the hosts. To reboot the [atlanta] servers with 10 parallel forks:

$ ansible atlanta -a "/sbin/reboot" -f 10

/usr/bin/ansible will default to running from your user account. To connect as a different user:

$ ansible atlanta -a "/sbin/reboot" -f 10 -u username

Rebooting probably requires privilege escalation. You can connect to the server as username and run the command as the root user by using the become keyword:

$ ansible atlanta -a "/sbin/reboot" -f 10 -u username --become [--ask-become-pass]

If you add --ask-become-pass or -K, Ansible prompts you for the password to use for privilege escalation (sudo/su/pfexec/doas/etc).

Note

The command module does not support extended shell syntaxes like piping and redirects (although shell variables will always work). If your command requires shell-specific syntax, use the shell module instead. Read more about the differences on the Working With Modules page.

So far all our examples have used the default ‘command’ module. To use a different module, pass -m for module name. For example, to use the ansible.builtin.shell module:

$ ansible raleigh -m ansible.builtin.shell -a 'echo $TERM'

When running any command with the Ansible ad hoc CLI (as opposed to Playbooks), pay particular attention to shell quoting rules, so the local shell retains the variable and passes it to Ansible. For example, using double rather than single quotes in the above example would evaluate the variable on the box you were on.

Managing files

An ad hoc task can harness the power of Ansible and SCP to transfer many files to multiple machines in parallel. To transfer a file directly to all servers in the [atlanta] group:

$ ansible atlanta -m ansible.builtin.copy -a "src=/etc/hosts dest=/tmp/hosts"

If you plan to repeat a task like this, use the ansible.builtin.template module in a playbook.

The ansible.builtin.file module allows changing ownership and permissions on files. These same options can be passed directly to the copy module as well:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.file -a "dest=/srv/foo/a.txt mode=600"
$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.file -a "dest=/srv/foo/b.txt mode=600 owner=mdehaan group=mdehaan"

The file module can also create directories, similar to mkdir -p:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.file -a "dest=/path/to/c mode=755 owner=mdehaan group=mdehaan state=directory"

As well as delete directories (recursively) and delete files:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.file -a "dest=/path/to/c state=absent"

Managing packages

You might also use an ad hoc task to install, update, or remove packages on managed nodes using a package management module such as yum. Package management modules support common functions to install, remove, and generally manage packages. Some specific functions for a package manager might not be present in the Ansible module since they are not part of general package management.

To ensure a package is installed without updating it:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.yum -a "name=acme state=present"

To ensure a specific version of a package is installed:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.yum -a "name=acme-1.5 state=present"

To ensure a package is at the latest version:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.yum -a "name=acme state=latest"

To ensure a package is not installed:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.yum -a "name=acme state=absent"

Ansible has modules for managing packages under many platforms. If there is no module for your package manager, you can install packages using the command module or create a module for your package manager.

Managing users and groups

You can create, manage, and remove user accounts on your managed nodes with ad hoc tasks:

$ ansible all -m ansible.builtin.user -a "name=foo password=<encrypted password here>"

$ ansible all -m ansible.builtin.user -a "name=foo state=absent"

See the ansible.builtin.user module documentation for details on all of the available options, including how to manipulate groups and group membership.

Managing services

Ensure a service is started on all webservers:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.service -a "name=httpd state=started"

Alternatively, restart a service on all webservers:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.service -a "name=httpd state=restarted"

Ensure a service is stopped:

$ ansible webservers -m ansible.builtin.service -a "name=httpd state=stopped"

Gathering facts

Facts represent discovered variables about a system. You can use facts to implement conditional execution of tasks but also just to get ad hoc information about your systems. To see all facts:

$ ansible all -m ansible.builtin.setup

You can also filter this output to display only certain facts, see the ansible.builtin.setup module documentation for details.

Check mode

In check mode, Ansible does not make any changes to remote systems. Ansible prints the commands only. It does not run the commands.

$  ansible all -m copy -a "content=foo dest=/root/bar.txt" -C

Enabling check mode (-C or --check) in the above command means Ansible does not actually create or update the /root/bar.txt file on any remote systems.

Patterns and ad-hoc commands

See the patterns documentation for details on all of the available options, including how to limit using patterns in ad-hoc commands.

Now that you understand the basic elements of Ansible execution, you are ready to learn to automate repetitive tasks using Ansible Playbooks.

See also

Configuring Ansible

All about the Ansible config file

Collection Index

Browse existing collections, modules, and plugins

Working with playbooks

Using Ansible for configuration management & deployment

Mailing List

Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups

Real-time chat

How to join Ansible chat channels