Discovering variables: facts and magic variables
With Ansible you can retrieve or discover certain variables containing information about your remote systems or about Ansible itself. Variables related to remote systems are called facts. With facts, you can use the behavior or state of one system as a configuration on other systems. For example, you can use the IP address of one system as a configuration value on another system. Variables related to Ansible are called magic variables.
Ansible facts
Ansible facts are data related to your remote systems, including operating systems, IP addresses, attached filesystems, and more. You can access this data in the ansible_facts
variable. By default, you can also access some Ansible facts as top-level variables with the ansible_
prefix. You can disable this behavior using the INJECT_FACTS_AS_VARS setting. To see all available facts, add this task to a play:
- name: Print all available facts
ansible.builtin.debug:
var: ansible_facts
To see the ‘raw’ information as gathered, run this command at the command line:
ansible <hostname> -m ansible.builtin.setup
Facts include a large amount of variable data, which may look like this:
{
"ansible_all_ipv4_addresses": [
"REDACTED IP ADDRESS"
],
"ansible_all_ipv6_addresses": [
"REDACTED IPV6 ADDRESS"
],
"ansible_apparmor": {
"status": "disabled"
},
"ansible_architecture": "x86_64",
"ansible_bios_date": "11/28/2013",
"ansible_bios_version": "4.1.5",
"ansible_cmdline": {
"BOOT_IMAGE": "/boot/vmlinuz-3.10.0-862.14.4.el7.x86_64",
"console": "ttyS0,115200",
"no_timer_check": true,
"nofb": true,
"nomodeset": true,
"ro": true,
"root": "LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs",
"vga": "normal"
},
"ansible_date_time": {
"date": "2018-10-25",
"day": "25",
"epoch": "1540469324",
"hour": "12",
"iso8601": "2018-10-25T12:08:44Z",
"iso8601_basic": "20181025T120844109754",
"iso8601_basic_short": "20181025T120844",
"iso8601_micro": "2018-10-25T12:08:44.109968Z",
"minute": "08",
"month": "10",
"second": "44",
"time": "12:08:44",
"tz": "UTC",
"tz_offset": "+0000",
"weekday": "Thursday",
"weekday_number": "4",
"weeknumber": "43",
"year": "2018"
},
"ansible_default_ipv4": {
"address": "REDACTED",
"alias": "eth0",
"broadcast": "REDACTED",
"gateway": "REDACTED",
"interface": "eth0",
"macaddress": "REDACTED",
"mtu": 1500,
"netmask": "255.255.255.0",
"network": "REDACTED",
"type": "ether"
},
"ansible_default_ipv6": {},
"ansible_device_links": {
"ids": {},
"labels": {
"xvda1": [
"cloudimg-rootfs"
],
"xvdd": [
"config-2"
]
},
"masters": {},
"uuids": {
"xvda1": [
"cac81d61-d0f8-4b47-84aa-b48798239164"
],
"xvdd": [
"2018-10-25-12-05-57-00"
]
}
},
"ansible_devices": {
"xvda": {
"holders": [],
"host": "",
"links": {
"ids": [],
"labels": [],
"masters": [],
"uuids": []
},
"model": null,
"partitions": {
"xvda1": {
"holders": [],
"links": {
"ids": [],
"labels": [
"cloudimg-rootfs"
],
"masters": [],
"uuids": [
"cac81d61-d0f8-4b47-84aa-b48798239164"
]
},
"sectors": "83883999",
"sectorsize": 512,
"size": "40.00 GB",
"start": "2048",
"uuid": "cac81d61-d0f8-4b47-84aa-b48798239164"
}
},
"removable": "0",
"rotational": "0",
"sas_address": null,
"sas_device_handle": null,
"scheduler_mode": "deadline",
"sectors": "83886080",
"sectorsize": "512",
"size": "40.00 GB",
"support_discard": "0",
"vendor": null,
"virtual": 1
},
"xvdd": {
"holders": [],
"host": "",
"links": {
"ids": [],
"labels": [
"config-2"
],
"masters": [],
"uuids": [
"2018-10-25-12-05-57-00"
]
},
"model": null,
"partitions": {},
"removable": "0",
"rotational": "0",
"sas_address": null,
"sas_device_handle": null,
"scheduler_mode": "deadline",
"sectors": "131072",
"sectorsize": "512",
"size": "64.00 MB",
"support_discard": "0",
"vendor": null,
"virtual": 1
},
"xvde": {
"holders": [],
"host": "",
"links": {
"ids": [],
"labels": [],
"masters": [],
"uuids": []
},
"model": null,
"partitions": {
"xvde1": {
"holders": [],
"links": {
"ids": [],
"labels": [],
"masters": [],
"uuids": []
},
"sectors": "167770112",
"sectorsize": 512,
"size": "80.00 GB",
"start": "2048",
"uuid": null
}
},
"removable": "0",
"rotational": "0",
"sas_address": null,
"sas_device_handle": null,
"scheduler_mode": "deadline",
"sectors": "167772160",
"sectorsize": "512",
"size": "80.00 GB",
"support_discard": "0",
"vendor": null,
"virtual": 1
}
},
"ansible_distribution": "CentOS",
"ansible_distribution_file_parsed": true,
"ansible_distribution_file_path": "/etc/redhat-release",
"ansible_distribution_file_variety": "RedHat",
"ansible_distribution_major_version": "7",
"ansible_distribution_release": "Core",
"ansible_distribution_version": "7.5.1804",
"ansible_dns": {
"nameservers": [
"127.0.0.1"
]
},
"ansible_domain": "",
"ansible_effective_group_id": 1000,
"ansible_effective_user_id": 1000,
"ansible_env": {
"HOME": "/home/zuul",
"LANG": "en_US.UTF-8",
"LESSOPEN": "||/usr/bin/lesspipe.sh %s",
"LOGNAME": "zuul",
"MAIL": "/var/mail/zuul",
"PATH": "/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin",
"PWD": "/home/zuul",
"SELINUX_LEVEL_REQUESTED": "",
"SELINUX_ROLE_REQUESTED": "",
"SELINUX_USE_CURRENT_RANGE": "",
"SHELL": "/bin/bash",
"SHLVL": "2",
"SSH_CLIENT": "REDACTED 55672 22",
"SSH_CONNECTION": "REDACTED 55672 REDACTED 22",
"USER": "zuul",
"XDG_RUNTIME_DIR": "/run/user/1000",
"XDG_SESSION_ID": "1",
"_": "/usr/bin/python2"
},
"ansible_eth0": {
"active": true,
"device": "eth0",
"ipv4": {
"address": "REDACTED",
"broadcast": "REDACTED",
"netmask": "255.255.255.0",
"network": "REDACTED"
},
"ipv6": [
{
"address": "REDACTED",
"prefix": "64",
"scope": "link"
}
],
"macaddress": "REDACTED",
"module": "xen_netfront",
"mtu": 1500,
"pciid": "vif-0",
"promisc": false,
"type": "ether"
},
"ansible_eth1": {
"active": true,
"device": "eth1",
"ipv4": {
"address": "REDACTED",
"broadcast": "REDACTED",
"netmask": "255.255.224.0",
"network": "REDACTED"
},
"ipv6": [
{
"address": "REDACTED",
"prefix": "64",
"scope": "link"
}
],
"macaddress": "REDACTED",
"module": "xen_netfront",
"mtu": 1500,
"pciid": "vif-1",
"promisc": false,
"type": "ether"
},
"ansible_fips": false,
"ansible_form_factor": "Other",
"ansible_fqdn": "centos-7-rax-dfw-0003427354",
"ansible_hostname": "centos-7-rax-dfw-0003427354",
"ansible_interfaces": [
"lo",
"eth1",
"eth0"
],
"ansible_is_chroot": false,
"ansible_kernel": "3.10.0-862.14.4.el7.x86_64",
"ansible_lo": {
"active": true,
"device": "lo",
"ipv4": {
"address": "127.0.0.1",
"broadcast": "host",
"netmask": "255.0.0.0",
"network": "127.0.0.0"
},
"ipv6": [
{
"address": "::1",
"prefix": "128",
"scope": "host"
}
],
"mtu": 65536,
"promisc": false,
"type": "loopback"
},
"ansible_local": {},
"ansible_lsb": {
"codename": "Core",
"description": "CentOS Linux release 7.5.1804 (Core)",
"id": "CentOS",
"major_release": "7",
"release": "7.5.1804"
},
"ansible_machine": "x86_64",
"ansible_machine_id": "2db133253c984c82aef2fafcce6f2bed",
"ansible_memfree_mb": 7709,
"ansible_memory_mb": {
"nocache": {
"free": 7804,
"used": 173
},
"real": {
"free": 7709,
"total": 7977,
"used": 268
},
"swap": {
"cached": 0,
"free": 0,
"total": 0,
"used": 0
}
},
"ansible_memtotal_mb": 7977,
"ansible_mounts": [
{
"block_available": 7220998,
"block_size": 4096,
"block_total": 9817227,
"block_used": 2596229,
"device": "/dev/xvda1",
"fstype": "ext4",
"inode_available": 10052341,
"inode_total": 10419200,
"inode_used": 366859,
"mount": "/",
"options": "rw,seclabel,relatime,data=ordered",
"size_available": 29577207808,
"size_total": 40211361792,
"uuid": "cac81d61-d0f8-4b47-84aa-b48798239164"
},
{
"block_available": 0,
"block_size": 2048,
"block_total": 252,
"block_used": 252,
"device": "/dev/xvdd",
"fstype": "iso9660",
"inode_available": 0,
"inode_total": 0,
"inode_used": 0,
"mount": "/mnt/config",
"options": "ro,relatime,mode=0700",
"size_available": 0,
"size_total": 516096,
"uuid": "2018-10-25-12-05-57-00"
}
],
"ansible_nodename": "centos-7-rax-dfw-0003427354",
"ansible_os_family": "RedHat",
"ansible_pkg_mgr": "yum",
"ansible_processor": [
"0",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"1",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"2",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"3",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"4",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"5",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"6",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz",
"7",
"GenuineIntel",
"Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz"
],
"ansible_processor_cores": 8,
"ansible_processor_count": 8,
"ansible_processor_nproc": 8,
"ansible_processor_threads_per_core": 1,
"ansible_processor_vcpus": 8,
"ansible_product_name": "HVM domU",
"ansible_product_serial": "REDACTED",
"ansible_product_uuid": "REDACTED",
"ansible_product_version": "4.1.5",
"ansible_python": {
"executable": "/usr/bin/python2",
"has_sslcontext": true,
"type": "CPython",
"version": {
"major": 2,
"micro": 5,
"minor": 7,
"releaselevel": "final",
"serial": 0
},
"version_info": [
2,
7,
5,
"final",
0
]
},
"ansible_python_version": "2.7.5",
"ansible_real_group_id": 1000,
"ansible_real_user_id": 1000,
"ansible_selinux": {
"config_mode": "enforcing",
"mode": "enforcing",
"policyvers": 31,
"status": "enabled",
"type": "targeted"
},
"ansible_selinux_python_present": true,
"ansible_service_mgr": "systemd",
"ansible_ssh_host_key_ecdsa_public": "REDACTED KEY VALUE",
"ansible_ssh_host_key_ed25519_public": "REDACTED KEY VALUE",
"ansible_ssh_host_key_rsa_public": "REDACTED KEY VALUE",
"ansible_swapfree_mb": 0,
"ansible_swaptotal_mb": 0,
"ansible_system": "Linux",
"ansible_system_capabilities": [
""
],
"ansible_system_capabilities_enforced": "True",
"ansible_system_vendor": "Xen",
"ansible_uptime_seconds": 151,
"ansible_user_dir": "/home/zuul",
"ansible_user_gecos": "",
"ansible_user_gid": 1000,
"ansible_user_id": "zuul",
"ansible_user_shell": "/bin/bash",
"ansible_user_uid": 1000,
"ansible_userspace_architecture": "x86_64",
"ansible_userspace_bits": "64",
"ansible_virtualization_role": "guest",
"ansible_virtualization_type": "xen",
"gather_subset": [
"all"
],
"module_setup": true
}
You can reference the model of the first disk in the facts shown above in a template or playbook as:
{{ ansible_facts['devices']['xvda']['model'] }}
To reference the system hostname:
{{ ansible_facts['nodename'] }}
You can use facts in conditionals (see Conditionals) and also in templates. You can also use facts to create dynamic groups of hosts that match particular criteria, see the group_by module documentation for details.
Note
Because ansible_date_time
is created and cached when Ansible gathers facts before each playbook run, it can get stale with long-running playbooks. If your playbook takes a long time to run, use the pipe
filter (for example, lookup('pipe', 'date +%Y-%m-%d.%H:%M:%S')
) or now() with a Jinja 2 template instead of ansible_date_time
.
Package requirements for fact gathering
On some distros, you may see missing fact values or facts set to default values because the packages that support gathering those facts are not installed by default. You can install the necessary packages on your remote hosts using the OS package manager. Known dependencies include:
Linux Network fact gathering - Depends on the
ip
binary, commonly included in theiproute2
package.
Caching facts
Like registered variables, facts are stored in memory by default. However, unlike registered variables, facts can be gathered independently and cached for repeated use. With cached facts, you can refer to facts from one system when configuring a second system, even if Ansible executes the current play on the second system first. For example:
{{ hostvars['asdf.example.com']['ansible_facts']['os_family'] }}
Caching is controlled by the cache plugins. By default, Ansible uses the memory cache plugin, which stores facts in memory for the duration of the current playbook run. To retain Ansible facts for repeated use, select a different cache plugin. See Cache plugins for details.
Fact caching can improve performance. If you manage thousands of hosts, you can configure fact caching to run nightly, and then manage configuration on a smaller set of servers periodically throughout the day. With cached facts, you have access to variables and information about all hosts even when you are only managing a small number of servers.
Disabling facts
By default, Ansible gathers facts at the beginning of each play. If you do not need to gather facts (for example, if you know everything about your systems centrally), you can turn off fact gathering at the play level to improve scalability. Disabling facts may particularly improve performance in push mode with very large numbers of systems, or if you are using Ansible on experimental platforms. To disable fact gathering:
- hosts: whatever
gather_facts: false
Adding custom facts
The setup module in Ansible automatically discovers a standard set of facts about each host. If you want to add custom values to your facts, you can write a custom facts module, set temporary facts with a ansible.builtin.set_fact
task, or provide permanent custom facts using the facts.d directory.
facts.d or local facts
New in version 1.3.
You can add static custom facts by adding static files to facts.d, or add dynamic facts by adding executable scripts to facts.d. For example, you can add a list of all users on a host to your facts by creating and running a script in facts.d.
To use facts.d, create an /etc/ansible/facts.d
directory on the remote host or hosts. If you prefer a different directory, create it and specify it using the fact_path
play keyword. Add files to the directory to supply your custom facts. All file names must end with .fact
. The files can be JSON, INI, or executable files returning JSON.
To add static facts, simply add a file with the .fact
extension. For example, create /etc/ansible/facts.d/preferences.fact
with this content:
[general]
asdf=1
bar=2
Note
Make sure the file is not executable as this will break the ansible.builtin.setup
module.
The next time fact gathering runs, your facts will include a hash variable fact named general
with asdf
and bar
as members. To validate this, run the following:
ansible <hostname> -m ansible.builtin.setup -a "filter=ansible_local"
And you will see your custom fact added:
{
"ansible_local": {
"preferences": {
"general": {
"asdf" : "1",
"bar" : "2"
}
}
}
}
The ansible_local namespace separates custom facts created by facts.d from system facts or variables defined elsewhere in the playbook, so variables will not override each other. You can access this custom fact in a template or playbook as:
{{ ansible_local['preferences']['general']['asdf'] }}
Note
The key part in the key=value pairs will be converted into lowercase inside the ansible_local variable. Using the example above, if the ini file contained XYZ=3
in the [general]
section, then you should expect to access it as: {{ ansible_local['preferences']['general']['xyz'] }}
and not {{ ansible_local['preferences']['general']['XYZ'] }}
. This is because Ansible uses Python’s ConfigParser which passes all option names through the optionxform method and this method’s default implementation converts option names to lowercase.
You can also use facts.d to execute a script on the remote host, generating dynamic custom facts to the ansible_local namespace. For example, you can generate a list of all users that exist on a remote host as a fact about that host. To generate dynamic custom facts using facts.d:
Write and test a script to generate the JSON data you want.
Save the script in your facts.d directory.
Make sure your script has the
.fact
file extension.Make sure your script is executable by the Ansible connection user.
Gather facts to execute the script and add the JSON output to ansible_local.
By default, fact gathering runs once at the beginning of each play. If you create a custom fact using facts.d in a playbook, it will be available in the next play that gathers facts. If you want to use it in the same play where you created it, you must explicitly re-run the setup module. For example:
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Create directory for ansible custom facts
ansible.builtin.file:
state: directory
recurse: true
path: /etc/ansible/facts.d
- name: Install custom ipmi fact
ansible.builtin.copy:
src: ipmi.fact
dest: /etc/ansible/facts.d
- name: Re-read facts after adding custom fact
ansible.builtin.setup:
filter: ansible_local
If you use this pattern frequently, a custom facts module would be more efficient than facts.d.
Information about Ansible: magic variables
You can access information about Ansible operations, including the Python version being used, the hosts and groups in inventory, and the directories for playbooks and roles, using “magic” variables. Like connection variables, magic variables are Special Variables. Magic variable names are reserved - do not set variables with these names. The variable environment
is also reserved.
The most commonly used magic variables are hostvars
, groups
, group_names
, and inventory_hostname
. With hostvars
, you can access variables defined for any host in the play, at any point in a playbook. You can access Ansible facts using the hostvars
variable too, but only after you have gathered (or cached) facts. Note that variables defined at play objects are not defined for specific hosts and therefore are not mapped to hostvars.
If you want to configure your database server using the value of a ‘fact’ from another node, or the value of an inventory variable assigned to another node, you can use hostvars
in a template or on an action line:
{{ hostvars['test.example.com']['ansible_facts']['distribution'] }}
With groups
, a list of all the groups (and hosts) in the inventory, you can enumerate all hosts within a group. For example:
{% for host in groups['app_servers'] %}
# something that applies to all app servers.
{% endfor %}
You can use groups
and hostvars
together to find all the IP addresses in a group.
{% for host in groups['app_servers'] %}
{{ hostvars[host]['ansible_facts']['eth0']['ipv4']['address'] }}
{% endfor %}
You can use this approach to point a frontend proxy server to all the hosts in your app servers group, to set up the correct firewall rules between servers, and so on. You must either cache facts or gather facts for those hosts before the task that fills out the template.
With group_names
, a list (array) of all the groups the current host is in, you can create templated files that vary based on the group membership (or role) of the host:
{% if 'webserver' in group_names %}
# some part of a configuration file that only applies to webservers
{% endif %}
You can use the magic variable inventory_hostname
, the name of the host as configured in your inventory, as an alternative to ansible_hostname
when fact-gathering is disabled. If you have a long FQDN, you can use inventory_hostname_short
, which contains the part up to the first period, without the rest of the domain.
Other useful magic variables refer to the current play or playbook. These vars may be useful for filling out templates with multiple hostnames or for injecting the list into the rules for a load balancer.
ansible_play_hosts
is the list of all hosts still active in the current play.
ansible_play_batch
is a list of hostnames that are in scope for the current ‘batch’ of the play.
The batch size is defined by serial
, when not set it is equivalent to the whole play (making it the same as ansible_play_hosts
).
ansible_playbook_python
is the path to the Python executable used to invoke the Ansible command line tool.
inventory_dir
is the pathname of the directory holding Ansible’s inventory host file.
inventory_file
is the pathname and the file name pointing to the Ansible’s inventory host file.
playbook_dir
contains the playbook base directory.
role_path
contains the current role’s pathname and only works inside a role.
ansible_check_mode
is a boolean, set to True
if you run Ansible with --check
.
Ansible version
New in version 1.8.
To adapt playbook behavior to different versions of Ansible, you can use the variable ansible_version
, which has the following structure:
{
"ansible_version": {
"full": "2.10.1",
"major": 2,
"minor": 10,
"revision": 1,
"string": "2.10.1"
}
}