cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af module – Manages VRF AF.

Note

This module is part of the cisco.nxos collection (version 9.2.1).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.nxos.

To use it in a playbook, specify: cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af.

New in cisco.nxos 1.0.0

Synopsis

  • Manages VRF AF

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

afi

string / required

Address-Family Identifier (AFI).

Choices:

  • "ipv4"

  • "ipv6"

route_target_both_auto_evpn

boolean

Enable/Disable the EVPN route-target ‘auto’ setting for both import and export target communities.

Choices:

  • false

  • true

route_targets

list / elements=dictionary

Specify the route-targets which should be imported and/or exported under the AF. This argument accepts a list of dicts that specify the route-target, the direction (import|export|both) and state of each route-target. Default direction is direction=both. See examples.

direction

string

Indicates the direction of the route-target (import|export|both)

Choices:

  • "import"

  • "export"

  • "both" ← (default)

rt

string / required

Defines the route-target itself

state

string

Determines whether the route-target with the given direction should be present or not on the device.

Choices:

  • "present" ← (default)

  • "absent"

state

string

Determines whether the config should be present or not on the device.

Choices:

  • "present" ← (default)

  • "absent"

vrf

string / required

Name of the VRF.

Notes

Note

  • Tested against NXOSv 7.3.(0)D1(1) on VIRL

  • Unsupported for Cisco MDS

  • Default, where supported, restores params default value.

  • In case of state=absent the address-family configuration will be absent. Therefore the options route_target_both_auto_evpn and route_targets are ignored.

  • For information on using CLI and NX-API see the :ref:`NXOS Platform Options guide <nxos_platform_options>`

  • For more information on using Ansible to manage network devices see the :ref:`Ansible Network Guide <network_guide>`

  • For more information on using Ansible to manage Cisco devices see the `Cisco integration page <https://www.ansible.com/integrations/networks/cisco>`_.

Examples

- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_target_both_auto_evpn: true
    state: present
- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_targets:
      - rt: '65000:1000'
        direction: import
      - rt: '65001:1000'
        direction: import
- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_targets:
      - rt: '65000:1000'
        direction: import
      - rt: '65001:1000'
        state: absent
- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_targets:
      - rt: '65000:1000'
        direction: export
      - rt: '65001:1000'
        direction: export
- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_targets:
      - rt: '65000:1000'
        direction: export
        state: absent
- cisco.nxos.nxos_vrf_af:
    vrf: ntc
    afi: ipv4
    route_targets:
      - rt: '65000:1000'
        direction: both
        state: present
      - rt: '65001:1000'
        direction: import
        state: present
      - rt: '65002:1000'
        direction: both
        state: absent

Return Values

Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:

Key

Description

commands

list / elements=string

commands sent to the device

Returned: always

Sample: ["vrf context ntc", "address-family ipv4 unicast"]

Authors

  • Gabriele Gerbino (@GGabriele)