ansible.builtin.nested lookup – composes a list with nested elements of other lists

Note

This lookup plugin is part of ansible-core and included in all Ansible installations. In most cases, you can use the short plugin name nested. However, we recommend you use the Fully Qualified Collection Name (FQCN) ansible.builtin.nested for easy linking to the plugin documentation and to avoid conflicting with other collections that may have the same lookup plugin name.

Synopsis

  • Takes the input lists and returns a list with elements that are lists composed of the elements of the input lists

Keyword parameters

This describes keyword parameters of the lookup. These are the values key1=value1, key2=value2 and so on in the following examples: lookup('ansible.builtin.nested', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...) and query('ansible.builtin.nested', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...)

Parameter

Comments

_raw

string / required

a set of lists

Examples

- name: give users access to multiple databases
  community.mysql.mysql_user:
    name: "{{ item[0] }}"
    priv: "{{ item[1] }}.*:ALL"
    append_privs: yes
    password: "foo"
  with_nested:
    - [ 'alice', 'bob' ]
    - [ 'clientdb', 'employeedb', 'providerdb' ]
# As with the case of 'with_items' above, you can use previously defined variables.:

- name: here, 'users' contains the above list of employees
  community.mysql.mysql_user:
    name: "{{ item[0] }}"
    priv: "{{ item[1] }}.*:ALL"
    append_privs: yes
    password: "foo"
  with_nested:
    - "{{ users }}"
    - [ 'clientdb', 'employeedb', 'providerdb' ]

Return Value

Key

Description

Return value

list / elements=string

A list composed of lists paring the elements of the input lists

Returned: success

Hint

Configuration entries for each entry type have a low to high priority order. For example, a variable that is lower in the list will override a variable that is higher up.