Playbook Debugger¶
Topics
Ansible includes a debugger as part of the strategy plugins. This debugger enables you to debug as task. You have access to all of the features of the debugger in the context of the task. You can then, for example, check or set the value of variables, update module arguments, and re-run the task with the new variables and arguments to help resolve the cause of the failure.
There are multiple ways to invoke the debugger.
Using the debugger keyword¶
New in version 2.5.
The debugger
keyword can be used on any block where you provide a name
attribute, such as a play, role, block or task.
The debugger
keyword accepts several values:
- always
Always invoke the debugger, regardless of the outcome
- never
Never invoke the debugger, regardless of the outcome
- on_failed
Only invoke the debugger if a task fails
- on_unreachable
Only invoke the debugger if the a host was unreachable
- on_skipped
Only invoke the debugger if the task is skipped
These options override any global configuration to enable or disable the debugger.
On a task¶
- name: Execute a command
command: false
debugger: on_failed
On a play¶
- name: Play
hosts: all
debugger: on_skipped
tasks:
- name: Execute a command
command: true
when: False
When provided at a generic level and a more specific level, the more specific wins:
- name: Play
hosts: all
debugger: never
tasks:
- name: Execute a command
command: false
debugger: on_failed
Configuration or environment variable¶
New in version 2.5.
In ansible.cfg:
[defaults]
enable_task_debugger = True
As an environment variable:
ANSIBLE_ENABLE_TASK_DEBUGGER=True ansible-playbook -i hosts site.yml
When using this method, any failed or unreachable task will invoke the debugger, unless otherwise explicitly disabled.
As a Strategy¶
Note
This is a backwards compatible method, to match Ansible versions before 2.5, and may be removed in a future release
To use the debug
strategy, change the strategy
attribute like this:
- hosts: test
strategy: debug
tasks:
...
If you don’t want change the code, you can define ANSIBLE_STRATEGY=debug
environment variable in order to enable the debugger, or modify ansible.cfg
such as:
[defaults]
strategy = debug
Examples¶
For example, run the playbook below:
- hosts: test
debugger: on_failed
gather_facts: no
vars:
var1: value1
tasks:
- name: wrong variable
ping: data={{ wrong_var }}
The debugger is invoked since the wrong_var variable is undefined.
Let’s change the module’s arguments and run the task again
PLAY ***************************************************************************
TASK [wrong variable] **********************************************************
fatal: [192.0.2.10]: FAILED! => {"failed": true, "msg": "ERROR! 'wrong_var' is undefined"}
Debugger invoked
[192.0.2.10] TASK: wrong variable (debug)> p result._result
{'failed': True,
'msg': 'The task includes an option with an undefined variable. The error '
"was: 'wrong_var' is undefined\n"
'\n'
'The error appears to have been in '
"'playbooks/debugger.yml': line 7, "
'column 7, but may\n'
'be elsewhere in the file depending on the exact syntax problem.\n'
'\n'
'The offending line appears to be:\n'
'\n'
' tasks:\n'
' - name: wrong variable\n'
' ^ here\n'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: wrong variable (debug)> p task.args
{u'data': u'{{ wrong_var }}'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: wrong variable (debug)> task.args['data'] = '{{ var1 }}'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: wrong variable (debug)> p task.args
{u'data': '{{ var1 }}'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: wrong variable (debug)> redo
ok: [192.0.2.10]
PLAY RECAP *********************************************************************
192.0.2.10 : ok=1 changed=0 unreachable=0 failed=0
This time, the task runs successfully!
Available Commands¶
p(print) task/task_vars/host/result¶
Print values used to execute a module:
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task
TASK: install package
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task.args
{u'name': u'{{ pkg_name }}'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task_vars
{u'ansible_all_ipv4_addresses': [u'192.0.2.10'],
u'ansible_architecture': u'x86_64',
...
}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task_vars['pkg_name']
u'bash'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p host
192.0.2.10
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p result._result
{'_ansible_no_log': False,
'changed': False,
u'failed': True,
...
u'msg': u"No package matching 'not_exist' is available"}
task.args[key] = value¶
Update module’s argument.
If you run a playbook like this:
- hosts: test
strategy: debug
gather_facts: yes
vars:
pkg_name: not_exist
tasks:
- name: install package
apt: name={{ pkg_name }}
Debugger is invoked due to wrong package name, so let’s fix the module’s args:
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task.args
{u'name': u'{{ pkg_name }}'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> task.args['name'] = 'bash'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task.args
{u'name': 'bash'}
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> redo
Then the task runs again with new args.
task_vars[key] = value¶
Update task_vars
.
Let’s use the same playbook above, but fix task_vars
instead of args:
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task_vars['pkg_name']
u'not_exist'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> task_vars['pkg_name'] = 'bash'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> p task_vars['pkg_name']
'bash'
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> update_task
[192.0.2.10] TASK: install package (debug)> redo
Then the task runs again with new task_vars
.
Note
In 2.5 this was updated from vars
to task_vars
to not conflict with the vars()
python function.
u(pdate_task)¶
New in version 2.8.
This command re-creates the task from the original task data structure, and templates with updated task_vars
See the above documentation for task_vars[key] = value for an example of use.
r(edo)¶
Run the task again.
c(ontinue)¶
Just continue.
q(uit)¶
Quit from the debugger. The playbook execution is aborted.
Use with the free strategy¶
Using the debugger on the free
strategy will cause no further tasks to be queued or executed
while the debugger is active. Additionally, using redo
on a task to schedule it for re-execution
may cause the rescheduled task to execute after subsequent tasks listed in your playbook.
See also
- Working With Playbooks
An introduction to playbooks
- User Mailing List
Have a question? Stop by the google group!
- irc.freenode.net
#ansible IRC chat channel