Parameter |
Choices/Defaults |
Comments |
artifact_id
-
/ required
|
|
The maven artifactId coordinate
|
attributes
string
|
|
The attributes the resulting file or directory should have.
To get supported flags look at the man page for chattr on the target system.
This string should contain the attributes in the same order as the one displayed by lsattr.
The = operator is assumed as default, otherwise + or - operators need to be included in the string.
aliases: attr
|
classifier
-
|
|
The maven classifier coordinate
|
dest
-
/ required
|
|
The path where the artifact should be written to
If file mode or ownerships are specified and destination path already exists, they affect the downloaded file
|
extension
-
|
Default:
"jar"
|
The maven type/extension coordinate
|
group
string
|
|
Name of the group that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown.
|
group_id
-
/ required
|
|
The Maven groupId coordinate
|
headers
dictionary
added in 2.8 |
|
Add custom HTTP headers to a request in hash/dict format.
|
keep_name
boolean
added in 2.4 |
|
If yes , the downloaded artifact's name is preserved, i.e the version number remains part of it.
This option only has effect when dest is a directory and version is set to latest .
|
mode
string
|
|
The permissions the resulting file or directory should have.
For those used to /usr/bin/chmod remember that modes are actually octal numbers. You must either add a leading zero so that Ansible's YAML parser knows it is an octal number (like 0644 or 01777 ) or quote it (like '644' or '1777' ) so Ansible receives a string and can do its own conversion from string into number.
Giving Ansible a number without following one of these rules will end up with a decimal number which will have unexpected results.
As of Ansible 1.8, the mode may be specified as a symbolic mode (for example, u+rwx or u=rw,g=r,o=r ).
As of Ansible 2.6, the mode may also be the special string preserve .
When set to preserve the file will be given the same permissions as the source file.
|
owner
string
|
|
Name of the user that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown.
|
password
-
|
|
The password to authenticate with to the Maven Repository. Use AWS secret access key of the repository is hosted on S3
aliases: aws_secret_access_key
|
repository_url
-
|
Default:
"http://repo1.maven.org/maven2"
|
The URL of the Maven Repository to download from.
Use s3://... if the repository is hosted on Amazon S3, added in version 2.2.
Use file://... if the repository is local, added in version 2.6
|
selevel
string
|
Default:
"s0"
|
The level part of the SELinux file context.
This is the MLS/MCS attribute, sometimes known as the range .
When set to _default , it will use the level portion of the policy if available.
|
serole
string
|
|
The role part of the SELinux file context.
When set to _default , it will use the role portion of the policy if available.
|
setype
string
|
|
The type part of the SELinux file context.
When set to _default , it will use the type portion of the policy if available.
|
seuser
string
|
|
The user part of the SELinux file context.
By default it uses the system policy, where applicable.
When set to _default , it will use the user portion of the policy if available.
|
state
-
|
Choices:
present ←
- absent
|
The desired state of the artifact
|
timeout
-
|
Default:
10
|
Specifies a timeout in seconds for the connection attempt
|
unsafe_writes
boolean
|
|
Influence when to use atomic operation to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target file.
By default this module uses atomic operations to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target files, but sometimes systems are configured or just broken in ways that prevent this. One example is docker mounted files, which cannot be updated atomically from inside the container and can only be written in an unsafe manner.
This option allows Ansible to fall back to unsafe methods of updating files when atomic operations fail (however, it doesn't force Ansible to perform unsafe writes).
IMPORTANT! Unsafe writes are subject to race conditions and can lead to data corruption.
|
username
-
|
|
The username to authenticate as to the Maven Repository. Use AWS secret key of the repository is hosted on S3
aliases: aws_secret_key
|
validate_certs
boolean
|
|
If no , SSL certificates will not be validated. This should only be set to no when no other option exists.
|
verify_checksum
-
added in 2.6 |
Choices:
- never
download ←
- change
- always
|
If never , the md5 checksum will never be downloaded and verified.
If download , the md5 checksum will be downloaded and verified only after artifact download. This is the default.
If change , the md5 checksum will be downloaded and verified if the destination already exist, to verify if they are identical. This was the behaviour before 2.6. Since it downloads the md5 before (maybe) downloading the artifact, and since some repository software, when acting as a proxy/cache, return a 404 error if the artifact has not been cached yet, it may fail unexpectedly. If you still need it, you should consider using always instead - if you deal with a checksum, it is better to use it to verify integrity after download.
always combines download and change .
|
version
-
|
Default:
"latest"
|
The maven version coordinate
|