cisco.meraki.meraki_mx_uplink_bandwidth – Manage uplinks on Meraki MX appliances¶
Note
This plugin is part of the cisco.meraki collection (version 2.2.1).
To install it use: ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.meraki
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: cisco.meraki.meraki_mx_uplink_bandwidth
.
New in version 1.1.0: of cisco.meraki
Parameters¶
Notes¶
Note
Some of the options are likely only used for developers within Meraki.
Module was formerly named meraki_mx_uplink.
More information about the Meraki API can be found at https://dashboard.meraki.com/api_docs.
Some of the options are likely only used for developers within Meraki.
As of Ansible 2.9, Meraki modules output keys as snake case. To use camel case, set the
ANSIBLE_MERAKI_FORMAT
environment variable tocamelcase
.Ansible’s Meraki modules will stop supporting camel case output in Ansible 2.13. Please update your playbooks.
Check Mode downloads the current configuration from the dashboard, then compares changes against this download. Check Mode will report changed if there are differences in the configurations, but does not submit changes to the API for validation of change.
Examples¶
- name: Set MX uplink settings
meraki_mx_uplink_bandwidth:
auth_key: '{{auth_key}}'
state: present
org_name: '{{test_org_name}}'
net_name: '{{test_net_name}} - Uplink'
wan1:
bandwidth_limits:
limit_down: 1000000
limit_up: 1000
cellular:
bandwidth_limits:
limit_down: 0
limit_up: 0
delegate_to: localhost
- name: Query MX uplink settings
meraki_mx_uplink_bandwidth:
auth_key: '{{auth_key}}'
state: query
org_name: '{{test_org_name}}'
net_name: '{{test_net_name}} - Uplink'
delegate_to: localhost
Return Values¶
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Authors¶
Kevin Breit (@kbreit)