Re-using Ansible artifacts¶
You can write a simple playbook in one very large file, and most users learn the one-file approach first. However, breaking tasks up into different files is an excellent way to organize complex sets of tasks and reuse them. Smaller, more distributed artifacts let you re-use the same variables, tasks, and plays in multiple playbooks to address different use cases. You can use distributed artifacts across multiple parent playbooks or even multiple times within one playbook. For example, you might want to update your customer database as part of several different playbooks. If you put all the tasks related to updating your database in a tasks file, you can re-use them in many playbooks while only maintaining them in one place.
Creating re-usable files and roles¶
Ansible offers four distributed, re-usable artifacts: variables files, task files, playbooks, and roles.
A variables file contains only variables.
A task file contains only tasks.
A playbook contains at least one play, and may contain variables, tasks, and other content. You can re-use tightly focused playbooks, but you can only re-use them statically, not dynamically.
A role contains a set of related tasks, variables, defaults, handlers, and even modules or other plugins in a defined file-tree. Unlike variables files, task files, or playbooks, roles can be easily uploaded and shared via Ansible Galaxy. See Roles for details about creating and using roles.
New in version 2.4.
Re-using playbooks¶
You can incorporate multiple playbooks into a master playbook. However, you can only use imports to re-use playbooks. For example:
- import_playbook: webservers.yml
- import_playbook: databases.yml
Importing incorporates playbooks in other playbooks statically. Ansible runs the plays and tasks in each imported playbook in the order they are listed, just as if they had been defined directly in the master playbook.
Re-using files and roles¶
Ansible offers two ways to re-use files and roles in a playbook: dynamic and static.
For dynamic re-use, add an
include_*
task in the tasks section of a play:For static re-use, add an
import_*
task in the tasks section of a play:
Task include and import statements can be used at arbitrary depth.
You can still use the bare roles keyword at the play level to incorporate a role in a playbook statically. However, the bare include keyword, once used for both task files and playbook-level includes, is now deprecated.
Includes: dynamic re-use¶
Including roles, tasks, or variables adds them to a playbook dynamically. Ansible processes included files and roles as they come up in a playbook, so included tasks can be affected by the results of earlier tasks within the top-level playbook. Included roles and tasks are similar to handlers - they may or may not run, depending on the results of other tasks in the top-level playbook.
The primary advantage of using include_*
statements is looping. When a loop is used with an include, the included tasks or role will be executed once for each item in the loop.
You can pass variables into includes. See Variable precedence: Where should I put a variable? for more details on variable inheritance and precedence.
Imports: static re-use¶
Importing roles, tasks, or playbooks adds them to a playbook statically. Ansible pre-processes imported files and roles before it runs any tasks in a playbook, so imported content is never affected by other tasks within the top-level playbook.
You can pass variables to imports. You must pass variables if you want to run an imported file more than once in a playbook. For example:
tasks:
- import_tasks: wordpress.yml
vars:
wp_user: timmy
- import_tasks: wordpress.yml
vars:
wp_user: alice
- import_tasks: wordpress.yml
vars:
wp_user: bob
See Variable precedence: Where should I put a variable? for more details on variable inheritance and precedence.
Comparing includes and imports: dynamic and static re-use¶
Each approach to re-using distributed Ansible artifacts has advantages and limitations. You may choose dynamic re-use for some playbooks and static re-use for others. Although you can use both dynamic and static re-use in a single playbook, it is best to select one approach per playbook. Mixing static and dynamic re-use can introduce difficult-to-diagnose bugs into your playbooks. This table summarizes the main differences so you can choose the best approach for each playbook you create.
Include_* |
Import_* |
|
---|---|---|
Type of re-use |
Dynamic |
Static |
When processed |
At runtime, when encountered |
Pre-processed during playbook parsing |
Task or play |
All includes are tasks |
|
Task options |
Apply only to include task itself |
Apply to all child tasks in import |
Calling from loops |
Executed once for each loop item |
Cannot be used in a loop |
Using |
Tags within includes not listed |
All tags appear with |
Using |
Tasks within includes not listed |
All tasks appear with |
Notifying handlers |
Cannot trigger handlers within includes |
Can trigger individual imported handlers |
Using |
Cannot start at tasks within includes |
Can start at imported tasks |
Using inventory variables |
Can |
Cannot |
With playbooks |
No |
Can import full playbooks |
With variables files |
Can include variables files |
Use |
Re-using tasks as handlers¶
You can also use includes and imports in the Handlers: running operations on change section of a playbook. For instance, if you want to define how to restart Apache, you only have to do that once for all of your playbooks. You might make a restarts.yml
file that looks like:
# restarts.yml
- name: Restart apache
ansible.builtin.service:
name: apache
state: restarted
- name: Restart mysql
ansible.builtin.service:
name: mysql
state: restarted
You can trigger handlers from either an import or an include, but the procedure is different for each method of re-use. If you include the file, you must notify the include itself, which triggers all the tasks in restarts.yml
. If you import the file, you must notify the individual task(s) within restarts.yml
. You can mix direct tasks and handlers with included or imported tasks and handlers.
Triggering included (dynamic) handlers¶
Includes are executed at run-time, so the name of the include exists during play execution, but the included tasks do not exist until the include itself is triggered. To use the Restart apache
task with dynamic re-use, refer to the name of the include itself. This approach triggers all tasks in the included file as handlers. For example, with the task file shown above:
- trigger an included (dynamic) handler
hosts: localhost
handlers:
- name: Restart services
include_tasks: restarts.yml
tasks:
- command: "true"
notify: Restart services
Triggering imported (static) handlers¶
Imports are processed before the play begins, so the name of the import no longer exists during play execution, but the names of the individual imported tasks do exist. To use the Restart apache
task with static re-use, refer to the name of each task or tasks within the imported file. For example, with the task file shown above:
- trigger an imported (static) handler
hosts: localhost
handlers:
- name: Restart services
import_tasks: restarts.yml
tasks:
- command: "true"
notify: Restart apache
- command: "true"
notify: Restart mysql
See also
- Utilities modules
Documentation of the
include*
andimport*
modules discussed here.- Working with playbooks
Review the basic Playbook language features
- Using Variables
All about variables in playbooks
- Conditionals
Conditionals in playbooks
- Loops
Loops in playbooks
- Tips and tricks
Tips and tricks for playbooks
- Galaxy User Guide
How to share roles on galaxy, role management
- GitHub Ansible examples
Complete playbook files from the GitHub project source
- Mailing List
Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups