cisco.meraki.meraki_ms_storm_control – Manage storm control configuration on a switch in the Meraki cloud
Note
This plugin is part of the cisco.meraki collection (version 2.5.0).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package.
It is not included in ansible-core
.
To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.meraki
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: cisco.meraki.meraki_ms_storm_control
.
New in version 0.0.1: of cisco.meraki
Parameters
Parameter |
Comments |
---|---|
Authentication key provided by the dashboard. Required if environmental variable |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for broadcast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. |
|
Hostname for Meraki dashboard. Can be used to access regional Meraki environments, such as China. Default: “api.meraki.com” |
|
Number of seconds to retry if server returns an internal server error. Default: 60 |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for multicast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. |
|
ID of network. |
|
Name of network. |
|
ID of organization. |
|
Name of organization. |
|
Instructs module whether response keys should be snake case (ex. Choices:
|
|
Set amount of debug output during module execution. Choices:
|
|
Number of seconds to retry if rate limiter is triggered. Default: 165 |
|
Specifies whether storm control configuration should be queried or modified. Choices:
|
|
Time to timeout for HTTP requests. Default: 30 |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for unknown unicast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. |
|
If Only useful for internal Meraki developers. Choices:
|
|
If Choices:
|
|
Whether to validate HTTP certificates. Choices:
|
Notes
Note
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 broadcast settings
meraki_switch_storm_control:
auth_key: abc123
state: present
org_name: YourOrg
net_name: YourNet
broadcast_threshold: 75
multicast_threshold: 70
unknown_unicast_threshold: 65
delegate_to: localhost
- name: Query storm control settings
meraki_switch_storm_control:
auth_key: abc123
state: query
org_name: YourOrg
net_name: YourNet
delegate_to: localhost
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key |
Description |
---|---|
Information queried or updated storm control configuration. Returned: success |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for broadcast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. Returned: success Sample: 42 |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for multicast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. Returned: success Sample: 42 |
|
Percentage (1 to 99) of total available port bandwidth for unknown unicast traffic type. Default value 100 percent rate is to clear the configuration. Returned: success Sample: 42 |
Authors
Kevin Breit (@kbreit)