How to connect to RouterOS devices with the RouterOS API

You can use the community.routeros.api module to connect to a RouterOS device with the RouterOS API.

No special setup is needed; the module needs to be run on a host that can connect to the device’s API. The most common case is that the module is run on localhost, either by using hosts: localhost in the playbook, or by using delegate_to: localhost for the task. The following example shows how to run the equivalent of /ip address print:

---
- name: RouterOS test with API
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: no
  vars:
    hostname: 192.168.1.1
    username: admin
    password: test1234
  tasks:
    - name: Get "ip address print"
      community.routeros.api:
        hostname: "{{ hostname }}"
        password: "{{ password }}"
        username: "{{ username }}"
        path: "ip address"
        # The following options configure TLS/SSL.
        # Depending on your setup, these options need different values:
        tls: true
        validate_certs: true
        validate_cert_hostname: true
        # If you are using your own PKI, specify the path to your CA certificate here:
        # ca_path: /path/to/ca-certificate.pem
      register: print_path

- name: Show IP address of first interface
  debug:
    msg: "{{ print_path.msg[0].address }}"

This results in the following output:

PLAY [RouterOS test] *********************************************************************************************

TASK [Get "ip address print"] ************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

TASK [Show IP address of first interface] ************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": "192.168.2.1/24"
}

PLAY RECAP *******************************************************************************************************
localhost                  : ok=2    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0    skipped=0    rescued=0    ignored=0

Check out the documenation of the community.routeros.api module for details on the options.

Setting up encryption

It is recommended to always use tls: true when connecting with the API, even if you are only connecting to the device through a trusted network. The following options control how TLS/SSL is used:

validate_certs

Setting to false disables any certificate validation. This is discouraged to use in production, but is needed when setting the device up. The default value is true.

validate_cert_hostname

Setting to false (default) disables hostname verification during certificate validation. This is needed if the hostnames specified in the certificate do not match the hostname used for connecting (usually the device’s IP). It is recommended to set up the certificate correctly and set this to true; the default false is chosen for backwards compatibility to an older version of the module.

ca_path

If you are not using a commerically trusted CA certificate to sign your device’s certificate, or have not included your CA certificate in Python’s truststore, you need to point this option to the CA certificate.

We recommend to create a CA certificate that is used to sign the certificates for your RouterOS devices, and have the certificates include the correct hostname(s), including the IP of the device. That way, you can fully enable TLS and be sure that you always talk to the correct device.

Setting up a PKI

Please follow the instructions in the community.crypto How to create a small CA guide to set up a CA certificate and sign a certificate for your router. You should add a Subject Alternative Name for the IP address (for example IP:192.168.1.1) and - if available - for the DNS name (for example DNS:router.local) to the certificate.

Installing a certificate on a MikroTik router

Installing the certificate is best done with the SSH connection. (See the How to connect to RouterOS devices with SSH guide for more information.) Once the certificate has been installed, and the HTTPS API enabled, it’s easier to work with the API, since it has a quite a few less problems, and returns data as JSON objects instead of text you first have to parse.

First you have to convert the certificate and its private key to a PKCS #12 bundle. This can be done with the community.crypto.openssl_pkcs12. The following playbook assumes that the certificate is available as keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.pem, and its private key is available as keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.key. It generates a random passphrase to protect the PKCS#12 file.

---
- name: Install certificates on devices
  hosts: routers
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - block:
        - set_fact:
            random_password: "{{ lookup('community.general.random_string', length=32, override_all='0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz') }}"

        - name: Create PKCS#12 bundle
          openssl_pkcs12:
            path: keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.p12
            certificate_path: keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.pem
            privatekey_path: keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.key
            friendly_name: '{{ inventory_hostname }}'
            passphrase: "{{ random_password }}"
            mode: "0600"
          changed_when: false
          delegate_to: localhost

        - name: Copy router certificate onto router
          ansible.netcommon.net_put:
            src: 'keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.p12'
            dest: '{{ inventory_hostname }}.p12'

        - name: Install router certificate and clean up
          community.routeros.command:
            commands:
              # Import certificate:
              - /certificate import name={{ inventory_hostname }} file-name={{ inventory_hostname }}.p12 passphrase="{{ random_password }}"
              # Remove PKCS12 bundle:
              - /file remove {{ inventory_hostname }}.p12
              # Show certificates
              - /certificate print
          register: output

        - name: Show result of certificate import
          debug:
            var: output.stdout_lines[0]

        - name: Show certificates
          debug:
            var: output.stdout_lines[2]

      always:
        - name: Wipe PKCS12 bundle
          command: wipe keys/{{ inventory_hostname }}.p12
          changed_when: false
          delegate_to: localhost

    - name: Use certificate
      community.routeros.command:
        commands:
          - /ip service set www-ssl address={{ admin_network }} certificate={{ inventory_hostname }} disabled=no tls-version=only-1.2
          - /ip service set api-ssl address={{ admin_network }} certificate={{ inventory_hostname }} tls-version=only-1.2

The playbook also assumes that admin_network describes the network from which the HTTPS and API interface can be accessed. This can be for example 192.168.1.0/24.

When this playbook completed successfully, you should be able to use the HTTPS admin interface (reachable in a browser from https://192.168.1.1/, with the correct IP inserted), as well as the community.routeros.api module module with TLS and certificate validation enabled:

- community.routeros.api:
    ...
    tls: true
    validate_certs: true
    validate_cert_hostname: true
    ca_path: /path/to/ca-certificate.pem