infinidat.infinibox.infini_user module – Create, Delete and Modify a User on Infinibox

Note

This module is part of the infinidat.infinibox collection (version 1.3.3).

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 infinidat.infinibox.

To use it in a playbook, specify: infinidat.infinibox.infini_user.

New in version 2.10: of infinidat.infinibox

Synopsis

  • This module creates, deletes or modifies a user on Infinibox.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

password

string

Infinibox User password.

state

string

Creates/Modifies user when present or removes when absent

Choices:

  • stat

  • reset_password

  • present ← (default)

  • absent

system

string / required

Infinibox Hostname or IPv4 Address.

user

string

Infinibox User username with sufficient priveledges ( see notes ).

user_email

string / required

The new user’s Email address

user_enabled

boolean

Specify whether to enable the user

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

user_name

string / required

The new user’s Name. Once a user is created, the user_name may not be changed from this module. It may be changed from the UI or from infinishell.

user_password

string / required

The new user’s password

user_pool

string

Use with role==pool_admin. Specify the new user’s pool.

user_role

string / required

The user’s role

Choices:

  • admin

  • pool_admin

  • read_only

Notes

Note

  • This module requires infinisdk python library

  • You must set INFINIBOX_USER and INFINIBOX_PASSWORD environment variables if user and password arguments are not passed to the module directly

  • Ansible uses the infinisdk configuration file ~/.infinidat/infinisdk.ini if no credentials are provided. See http://infinisdk.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started.html

  • All Infinidat modules support check mode (–check). However, a dryrun that creates resources may fail if the resource dependencies are not met for a task. For example, consider a task that creates a volume in a pool. If the pool does not exist, the volume creation task will fail. It will fail even if there was a previous task in the playbook that would have created the pool but did not because the pool creation was also part of the dry run.

Examples

- name: Create new user
  infini_user:
    user_name: foo_user
    user_email: [email protected]
    user_password: secret2
    user_role: pool_admin
    user_enabled: false
    pool: foo_pool
    state: present
    password: secret1
    system: ibox001

Authors

  • David Ohlemacher (@ohlemacher)