openstack.cloud.volume module – Create/Delete Cinder Volumes
Note
This module is part of the openstack.cloud collection (version 1.10.0).
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 openstack.cloud
.
You need further requirements to be able to use this module,
see Requirements for details.
To use it in a playbook, specify: openstack.cloud.volume
.
Synopsis
Create or Remove cinder block storage volumes
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
openstacksdk
openstacksdk >= 0.36, < 0.99.0
python >= 3.6
Parameters
Parameter |
Comments |
---|---|
How long should the socket layer wait before timing out for API calls. If this is omitted, nothing will be passed to the requests library. |
|
Dictionary containing auth information as needed by the cloud’s auth plugin strategy. For the default password plugin, this would contain auth_url, username, password, project_name and any information about domains (for example, user_domain_name or project_domain_name) if the cloud supports them. For other plugins, this param will need to contain whatever parameters that auth plugin requires. This parameter is not needed if a named cloud is provided or OpenStack OS_* environment variables are present. |
|
Name of the auth plugin to use. If the cloud uses something other than password authentication, the name of the plugin should be indicated here and the contents of the auth parameter should be updated accordingly. |
|
Ignored. Present for backwards compatibility |
|
Bootable flag for volume. Choices:
|
|
A path to a CA Cert bundle that can be used as part of verifying SSL API requests. |
|
A path to a client certificate to use as part of the SSL transaction. |
|
A path to a client key to use as part of the SSL transaction. |
|
Named cloud or cloud config to operate against. If cloud is a string, it references a named cloud config as defined in an OpenStack clouds.yaml file. Provides default values for auth and auth_type. This parameter is not needed if auth is provided or if OpenStack OS_* environment variables are present. If cloud is a dict, it contains a complete cloud configuration like would be in a section of clouds.yaml. |
|
String describing the volume |
|
Name of volume |
|
Image name or id for boot from volume |
|
Endpoint URL type to fetch from the service catalog. Choices:
|
|
Metadata for the volume |
|
Name of the region. |
|
Scheduler hints passed to volume API in form of dict |
|
Log level of the OpenStackSDK Choices:
|
|
Path to the logfile of the OpenStackSDK. If empty no log is written |
|
Size of volume in GB. This parameter is required when the state parameter is ‘present’. |
|
Volume snapshot id to create from |
|
Should the resource be present or absent. Choices:
|
|
How long should ansible wait for the requested resource. Default: |
|
Whether or not SSL API requests should be verified. Before Ansible 2.3 this defaulted to Choices:
|
|
Volume name or id to create from |
|
Volume type for volume |
|
Should ansible wait until the requested resource is complete. Choices:
|
Notes
Note
The standard OpenStack environment variables, such as
OS_USERNAME
may be used instead of providing explicit values.Auth information is driven by openstacksdk, which means that values can come from a yaml config file in /etc/ansible/openstack.yaml, /etc/openstack/clouds.yaml or ~/.config/openstack/clouds.yaml, then from standard environment variables, then finally by explicit parameters in plays. More information can be found at https://docs.openstack.org/openstacksdk/
Examples
# Creates a new volume
- name: create a volume
hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: create 40g test volume
openstack.cloud.volume:
state: present
cloud: mordred
availability_zone: az2
size: 40
display_name: test_volume
scheduler_hints:
same_host: 243e8d3c-8f47-4a61-93d6-7215c344b0c0