wti.remote.cpm_syslog_server_config lookup – Set network SYSLOG Server parameters in WTI OOB and PDU devices

Note

This lookup plugin is part of the wti.remote collection (version 1.0.5).

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 wti.remote.

To use it in a playbook, specify: wti.remote.cpm_syslog_server_config.

New in wti.remote 2.11.0

Synopsis

  • Set network SYSLOG Server parameters in WTI OOB and PDU devices

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

address

list / elements=any

Sets the IP Address to block message logging.

clear

integer

Removes all the IP block entries for the protocol being defined before setting the newly defined entries.

Choices:

  • 0

  • 1

cpm_password

string / required

This is the Password of the WTI device to send the module.

cpm_url

string / required

This is the URL of the WTI device to send the module.

cpm_username

string / required

This is the Username of the WTI device to send the module.

enable

integer

Activates SYSLOG listening for the specified interface and protocol.

Choices:

  • 0

  • 1

index

list / elements=any

Index of the IP block being modified.

interface

string / required

The ethernet port for the SYSLOG we are defining.

Choices:

  • "eth0"

  • "eth1"

  • "ppp0"

  • "qmimux0"

port

integer

Defines the port number used by the SYSLOG Server (1 - 65535).

protocol

integer

The protocol that the SYSLOG entry should be applied. 0 = ipv4, 1 = ipv6.

Choices:

  • 0

  • 1

secure

integer

Defines if a secure connection is used by the SYSLOG Server (TCP Transport required).

Choices:

  • 0

  • 1

transport

integer

Defines the transfer protocol type used by the SYSLOG Server. 0=UDP, 1=TCP;

Choices:

  • 0

  • 1

use_https

boolean

Designates to use an https connection or http connection.

Choices:

  • false

  • true ← (default)

use_proxy

boolean

Flag to control if the lookup will observe HTTP proxy environment variables when present.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

validate_certs

boolean

If false, SSL certificates will not be validated. This should only be used

on personally controlled sites using self-signed certificates.

Choices:

  • false

  • true ← (default)

Notes

Note

  • Use groups/cpm in module_defaults to set common options used between CPM modules.

Examples

# Sets the device SYSLOG Server Parameters
- name: Set the an SYSLOG Server Parameter for a WTI device
  cpm_iptables_config:
    cpm_url: "nonexist.wti.com"
    cpm_username: "super"
    cpm_password: "super"
    use_https: true
    validate_certs: false
    interface: "eth0"
    protocol: 0
    port: 514
    transport: 0
    secure: 0
    clear: 1

# Sets the device SYSLOG Server Parameters
- name: Set the SYSLOG Server Parameters a WTI device
  cpm_iptables_config:
    cpm_url: "nonexist.wti.com"
    cpm_username: "super"
    cpm_password: "super"
    use_https: true
    validate_certs: false
    interface: "eth0"
    protocol: 0
    port: 514
    transport: 0
    secure: 0
    clear: 1
    index:
      - 1
      - 2
    block:
      - "192.168.50.4"
      - "72.76.4.56"

Return Value

Key

Description

data

complex

The output JSON returned from the commands sent

Returned: always

syslogserver

dictionary

Current k/v pairs of interface info for the WTI device after module execution.

Returned: always

Sample: {"syslogserver": {"eth0": [{"ietf-ipv4": {"block": [{"address": "", "index": "1"}, {"address": "", "index": "2"}, {"address": "", "index": "3"}, {"address": "", "index": "4"}], "enable": 0, "port": "514", "secure": "0", "transport": "0"}, "ietf-ipv6": {"block": [{"address": "", "index": "1"}, {"address": "", "index": "2"}, {"address": "", "index": "3"}, {"address": "", "index": "4"}], "enable": 0, "port": "514", "secure": "0", "transport": "0"}}]}}

Authors

  • Western Telematic Inc. (@wtinetworkgear)

Hint

Configuration entries for each entry type have a low to high priority order. For example, a variable that is lower in the list will override a variable that is higher up.