amazon.aws.aws_account_attribute lookup – Look up AWS account attributes
Note
This lookup plugin is part of the amazon.aws collection (version 6.5.0).
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 amazon.aws
.
You need further requirements to be able to use this lookup plugin,
see Requirements for details.
To use it in a playbook, specify: amazon.aws.aws_account_attribute
.
Synopsis
Describes attributes of your AWS account. You can specify one of the listed attribute choices or omit it to see all attributes.
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the local controller node that executes this lookup.
python >= 3.6
boto3 >= 1.22.0
botocore >= 1.25.0
Keyword parameters
This describes keyword parameters of the lookup. These are the values key1=value1
, key2=value2
and so on in the following
examples: lookup('amazon.aws.aws_account_attribute', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...)
and query('amazon.aws.aws_account_attribute', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...)
Parameter |
Comments |
---|---|
AWS access key ID. See the AWS documentation for more information about access tokens https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws-sec-cred-types.html#access-keys-and-secret-access-keys. The aws_access_key and profile options are mutually exclusive. The aws_access_key_id alias was added in release 5.1.0 for consistency with the AWS botocore SDK. The ec2_access_key alias has been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Configuration:
|
|
The attribute for which to get the value(s). Choices:
|
|
URL to connect to instead of the default AWS endpoints. While this can be used to connection to other AWS-compatible services the amazon.aws and community.aws collections are only tested against AWS. The endpoint alias has been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Configuration: |
|
A named AWS profile to use for authentication. See the AWS documentation for more information about named profiles https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/userguide/cli-configure-profiles.html. The profile option is mutually exclusive with the aws_access_key, aws_secret_key and security_token options. The boto_profile alias has been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Configuration:
|
|
The AWS region to use. See the Amazon AWS documentation for more information http://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html#ec2_region. Configuration:
|
|
AWS secret access key. See the AWS documentation for more information about access tokens https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws-sec-cred-types.html#access-keys-and-secret-access-keys. The secret_key and profile options are mutually exclusive. The aws_secret_access_key alias was added in release 5.1.0 for consistency with the AWS botocore SDK. The ec2_secret_key alias has been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Configuration:
|
|
AWS STS session token for use with temporary credentials. See the AWS documentation for more information about access tokens https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws-sec-cred-types.html#access-keys-and-secret-access-keys. The security_token and profile options are mutually exclusive. Aliases aws_session_token and session_token were added in release 3.2.0, with the parameter being renamed from security_token to session_token in release 6.0.0. The security_token, aws_security_token, and access_token aliases have been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Configuration:
|
Notes
Note
Caution: For modules, environment variables and configuration files are read from the Ansible ‘host’ context and not the ‘controller’ context. As such, files may need to be explicitly copied to the ‘host’. For lookup and connection plugins, environment variables and configuration files are read from the Ansible ‘controller’ context and not the ‘host’ context.
The AWS SDK (boto3) that Ansible uses may also read defaults for credentials and other settings, such as the region, from its configuration files in the Ansible ‘host’ context (typically
~/.aws/credentials
). See https://boto3.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/guide/credentials.html for more information.
Examples
vars:
has_ec2_classic: "{{ lookup('aws_account_attribute', attribute='has-ec2-classic') }}"
# true | false
default_vpc_id: "{{ lookup('aws_account_attribute', attribute='default-vpc') }}"
# vpc-xxxxxxxx | none
account_details: "{{ lookup('aws_account_attribute', wantlist='true') }}"
# {'default-vpc': ['vpc-xxxxxxxx'], 'max-elastic-ips': ['5'], 'max-instances': ['20'],
# 'supported-platforms': ['VPC', 'EC2'], 'vpc-max-elastic-ips': ['5'], 'vpc-max-security-groups-per-interface': ['5']}
Return Value
Key |
Description |
---|---|
Returns a boolean when attribute is check_ec2_classic. Otherwise returns the value(s) of the attribute (or all attributes if one is not specified). Returned: success |