amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info module – Gather information about EC2 security groups in AWS
Note
This module is part of the amazon.aws collection (version 7.6.1).
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 module,
see Requirements for details.
To use it in a playbook, specify: amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info
.
New in amazon.aws 1.0.0
Synopsis
Gather information about EC2 security groups in AWS.
Aliases: ec2_group_info
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
python >= 3.6
boto3 >= 1.26.0
botocore >= 1.29.0
Parameters
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 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. Support for the |
|
The location of a CA Bundle to use when validating SSL certificates. The |
|
A dictionary to modify the botocore configuration. Parameters can be found in the AWS documentation https://botocore.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/reference/config.html#botocore.config.Config. |
|
Use a The 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 The ec2_url and s3_url aliases have been deprecated and will be removed in a release after 2024-12-01. Support for the |
|
A dict of filters to apply. Each dict item consists of a filter key and a filter value. See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeSecurityGroups.html for possible filters. Filter names and values are case sensitive. You can also use underscores (_) instead of dashes (-) in the filter keys, which will take precedence in case of conflict. Default: |
|
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 The profile option is mutually exclusive with the aws_access_key, aws_secret_key and security_token options. |
|
The AWS region to use. For global services such as IAM, Route53 and CloudFront, region is ignored. The See the Amazon AWS documentation for more information http://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html#ec2_region. The Support for the |
|
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 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. Support for the |
|
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 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. Support for the |
|
When set to Setting validate_certs=false is strongly discouraged, as an alternative, consider setting aws_ca_bundle instead. Choices:
|
Notes
Note
By default, the module will return all security groups in a region. To limit results use the appropriate filters.
Prior to release 5.0.0 this module was called
amazon.aws.ec2_group_info
. The usage did not change.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
# Note: These examples do not set authentication details, see the AWS Guide for details.
# Gather information about all security groups
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
# Gather information about all security groups in a specific VPC
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
vpc-id: vpc-12345678
# Gather information about all security groups in a specific VPC
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
vpc-id: vpc-12345678
# Gather information about a security group
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
group-name: example-1
# Gather information about a security group by id
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
group-id: sg-12345678
# Gather information about a security group with multiple filters, also mixing the use of underscores as filter keys
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
group_id: sg-12345678
vpc-id: vpc-12345678
# Gather information about various security groups
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
group-name:
- example-1
- example-2
- example-3
# Gather information about any security group with a tag key Name and value Example.
# The quotes around 'tag:name' are important because of the colon in the value
- amazon.aws.ec2_security_group_info:
filters:
"tag:Name": Example
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key |
Description |
---|---|
Security groups that match the provided filters. Each element consists of a dict with all the information related to that security group. Returned: always Sample: |
|
The description of the security group. Returned: always |
|
The ID of the security group. Returned: always |
|
The name of the security group. Returned: always |
|
The inbound rules associated with the security group. Returned: always |
|
The IP protocol name or number. Returned: always |
|
The IPv4 ranges. Returned: always |
|
The IPv4 CIDR range. Returned: always |
|
The IPv6 ranges. Returned: always |
|
The IPv6 CIDR range. Returned: always |
|
The prefix list IDs. Returned: always |
|
The ID of the prefix. Returned: always |
|
The security group and AWS account ID pairs. Returned: always |
|
The security group ID of the pair. Returned: always |
|
The user ID of the pair. Returned: always |
|
The outbound rules associated with the security group. Returned: always |
|
The IP protocol name or number. Returned: always |
|
The IPv4 ranges. Returned: always |
|
The IPv4 CIDR range. Returned: always |
|
The IPv6 ranges. Returned: always |
|
The IPv6 CIDR range. Returned: always |
|
The prefix list IDs. Returned: always |
|
The ID of the prefix. Returned: always |
|
The security group and AWS account ID pairs. Returned: always |
|
The security group ID of the pair. Returned: always |
|
The user ID of the pair. Returned: always |
|
The AWS account ID of the owner of the security group. Returned: always |
|
The tags associated with the security group. Returned: always |
|
The ID of the VPC for the security group. Returned: always |