Ansible Configuration Settings

Ansible supports several sources for configuring its behavior, including an ini file named ansible.cfg, environment variables, command-line options, playbook keywords, and variables. See Controlling how Ansible behaves: precedence rules for details on the relative precedence of each source.

The ansible-config utility allows users to see all the configuration settings available, their defaults, how to set them and where their current value comes from. See ansible-config for more information.

The configuration file

Changes can be made and used in a configuration file which will be searched for in the following order:

  • ANSIBLE_CONFIG (environment variable if set)

  • ansible.cfg (in the current directory)

  • ~/.ansible.cfg (in the home directory)

  • /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg

Ansible will process the above list and use the first file found, all others are ignored.

Note

The configuration file is one variant of an INI format. Both the hash sign (#) and semicolon (;) are allowed as comment markers when the comment starts the line. However, if the comment is inline with regular values, only the semicolon is allowed to introduce the comment. For instance:

# some basic default values...
inventory = /etc/ansible/hosts  ; This points to the file that lists your hosts

Generating a sample ansible.cfg file

You can generate a fully commented-out example ansible.cfg file, for example:

$ ansible-config init --disabled > ansible.cfg

You can also have a more complete file that includes existing plugins:

$ ansible-config init --disabled -t all > ansible.cfg

You can use these as starting points to create your own ansible.cfg file.

Avoiding security risks with ansible.cfg in the current directory

If Ansible were to load ansible.cfg from a world-writable current working directory, it would create a serious security risk. Another user could place their own config file there, designed to make Ansible run malicious code both locally and remotely, possibly with elevated privileges. For this reason, Ansible will not automatically load a config file from the current working directory if the directory is world-writable.

If you depend on using Ansible with a config file in the current working directory, the best way to avoid this problem is to restrict access to your Ansible directories to particular user(s) and/or group(s). If your Ansible directories live on a filesystem which has to emulate Unix permissions, like Vagrant or Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), you may, at first, not know how you can fix this as chmod, chown, and chgrp might not work there. In most of those cases, the correct fix is to modify the mount options of the filesystem so the files and directories are readable and writable by the users and groups running Ansible but closed to others. For more details on the correct settings, see:

If you absolutely depend on storing your Ansible config in a world-writable current working directory, you can explicitly specify the config file via the ANSIBLE_CONFIG environment variable. Please take appropriate steps to mitigate the security concerns above before doing so.

Relative paths for configuration

You can specify a relative path for many configuration options. In most of those cases the path used will be relative to the ansible.cfg file used for the current execution. If you need a path relative to your current working directory (CWD) you can use the {{CWD}} macro to specify it. We do not recommend this approach, as using your CWD as the root of relative paths can be a security risk. For example: cd /tmp; secureinfo=./newrootpassword ansible-playbook ~/safestuff/change_root_pwd.yml.

Common Options

This is a copy of the options available from our release, your local install might have extra options due to additional plugins, you can use the command line utility mentioned above (ansible-config) to browse through those.

ACTION_WARNINGS

Description:

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when received from a task action (module or action plugin). These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

action_warnings

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ACTION_WARNINGS

AGNOSTIC_BECOME_PROMPT

Description:

Display an agnostic become prompt instead of displaying a prompt containing the command line supplied become method.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

agnostic_become_prompt

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_AGNOSTIC_BECOME_PROMPT

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PATH

Description:

Specify where to look for the ansible-connection script. This location will be checked before searching $PATH. If null, ansible will start with the same directory as the ansible script.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[persistent_connection]

Key:

ansible_connection_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PATH

Deprecated in:

2.22

Deprecated detail:

This setting has no effect.

ANSIBLE_COW_ACCEPTLIST

Description:

Accept a list of cowsay templates that are ‘safe’ to use, set to an empty list if you want to enable all installed templates.

Type:

list

Default:

['bud-frogs', 'bunny', 'cheese', 'daemon', 'default', 'dragon', 'elephant-in-snake', 'elephant', 'eyes', 'hellokitty', 'kitty', 'luke-koala', 'meow', 'milk', 'moofasa', 'moose', 'ren', 'sheep', 'small', 'stegosaurus', 'stimpy', 'supermilker', 'three-eyes', 'turkey', 'turtle', 'tux', 'udder', 'vader-koala', 'vader', 'www']

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

cowsay_enabled_stencils :Version Added: 2.11

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COW_ACCEPTLIST :Version Added: 2.11

ANSIBLE_COW_PATH

Description:

Specify a custom cowsay path or swap in your cowsay implementation of choice.

Type:

string

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

cowpath

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COW_PATH

ANSIBLE_COW_SELECTION

Description:

This allows you to choose a specific cowsay stencil for the banners or use ‘random’ to cycle through them.

Default:

default

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

cow_selection

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COW_SELECTION

ANSIBLE_FORCE_COLOR

Description:

This option forces color mode even when running without a TTY or the “nocolor” setting is True.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

force_color

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_FORCE_COLOR

ANSIBLE_HOME

Description:

The default root path for Ansible config files on the controller.

Type:

path

Default:

~/.ansible

Version Added:

2.14

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

home

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_HOME

ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR

Description:

This setting allows suppressing colorizing output, which is used to give a better indication of failure and status information.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

nocolor

Environment:

ANSIBLE_NOCOWS

Description:

If you have cowsay installed but want to avoid the ‘cows’ (why????), use this.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

nocows

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NOCOWS

ANSIBLE_PIPELINING

Description:

This is a global option, each connection plugin can override either by having more specific options or not supporting pipelining at all. Pipelining, if supported by the connection plugin, reduces the number of network operations required to execute a module on the remote server, by executing many Ansible modules without actual file transfer. It can result in a very significant performance improvement when enabled. However this conflicts with privilege escalation (become). For example, when using ‘sudo:’ operations you must first disable ‘requiretty’ in /etc/sudoers on all managed hosts, which is why it is disabled by default. This setting will be disabled if ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES is enabled.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
  • Section:

    [connection]

    Key:

    pipelining

  • Section:

    [defaults]

    Key:

    pipelining

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PIPELINING

ANY_ERRORS_FATAL

Description:

Sets the default value for the any_errors_fatal keyword, if True, Task failures will be considered fatal errors.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.4

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

any_errors_fatal

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ANY_ERRORS_FATAL

BECOME_ALLOW_SAME_USER

Description:

When False``(default), Ansible will skip using become if the remote user is the same as the become user, as this is normally a redundant operation. In other words root sudo to root. If ``True, this forces Ansible to use the become plugin anyways as there are cases in which this is needed.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_allow_same_user

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_ALLOW_SAME_USER

BECOME_PASSWORD_FILE

Description:

The password file to use for the become plugin. --become-password-file. If executable, it will be run and the resulting stdout will be used as the password.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.12

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

become_password_file

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASSWORD_FILE

BECOME_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Become Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/become:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/become" }}

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

become_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_PLUGINS

CACHE_PLUGIN

Description:

Chooses which cache plugin to use, the default ‘memory’ is ephemeral.

Default:

memory

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

fact_caching

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN

CACHE_PLUGIN_CONNECTION

Description:

Defines connection or path information for the cache plugin.

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

fact_caching_connection

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_CONNECTION

CACHE_PLUGIN_PREFIX

Description:

Prefix to use for cache plugin files/tables.

Default:

ansible_facts

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

fact_caching_prefix

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_PREFIX

CACHE_PLUGIN_TIMEOUT

Description:

Expiration timeout for the cache plugin data.

Type:

integer

Default:

86400

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

fact_caching_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_TIMEOUT

CALLBACKS_ENABLED

Description:

List of enabled callbacks, not all callbacks need enabling, but many of those shipped with Ansible do as we don’t want them activated by default.

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

callbacks_enabled :Version Added: 2.11

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CALLBACKS_ENABLED :Version Added: 2.11

COLLECTIONS_ON_ANSIBLE_VERSION_MISMATCH

Description:

When a collection is loaded that does not support the running Ansible version (with the collection metadata key requires_ansible).

Default:

warning

Choices:
  • error:

    issue a ‘fatal’ error and stop the play

  • warning:

    issue a warning but continue

  • ignore:

    just continue silently

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

collections_on_ansible_version_mismatch

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_ON_ANSIBLE_VERSION_MISMATCH

COLLECTIONS_PATHS

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for collections content. Collections must be in nested subdirectories, not directly in these directories. For example, if COLLECTIONS_PATHS includes '{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/collections" }}', and you want to add my.collection to that directory, it must be saved as '{{ ANSIBLE_HOME} ~ "/collections/ansible_collections/my/collection" }}'.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/collections:/usr/share/ansible/collections" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

collections_path :Version Added: 2.10

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_PATH :Version Added: 2.10

COLLECTIONS_SCAN_SYS_PATH

Description:

A boolean to enable or disable scanning the sys.path for installed collections.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

collections_scan_sys_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_SCAN_SYS_PATH

COLOR_CHANGED

Description:

Defines the color to use on ‘Changed’ task status.

Default:

yellow

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

changed

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_CHANGED

COLOR_CONSOLE_PROMPT

Description:

Defines the default color to use for ansible-console.

Default:

white

Version Added:

2.7

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

console_prompt

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_CONSOLE_PROMPT

COLOR_DEBUG

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting debug messages.

Default:

dark gray

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

debug

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DEBUG

COLOR_DEPRECATE

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting deprecation messages.

Default:

purple

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

deprecate

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DEPRECATE

COLOR_DIFF_ADD

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing added lines in diffs.

Default:

green

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

diff_add

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_ADD

COLOR_DIFF_LINES

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing diffs.

Default:

cyan

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

diff_lines

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_LINES

COLOR_DIFF_REMOVE

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing removed lines in diffs.

Default:

red

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

diff_remove

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_REMOVE

COLOR_DOC_CONSTANT

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting a constant in the ansible-doc output.

Default:

dark gray

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

doc_constant

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_CONSTANT

COLOR_DOC_DEPRECATED

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting a deprecated value in the ansible-doc output.

Default:

magenta

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

doc_deprecated

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_DEPRECATED

COLOR_DOC_MODULE

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting a module name in the ansible-doc output.

Default:

yellow

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

doc_module

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_MODULE

COLOR_DOC_PLUGIN

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting a plugin name in the ansible-doc output.

Default:

yellow

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

doc_plugin

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_PLUGIN

COLOR_DOC_REFERENCE

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting cross-reference in the ansible-doc output.

Default:

magenta

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

doc_reference

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_REFERENCE

COLOR_ERROR

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting error messages.

Default:

red

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

error

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_ERROR

COLOR_HIGHLIGHT

Description:

Defines the color to use for highlighting.

Default:

white

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

highlight

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_HIGHLIGHT

COLOR_INCLUDED

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing ‘Included’ task status.

Default:

cyan

Version Added:

2.18

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

included

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_INCLUDED

COLOR_OK

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing ‘OK’ task status.

Default:

green

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

ok

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_OK

COLOR_SKIP

Description:

Defines the color to use when showing ‘Skipped’ task status.

Default:

cyan

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

skip

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_SKIP

COLOR_UNREACHABLE

Description:

Defines the color to use on ‘Unreachable’ status.

Default:

bright red

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

unreachable

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_UNREACHABLE

COLOR_VERBOSE

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting verbose messages. In other words, those that show with ‘-v’s.

Default:

blue

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

verbose

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_VERBOSE

COLOR_WARN

Description:

Defines the color to use when emitting warning messages.

Default:

bright purple

Ini:
Section:

[colors]

Key:

warn

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_COLOR_WARN

CONNECTION_FACTS_MODULES

Description:

Which modules to run during a play’s fact gathering stage based on connection

Type:

dict

Default:

{'asa': 'ansible.legacy.asa_facts', 'cisco.asa.asa': 'cisco.asa.asa_facts', 'eos': 'ansible.legacy.eos_facts', 'arista.eos.eos': 'arista.eos.eos_facts', 'frr': 'ansible.legacy.frr_facts', 'frr.frr.frr': 'frr.frr.frr_facts', 'ios': 'ansible.legacy.ios_facts', 'cisco.ios.ios': 'cisco.ios.ios_facts', 'iosxr': 'ansible.legacy.iosxr_facts', 'cisco.iosxr.iosxr': 'cisco.iosxr.iosxr_facts', 'junos': 'ansible.legacy.junos_facts', 'junipernetworks.junos.junos': 'junipernetworks.junos.junos_facts', 'nxos': 'ansible.legacy.nxos_facts', 'cisco.nxos.nxos': 'cisco.nxos.nxos_facts', 'vyos': 'ansible.legacy.vyos_facts', 'vyos.vyos.vyos': 'vyos.vyos.vyos_facts', 'exos': 'ansible.legacy.exos_facts', 'extreme.exos.exos': 'extreme.exos.exos_facts', 'slxos': 'ansible.legacy.slxos_facts', 'extreme.slxos.slxos': 'extreme.slxos.slxos_facts', 'voss': 'ansible.legacy.voss_facts', 'extreme.voss.voss': 'extreme.voss.voss_facts', 'ironware': 'ansible.legacy.ironware_facts', 'community.network.ironware': 'community.network.ironware_facts'}

CONNECTION_PASSWORD_FILE

Description:

The password file to use for the connection plugin. --connection-password-file.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.12

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

connection_password_file

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PASSWORD_FILE

COVERAGE_REMOTE_OUTPUT

Description:

Sets the output directory on the remote host to generate coverage reports into. Currently only used for remote coverage on PowerShell modules. This is for internal use only.

Type:

str

Version Added:

2.9

Environment:
Variable:

_ANSIBLE_COVERAGE_REMOTE_OUTPUT

Variables:
name:

_ansible_coverage_remote_output

COVERAGE_REMOTE_PATHS

Description:

A list of paths for files on the Ansible controller to run coverage for when executing on the remote host. Only files that match the path glob will have their coverage collected. Multiple path globs can be specified and are separated by :. Currently only used for remote coverage on PowerShell modules. This is for internal use only.

Type:

str

Default:

*

Version Added:

2.9

Environment:
Variable:

_ANSIBLE_COVERAGE_REMOTE_PATH_FILTER

DEFAULT_ACTION_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Action Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/action:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/action" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

action_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ACTION_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_ALLOW_UNSAFE_LOOKUPS

Description:

When enabled, this option allows lookup plugins (whether used in variables as {{lookup('foo')}} or as a loop as with_foo) to return data that is not marked ‘unsafe’. By default, such data is marked as unsafe to prevent the templating engine from evaluating any jinja2 templating language, as this could represent a security risk. This option is provided to allow for backward compatibility, however, users should first consider adding allow_unsafe=True to any lookups that may be expected to contain data that may be run through the templating engine late.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.2.3

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

allow_unsafe_lookups

DEFAULT_ASK_PASS

Description:

This controls whether an Ansible playbook should prompt for a login password. If using SSH keys for authentication, you probably do not need to change this setting.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

ask_pass

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ASK_PASS

DEFAULT_ASK_VAULT_PASS

Description:

This controls whether an Ansible playbook should prompt for a vault password.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

ask_vault_pass

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ASK_VAULT_PASS

DEFAULT_BECOME

Description:

Toggles the use of privilege escalation, allowing you to ‘become’ another user after login.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME

DEFAULT_BECOME_ASK_PASS

Description:

Toggle to prompt for privilege escalation password.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_ask_pass

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_ASK_PASS

DEFAULT_BECOME_EXE

Description:

executable to use for privilege escalation, otherwise Ansible will depend on PATH.

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_exe

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_EXE

DEFAULT_BECOME_FLAGS

Description:

Flags to pass to the privilege escalation executable.

Default:

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_flags

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_FLAGS

DEFAULT_BECOME_METHOD

Description:

Privilege escalation method to use when become is enabled.

Default:

sudo

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_method

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_METHOD

DEFAULT_BECOME_USER

Description:

The user your login/remote user ‘becomes’ when using privilege escalation, most systems will use ‘root’ when no user is specified.

Default:

root

Ini:
Section:

[privilege_escalation]

Key:

become_user

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_BECOME_USER

DEFAULT_CACHE_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Cache Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/cache:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/cache" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

cache_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_CALLBACK_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Callback Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/callback:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/callback" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

callback_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_CLICONF_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Cliconf Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/cliconf:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/cliconf" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

cliconf_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CLICONF_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_CONNECTION_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Connection Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/connection:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/connection" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

connection_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_DEBUG

Description:

Toggles debug output in Ansible. This is very verbose and can hinder multiprocessing. Debug output can also include secret information despite no_log settings being enabled, which means debug mode should not be used in production.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

debug

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DEBUG

DEFAULT_EXECUTABLE

Description:

This indicates the command to use to spawn a shell under, which is required for Ansible’s execution needs on a target. Users may need to change this in rare instances when shell usage is constrained, but in most cases, it may be left as is.

Default:

/bin/sh

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

executable

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_EXECUTABLE

DEFAULT_FILTER_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Jinja2 Filter Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/filter:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/filter" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

filter_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_FILTER_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_FORCE_HANDLERS

Description:

This option controls if notified handlers run on a host even if a failure occurs on that host. When false, the handlers will not run if a failure has occurred on a host. This can also be set per play or on the command line. See Handlers and Failure for more details.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

1.9.1

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

force_handlers

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_FORCE_HANDLERS

DEFAULT_FORKS

Description:

Maximum number of forks Ansible will use to execute tasks on target hosts.

Type:

integer

Default:

5

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

forks

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_FORKS

DEFAULT_GATHERING

Description:

This setting controls the default policy of fact gathering (facts discovered about remote systems). This option can be useful for those wishing to save fact gathering time. Both ‘smart’ and ‘explicit’ will use the cache plugin.

Default:

implicit

Choices:
  • implicit:

    the cache plugin will be ignored and facts will be gathered per play unless ‘gather_facts: False’ is set.

  • explicit:

    facts will not be gathered unless directly requested in the play.

  • smart:

    each new host that has no facts discovered will be scanned, but if the same host is addressed in multiple plays it will not be contacted again in the run.

Version Added:

1.6

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

gathering

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GATHERING

DEFAULT_HASH_BEHAVIOUR

Description:

This setting controls how duplicate definitions of dictionary variables (aka hash, map, associative array) are handled in Ansible. This does not affect variables whose values are scalars (integers, strings) or arrays. WARNING, changing this setting is not recommended as this is fragile and makes your content (plays, roles, collections) nonportable, leading to continual confusion and misuse. Don’t change this setting unless you think you have an absolute need for it. We recommend avoiding reusing variable names and relying on the combine filter and vars and varnames lookups to create merged versions of the individual variables. In our experience, this is rarely needed and is a sign that too much complexity has been introduced into the data structures and plays. For some uses you can also look into custom vars_plugins to merge on input, even substituting the default host_group_vars that is in charge of parsing the host_vars/ and group_vars/ directories. Most users of this setting are only interested in inventory scope, but the setting itself affects all sources and makes debugging even harder. All playbooks and roles in the official examples repos assume the default for this setting. Changing the setting to merge applies across variable sources, but many sources will internally still overwrite the variables. For example include_vars will dedupe variables internally before updating Ansible, with ‘last defined’ overwriting previous definitions in same file. The Ansible project recommends you avoid ``merge`` for new projects. It is the intention of the Ansible developers to eventually deprecate and remove this setting, but it is being kept as some users do heavily rely on it. New projects should avoid ‘merge’.

Type:

string

Default:

replace

Choices:
  • replace:

    Any variable that is defined more than once is overwritten using the order from variable precedence rules (highest wins).

  • merge:

    Any dictionary variable will be recursively merged with new definitions across the different variable definition sources.

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

hash_behaviour

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_HASH_BEHAVIOUR

DEFAULT_HOST_LIST

Description:

Comma-separated list of Ansible inventory sources

Type:

pathlist

Default:

/etc/ansible/hosts

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

inventory

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY

DEFAULT_HTTPAPI_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for HttpApi Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/httpapi:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/httpapi" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

httpapi_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_HTTPAPI_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_INTERNAL_POLL_INTERVAL

Description:

This sets the interval (in seconds) of Ansible internal processes polling each other. Lower values improve performance with large playbooks at the expense of extra CPU load. Higher values are more suitable for Ansible usage in automation scenarios when UI responsiveness is not required but CPU usage might be a concern. The default corresponds to the value hardcoded in Ansible <= 2.1

Type:

float

Default:

0.001

Version Added:

2.2

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

internal_poll_interval

DEFAULT_INVENTORY_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Inventory Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/inventory:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/inventory" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

inventory_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_JINJA2_EXTENSIONS

Description:

This is a developer-specific feature that allows enabling additional Jinja2 extensions. See the Jinja2 documentation for details. If you do not know what these do, you probably don’t need to change this setting :)

Default:

[]

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

jinja2_extensions

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_JINJA2_EXTENSIONS

DEFAULT_JINJA2_NATIVE

Description:

This option preserves variable types during template operations.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.7

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

jinja2_native

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_JINJA2_NATIVE

DEFAULT_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES

Description:

Enables/disables the cleaning up of the temporary files Ansible used to execute the tasks on the remote. If this option is enabled it will disable ANSIBLE_PIPELINING.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

keep_remote_files

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES

DEFAULT_LIBVIRT_LXC_NOSECLABEL

Description:

This setting causes libvirt to connect to LXC containers by passing --noseclabel parameter to virsh command. This is necessary when running on systems which do not have SELinux.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.1

Ini:
Section:

[selinux]

Key:

libvirt_lxc_noseclabel

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LIBVIRT_LXC_NOSECLABEL

Deprecated in:

2.22

Deprecated detail:

This option was moved to the plugin itself

Deprecated alternatives:

Use the option from the plugin itself.

DEFAULT_LOAD_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

Description:

Controls whether callback plugins are loaded when running /usr/bin/ansible. This may be used to log activity from the command line, send notifications, and so on. Callback plugins are always loaded for ansible-playbook.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

1.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

bin_ansible_callbacks

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOAD_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_LOCAL_TMP

Description:

Temporary directory for Ansible to use on the controller.

Type:

tmppath

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/tmp" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

local_tmp

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOCAL_TEMP

DEFAULT_LOG_FILTER

Description:

List of logger names to filter out of the log file.

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

log_filter

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOG_FILTER

DEFAULT_LOG_PATH

Description:

File to which Ansible will log on the controller. When not set the logging is disabled.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

log_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOG_PATH

DEFAULT_LOOKUP_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Lookup Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/lookup:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/lookup" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

lookup_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOOKUP_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_MANAGED_STR

Description:

Sets the macro for the ‘ansible_managed’ variable available for ansible_collections.ansible.builtin.template_module and ansible_collections.ansible.windows.win_template_module. This is only relevant to those two modules.

Default:

Ansible managed

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

ansible_managed

DEFAULT_MODULE_ARGS

Description:

This sets the default arguments to pass to the ansible adhoc binary if no -a is specified.

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_args

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_MODULE_ARGS

DEFAULT_MODULE_COMPRESSION

Description:

Compression scheme to use when transferring Python modules to the target.

Default:

ZIP_DEFLATED

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_compression

Variables:
name:

ansible_module_compression

DEFAULT_MODULE_NAME

Description:

Module to use with the ansible AdHoc command, if none is specified via -m.

Default:

command

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_name

DEFAULT_MODULE_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Modules.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/modules:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/modules" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

library

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LIBRARY

DEFAULT_MODULE_UTILS_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Module utils files, which are shared by modules.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/module_utils:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/module_utils" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_utils

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_MODULE_UTILS

DEFAULT_NETCONF_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Netconf Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/netconf:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/netconf" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

netconf_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NETCONF_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_NO_LOG

Description:

Toggle Ansible’s display and logging of task details, mainly used to avoid security disclosures.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

no_log

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NO_LOG

DEFAULT_NO_TARGET_SYSLOG

Description:

Toggle Ansible logging to syslog on the target when it executes tasks. On Windows hosts, this will disable a newer style PowerShell modules from writing to the event log.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

no_target_syslog

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NO_TARGET_SYSLOG

Variables:
name:

ansible_no_target_syslog :Version Added: 2.10

DEFAULT_NULL_REPRESENTATION

Description:

What templating should return as a ‘null’ value. When not set it will let Jinja2 decide.

Type:

raw

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

null_representation

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NULL_REPRESENTATION

DEFAULT_POLL_INTERVAL

Description:

For asynchronous tasks in Ansible (covered in Asynchronous Actions and Polling), this is how often to check back on the status of those tasks when an explicit poll interval is not supplied. The default is a reasonably moderate 15 seconds which is a tradeoff between checking in frequently and providing a quick turnaround when something may have completed.

Type:

integer

Default:

15

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

poll_interval

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_POLL_INTERVAL

DEFAULT_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE

Description:

Option for connections using a certificate or key file to authenticate, rather than an agent or passwords, you can set the default value here to avoid re-specifying --private-key with every invocation.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

private_key_file

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE

DEFAULT_PRIVATE_ROLE_VARS

Description:

By default, imported roles publish their variables to the play and other roles, this setting can avoid that. This was introduced as a way to reset role variables to default values if a role is used more than once in a playbook. Starting in version ‘2.17’ M(ansible.builtin.include_roles) and M(ansible.builtin.import_roles) can individually override this via the C(public) parameter. Included roles only make their variables public at execution, unlike imported roles which happen at playbook compile time.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

private_role_vars

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PRIVATE_ROLE_VARS

DEFAULT_REMOTE_PORT

Description:

Port to use in remote connections, when blank it will use the connection plugin default.

Type:

integer

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

remote_port

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_REMOTE_PORT

DEFAULT_REMOTE_USER

Description:

Sets the login user for the target machines When blank it uses the connection plugin’s default, normally the user currently executing Ansible.

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

remote_user

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_REMOTE_USER

DEFAULT_ROLES_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Roles.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/roles:/usr/share/ansible/roles:/etc/ansible/roles" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

roles_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH

DEFAULT_SELINUX_SPECIAL_FS

Description:

Some filesystems do not support safe operations and/or return inconsistent errors, this setting makes Ansible ‘tolerate’ those in the list without causing fatal errors. Data corruption may occur and writes are not always verified when a filesystem is in the list.

Type:

list

Default:

fuse, nfs, vboxsf, ramfs, 9p, vfat

Ini:
Section:

[selinux]

Key:

special_context_filesystems

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SELINUX_SPECIAL_FS :Version Added: 2.9

DEFAULT_STDOUT_CALLBACK

Description:

Set the main callback used to display Ansible output. You can only have one at a time. You can have many other callbacks, but just one can be in charge of stdout. See Callback plugins for a list of available options.

Default:

default

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

stdout_callback

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_STDOUT_CALLBACK

DEFAULT_STRATEGY

Description:

Set the default strategy used for plays.

Default:

linear

Version Added:

2.3

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

strategy

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_STRATEGY

DEFAULT_STRATEGY_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Strategy Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/strategy:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/strategy" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

strategy_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_STRATEGY_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_SU

Description:

Toggle the use of “su” for tasks.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

su

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SU

DEFAULT_SYSLOG_FACILITY

Description:

Syslog facility to use when Ansible logs to the remote target.

Default:

LOG_USER

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

syslog_facility

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SYSLOG_FACILITY

DEFAULT_TERMINAL_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Terminal Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/terminal:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/terminal" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

terminal_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TERMINAL_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_TEST_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Jinja2 Test Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/test:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/test" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

test_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TEST_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_TIMEOUT

Description:

This is the default timeout for connection plugins to use.

Type:

integer

Default:

10

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TIMEOUT

DEFAULT_TRANSPORT

Description:

Can be any connection plugin available to your ansible installation. There is also a (DEPRECATED) special ‘smart’ option, that will toggle between ‘ssh’ and ‘paramiko’ depending on controller OS and ssh versions.

Default:

ssh

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

transport

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TRANSPORT

DEFAULT_UNDEFINED_VAR_BEHAVIOR

Description:

When True, this causes ansible templating to fail steps that reference variable names that are likely typoed. Otherwise, any ‘{{ template_expression }}’ that contains undefined variables will be rendered in a template or ansible action line exactly as written.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

1.3

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

error_on_undefined_vars

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ERROR_ON_UNDEFINED_VARS

DEFAULT_VARS_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Vars Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/vars:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/vars" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vars_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VARS_PLUGINS

DEFAULT_VAULT_ENCRYPT_IDENTITY

Description:

The vault_id to use for encrypting by default. If multiple vault_ids are provided, this specifies which to use for encryption. The --encrypt-vault-id CLI option overrides the configured value.

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_encrypt_identity

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ENCRYPT_IDENTITY

DEFAULT_VAULT_ID_MATCH

Description:

If true, decrypting vaults with a vault id will only try the password from the matching vault-id.

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_id_match

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ID_MATCH

DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY

Description:

The label to use for the default vault id label in cases where a vault id label is not provided.

Default:

default

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_identity

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_IDENTITY

DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY_LIST

Description:

A list of vault-ids to use by default. Equivalent to multiple --vault-id args. Vault-ids are tried in order.

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_identity_list

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_IDENTITY_LIST

DEFAULT_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE

Description:

The vault password file to use. Equivalent to --vault-password-file or --vault-id. If executable, it will be run and the resulting stdout will be used as the password.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_password_file

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE

DEFAULT_VERBOSITY

Description:

Sets the default verbosity, equivalent to the number of -v passed in the command line.

Type:

integer

Default:

0

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

verbosity

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VERBOSITY

DEPRECATION_WARNINGS

Description:

Toggle to control the showing of deprecation warnings

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

deprecation_warnings

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS

DEVEL_WARNING

Description:

Toggle to control showing warnings related to running devel.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

devel_warning

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DEVEL_WARNING

DIFF_ALWAYS

Description:

Configuration toggle to tell modules to show differences when in ‘changed’ status, equivalent to --diff.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[diff]

Key:

always

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DIFF_ALWAYS

DIFF_CONTEXT

Description:

Number of lines of context to show when displaying the differences between files.

Type:

integer

Default:

3

Ini:
Section:

[diff]

Key:

context

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DIFF_CONTEXT

DISPLAY_ARGS_TO_STDOUT

Description:

Normally ansible-playbook will print a header for each task that is run. These headers will contain the name: field from the task if you specified one. If you didn’t then ansible-playbook uses the task’s action to help you tell which task is presently running. Sometimes you run many of the same action and so you want more information about the task to differentiate it from others of the same action. If you set this variable to True in the config then ansible-playbook will also include the task’s arguments in the header. This setting defaults to False because there is a chance that you have sensitive values in your parameters and you do not want those to be printed. If you set this to True you should be sure that you have secured your environment’s stdout (no one can shoulder surf your screen and you aren’t saving stdout to an insecure file) or made sure that all of your playbooks explicitly added the no_log: True parameter to tasks that have sensitive values How do I keep secret data in my playbook? for more information.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.1

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

display_args_to_stdout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DISPLAY_ARGS_TO_STDOUT

DISPLAY_SKIPPED_HOSTS

Description:

Toggle to control displaying skipped task/host entries in a task in the default callback.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

display_skipped_hosts

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DISPLAY_SKIPPED_HOSTS

DOC_FRAGMENT_PLUGIN_PATH

Description:

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Documentation Fragments Plugins.

Type:

pathspec

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/plugins/doc_fragments:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/doc_fragments" }}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

doc_fragment_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DOC_FRAGMENT_PLUGINS

DOCSITE_ROOT_URL

Description:

Root docsite URL used to generate docs URLs in warning/error text; must be an absolute URL with a valid scheme and trailing slash.

Default:

https://docs.ansible.com/ansible-core/

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

docsite_root_url

DUPLICATE_YAML_DICT_KEY

Description:

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when a duplicate dict key is encountered in YAML. These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

Type:

string

Default:

warn

Choices:
  • error:

    issue a ‘fatal’ error and stop the play

  • warn:

    issue a warning but continue

  • ignore:

    just continue silently

Version Added:

2.9

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

duplicate_dict_key

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_DUPLICATE_YAML_DICT_KEY

EDITOR

Description:

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return a file within an editor, this chooses the application to use.

Default:

vi

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

editor :Version Added: 2.15

Environment:

ENABLE_TASK_DEBUGGER

Description:

Whether or not to enable the task debugger, this previously was done as a strategy plugin. Now all strategy plugins can inherit this behavior. The debugger defaults to activating when a task is failed on unreachable. Use the debugger keyword for more flexibility.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

enable_task_debugger

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ENABLE_TASK_DEBUGGER

ERROR_ON_MISSING_HANDLER

Description:

Toggle to allow missing handlers to become a warning instead of an error when notifying.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

error_on_missing_handler

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_ERROR_ON_MISSING_HANDLER

FACTS_MODULES

Description:

Which modules to run during a play’s fact gathering stage, using the default of ‘smart’ will try to figure it out based on connection type. If adding your own modules but you still want to use the default Ansible facts, you will want to include ‘setup’ or corresponding network module to the list (if you add ‘smart’, Ansible will also figure it out). This does not affect explicit calls to the ‘setup’ module, but does always affect the ‘gather_facts’ action (implicit or explicit).

Type:

list

Default:

['smart']

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

facts_modules

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_FACTS_MODULES

Variables:
name:

ansible_facts_modules

GALAXY_CACHE_DIR

Description:

The directory that stores cached responses from a Galaxy server. This is only used by the ansible-galaxy collection install and download commands. Cache files inside this dir will be ignored if they are world writable.

Type:

path

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/galaxy_cache" }}

Version Added:

2.11

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

cache_dir

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_CACHE_DIR

GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR

Description:

The multiplier used to increase the GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL when checking the collection import status.

Type:

float

Default:

1.5

Version Added:

2.18

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR

GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL

Description:

The initial interval in seconds for polling the import status of a collection. This interval increases exponentially based on the GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR, with a maximum delay of 30 seconds.

Type:

float

Default:

2.0

Version Added:

2.18

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL

GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON

Description:

Collection skeleton directory to use as a template for the init action in ansible-galaxy collection, same as --collection-skeleton.

Type:

path

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

collection_skeleton

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON

GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON_IGNORE

Description:

patterns of files to ignore inside a Galaxy collection skeleton directory.

Type:

list

Default:

['^.git$', '^.*/.git_keep$']

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

collection_skeleton_ignore

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON_IGNORE

GALAXY_COLLECTIONS_PATH_WARNING

Description:

whether ansible-galaxy collection install should warn about --collections-path missing from configured COLLECTIONS_PATHS.

Type:

bool

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.16

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

collections_path_warning

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTIONS_PATH_WARNING

GALAXY_DISABLE_GPG_VERIFY

Description:

Disable GPG signature verification during collection installation.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.13

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

disable_gpg_verify

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_DISABLE_GPG_VERIFY

GALAXY_DISPLAY_PROGRESS

Description:

Some steps in ansible-galaxy display a progress wheel which can cause issues on certain displays or when outputting the stdout to a file. This config option controls whether the display wheel is shown or not. The default is to show the display wheel if stdout has a tty.

Type:

bool

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.10

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

display_progress

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_DISPLAY_PROGRESS

GALAXY_GPG_KEYRING

Description:

Configure the keyring used for GPG signature verification during collection installation and verification.

Type:

path

Version Added:

2.13

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

gpg_keyring

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_GPG_KEYRING

GALAXY_IGNORE_CERTS

Description:

If set to yes, ansible-galaxy will not validate TLS certificates. This can be useful for testing against a server with a self-signed certificate.

Type:

boolean

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

ignore_certs

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_IGNORE

GALAXY_IGNORE_INVALID_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CODES

Description:

A list of GPG status codes to ignore during GPG signature verification. See L(https://github.com/gpg/gnupg/blob/master/doc/DETAILS#general-status-codes) for status code descriptions. If fewer signatures successfully verify the collection than GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT, signature verification will fail even if all error codes are ignored.

Type:

list

Choices:
  • EXPSIG

  • EXPKEYSIG

  • REVKEYSIG

  • BADSIG

  • ERRSIG

  • NO_PUBKEY

  • MISSING_PASSPHRASE

  • BAD_PASSPHRASE

  • NODATA

  • UNEXPECTED

  • ERROR

  • FAILURE

  • BADARMOR

  • KEYEXPIRED

  • KEYREVOKED

  • NO_SECKEY

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

ignore_signature_status_codes

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_IGNORE_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CODES

GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT

Description:

The number of signatures that must be successful during GPG signature verification while installing or verifying collections. This should be a positive integer or all to indicate all signatures must successfully validate the collection. Prepend + to the value to fail if no valid signatures are found for the collection.

Type:

str

Default:

1

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

required_valid_signature_count

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT

GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON

Description:

Role skeleton directory to use as a template for the init action in ansible-galaxy/ansible-galaxy role, same as --role-skeleton.

Type:

path

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

role_skeleton

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON

GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON_IGNORE

Description:

patterns of files to ignore inside a Galaxy role or collection skeleton directory.

Type:

list

Default:

['^.git$', '^.*/.git_keep$']

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

role_skeleton_ignore

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON_IGNORE

GALAXY_SERVER

Description:

URL to prepend when roles don’t specify the full URI, assume they are referencing this server as the source.

Default:

https://galaxy.ansible.com

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

server

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER

GALAXY_SERVER_LIST

Description:

A list of Galaxy servers to use when installing a collection. The value corresponds to the config ini header [galaxy_server.{{item}}] which defines the server details. See Configuring the ansible-galaxy client for more details on how to define a Galaxy server. The order of servers in this list is used as the order in which a collection is resolved. Setting this config option will ignore the GALAXY_SERVER config option.

Type:

list

Version Added:

2.9

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

server_list

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER_LIST

GALAXY_SERVER_TIMEOUT

Description:

The default timeout for Galaxy API calls. Galaxy servers that don’t configure a specific timeout will fall back to this value.

Type:

int

Default:

60

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

server_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER_TIMEOUT

GALAXY_TOKEN_PATH

Description:

Local path to galaxy access token file

Type:

path

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/galaxy_token" }}

Version Added:

2.9

Ini:
Section:

[galaxy]

Key:

token_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_TOKEN_PATH

HOST_KEY_CHECKING

Description:

Set this to “False” if you want to avoid host key checking by the underlying connection plugin Ansible uses to connect to the host. Please read the documentation of the specific connection plugin used for details.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

host_key_checking

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING

HOST_PATTERN_MISMATCH

Description:

This setting changes the behaviour of mismatched host patterns, it allows you to force a fatal error, a warning or just ignore it.

Default:

warning

Choices:
  • error:

    issue a ‘fatal’ error and stop the play

  • warning:

    issue a warning but continue

  • ignore:

    just continue silently

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

host_pattern_mismatch

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_HOST_PATTERN_MISMATCH

INJECT_FACTS_AS_VARS

Description:

Facts are available inside the ansible_facts variable, this setting also pushes them as their own vars in the main namespace. Unlike inside the ansible_facts dictionary where the prefix ansible_ is removed from fact names, these will have the exact names that are returned by the module.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

inject_facts_as_vars

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INJECT_FACT_VARS

INTERPRETER_PYTHON

Description:

Path to the Python interpreter to be used for module execution on remote targets, or an automatic discovery mode. Supported discovery modes are auto (the default), auto_silent, auto_legacy, and auto_legacy_silent. All discovery modes employ a lookup table to use the included system Python (on distributions known to include one), falling back to a fixed ordered list of well-known Python interpreter locations if a platform-specific default is not available. The fallback behavior will issue a warning that the interpreter should be set explicitly (since interpreters installed later may change which one is used). This warning behavior can be disabled by setting auto_silent or auto_legacy_silent. The value of auto_legacy provides all the same behavior, but for backward-compatibility with older Ansible releases that always defaulted to /usr/bin/python, will use that interpreter if present.

Default:

auto

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

interpreter_python

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PYTHON_INTERPRETER

Variables:
name:

ansible_python_interpreter

INTERPRETER_PYTHON_FALLBACK

Type:

list

Default:

['python3.13', 'python3.12', 'python3.11', 'python3.10', 'python3.9', 'python3.8', '/usr/bin/python3', 'python3']

Version Added:

2.8

Variables:
name:

ansible_interpreter_python_fallback

INVALID_TASK_ATTRIBUTE_FAILED

Description:

If ‘false’, invalid attributes for a task will result in warnings instead of errors.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.7

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

invalid_task_attribute_failed

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVALID_TASK_ATTRIBUTE_FAILED

INVENTORY_ANY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

Description:

If ‘true’, it is a fatal error when any given inventory source cannot be successfully parsed by any available inventory plugin; otherwise, this situation only attracts a warning.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.7

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

any_unparsed_is_failed

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_ANY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

INVENTORY_ENABLED

Description:

List of enabled inventory plugins, it also determines the order in which they are used.

Type:

list

Default:

['host_list', 'script', 'auto', 'yaml', 'ini', 'toml']

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

enable_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_ENABLED

INVENTORY_EXPORT

Description:

Controls if ansible-inventory will accurately reflect Ansible’s view into inventory or its optimized for exporting.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

export

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_EXPORT

INVENTORY_IGNORE_EXTS

Description:

List of extensions to ignore when using a directory as an inventory source.

Type:

list

Default:

{{(REJECT_EXTS + ('.orig', '.cfg', '.retry'))}}

Ini:
  • Section:

    [defaults]

    Key:

    inventory_ignore_extensions

  • Section:

    [inventory]

    Key:

    ignore_extensions

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_IGNORE

INVENTORY_IGNORE_PATTERNS

Description:

List of patterns to ignore when using a directory as an inventory source.

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Ini:
  • Section:

    [defaults]

    Key:

    inventory_ignore_patterns

  • Section:

    [inventory]

    Key:

    ignore_patterns

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_IGNORE_REGEX

INVENTORY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

Description:

If ‘true’ it is a fatal error if every single potential inventory source fails to parse, otherwise, this situation will only attract a warning.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

unparsed_is_failed

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_UNPARSED_FAILED

INVENTORY_UNPARSED_WARNING

Description:

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when no inventory was loaded and notes that it will use an implicit localhost-only inventory. These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.14

Ini:
Section:

[inventory]

Key:

inventory_unparsed_warning

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_UNPARSED_WARNING

LOCALHOST_WARNING

Description:

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when there are no hosts in the inventory. These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.6

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

localhost_warning

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOCALHOST_WARNING

LOG_VERBOSITY

Description:

This will set log verbosity if higher than the normal display verbosity, otherwise it will match that.

Type:

int

Version Added:

2.17

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

log_verbosity

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_LOG_VERBOSITY

MAX_FILE_SIZE_FOR_DIFF

Description:

Maximum size of files to be considered for diff display.

Type:

int

Default:

104448

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

max_diff_size

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_MAX_DIFF_SIZE

MODULE_IGNORE_EXTS

Description:

List of extensions to ignore when looking for modules to load. This is for rejecting script and binary module fallback extensions.

Type:

list

Default:

{{(REJECT_EXTS + ('.yaml', '.yml', '.ini'))}}

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_ignore_exts

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_MODULE_IGNORE_EXTS

MODULE_STRICT_UTF8_RESPONSE

Description:

Enables whether module responses are evaluated for containing non-UTF-8 data. Disabling this may result in unexpected behavior. Only ansible-core should evaluate this configuration.

Type:

bool

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

module_strict_utf8_response

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_MODULE_STRICT_UTF8_RESPONSE

NETCONF_SSH_CONFIG

Description:

This variable is used to enable bastion/jump host with netconf connection. If set to True the bastion/jump host ssh settings should be present in ~/.ssh/config file, alternatively it can be set to custom ssh configuration file path to read the bastion/jump host settings.

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[netconf_connection]

Key:

ssh_config

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NETCONF_SSH_CONFIG

NETWORK_GROUP_MODULES

Type:

list

Default:

['eos', 'nxos', 'ios', 'iosxr', 'junos', 'enos', 'ce', 'vyos', 'sros', 'dellos9', 'dellos10', 'dellos6', 'asa', 'aruba', 'aireos', 'bigip', 'ironware', 'onyx', 'netconf', 'exos', 'voss', 'slxos']

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

network_group_modules

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_NETWORK_GROUP_MODULES

OLD_PLUGIN_CACHE_CLEARING

Description:

Previously Ansible would only clear some of the plugin loading caches when loading new roles, this led to some behaviors in which a plugin loaded in previous plays would be unexpectedly ‘sticky’. This setting allows the user to return to that behavior.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

old_plugin_cache_clear

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_OLD_PLUGIN_CACHE_CLEAR

PAGER

Description:

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return output in a pageable fashion, this chooses the application to use.

Default:

less

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

pager :Version Added: 2.15

Environment:

PARAMIKO_HOST_KEY_AUTO_ADD

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[paramiko_connection]

Key:

host_key_auto_add

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PARAMIKO_HOST_KEY_AUTO_ADD

Deprecated in:

2.20

Deprecated detail:

This option was moved to the plugin itself

Deprecated alternatives:

Use the option from the plugin itself.

PARAMIKO_LOOK_FOR_KEYS

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[paramiko_connection]

Key:

look_for_keys

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PARAMIKO_LOOK_FOR_KEYS

Deprecated in:

2.20

Deprecated detail:

This option was moved to the plugin itself

Deprecated alternatives:

Use the option from the plugin itself.

PERSISTENT_COMMAND_TIMEOUT

Description:

This controls the amount of time to wait for a response from a remote device before timing out a persistent connection.

Type:

int

Default:

30

Ini:
Section:

[persistent_connection]

Key:

command_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_COMMAND_TIMEOUT

PERSISTENT_CONNECT_RETRY_TIMEOUT

Description:

This controls the retry timeout for persistent connection to connect to the local domain socket.

Type:

integer

Default:

15

Ini:
Section:

[persistent_connection]

Key:

connect_retry_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONNECT_RETRY_TIMEOUT

PERSISTENT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT

Description:

This controls how long the persistent connection will remain idle before it is destroyed.

Type:

integer

Default:

30

Ini:
Section:

[persistent_connection]

Key:

connect_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT

PERSISTENT_CONTROL_PATH_DIR

Description:

Path to the socket to be used by the connection persistence system.

Type:

path

Default:

{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/pc" }}

Ini:
Section:

[persistent_connection]

Key:

control_path_dir

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONTROL_PATH_DIR

PLAYBOOK_DIR

Description:

A number of non-playbook CLIs have a --playbook-dir argument; this sets the default value for it.

Type:

path

Version Added:

2.9

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

playbook_dir

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PLAYBOOK_DIR

PLAYBOOK_VARS_ROOT

Description:

This sets which playbook dirs will be used as a root to process vars plugins, which includes finding host_vars/group_vars.

Default:

top

Choices:
  • top:

    follows the traditional behavior of using the top playbook in the chain to find the root directory.

  • bottom:

    follows the 2.4.0 behavior of using the current playbook to find the root directory.

  • all:

    examines from the first parent to the current playbook.

Version Added:

2.4.1

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

playbook_vars_root

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PLAYBOOK_VARS_ROOT

PLUGIN_FILTERS_CFG

Description:

A path to configuration for filtering which plugins installed on the system are allowed to be used. See Rejecting modules for details of the filter file’s format. The default is /etc/ansible/plugin_filters.yml

Type:

path

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.5.0

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

plugin_filters_cfg

PYTHON_MODULE_RLIMIT_NOFILE

Description:

Attempts to set RLIMIT_NOFILE soft limit to the specified value when executing Python modules (can speed up subprocess usage on Python 2.x. See https://bugs.python.org/issue11284). The value will be limited by the existing hard limit. Default value of 0 does not attempt to adjust existing system-defined limits.

Default:

0

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

python_module_rlimit_nofile

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PYTHON_MODULE_RLIMIT_NOFILE

Variables:
name:

ansible_python_module_rlimit_nofile

RETRY_FILES_ENABLED

Description:

This controls whether a failed Ansible playbook should create a .retry file.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

retry_files_enabled

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_RETRY_FILES_ENABLED

RETRY_FILES_SAVE_PATH

Description:

This sets the path in which Ansible will save .retry files when a playbook fails and retry files are enabled. This file will be overwritten after each run with the list of failed hosts from all plays.

Type:

path

Default:

None

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

retry_files_save_path

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_RETRY_FILES_SAVE_PATH

RUN_VARS_PLUGINS

Description:

This setting can be used to optimize vars_plugin usage depending on the user’s inventory size and play selection.

Type:

str

Default:

demand

Choices:
  • demand:

    will run vars_plugins relative to inventory sources anytime vars are ‘demanded’ by tasks.

  • start:

    will run vars_plugins relative to inventory sources after importing that inventory source.

Version Added:

2.10

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

run_vars_plugins

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_RUN_VARS_PLUGINS

SHOW_CUSTOM_STATS

Description:

This adds the custom stats set via the set_stats plugin to the default output.

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

show_custom_stats

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SHOW_CUSTOM_STATS

STRING_TYPE_FILTERS

Description:

This list of filters avoids ‘type conversion’ when templating variables. Useful when you want to avoid conversion into lists or dictionaries for JSON strings, for example.

Type:

list

Default:

['string', 'to_json', 'to_nice_json', 'to_yaml', 'to_nice_yaml', 'ppretty', 'json']

Ini:
Section:

[jinja2]

Key:

dont_type_filters

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_STRING_TYPE_FILTERS

SYSTEM_WARNINGS

Description:

Allows disabling of warnings related to potential issues on the system running Ansible itself (not on the managed hosts). These may include warnings about third-party packages or other conditions that should be resolved if possible.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

system_warnings

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SYSTEM_WARNINGS

TAGS_RUN

Description:

default list of tags to run in your plays, Skip Tags has precedence.

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[tags]

Key:

run

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_RUN_TAGS

TAGS_SKIP

Description:

default list of tags to skip in your plays, has precedence over Run Tags

Type:

list

Default:

[]

Version Added:

2.5

Ini:
Section:

[tags]

Key:

skip

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_SKIP_TAGS

TARGET_LOG_INFO

Description:

A string to insert into target logging for tracking purposes

Version Added:

2.17

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

target_log_info

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TARGET_LOG_INFO

Variables:
name:

ansible_target_log_info

TASK_DEBUGGER_IGNORE_ERRORS

Description:

This option defines whether the task debugger will be invoked on a failed task when ignore_errors=True is specified. True specifies that the debugger will honor ignore_errors, and False will not honor ignore_errors.

Type:

boolean

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.7

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

task_debugger_ignore_errors

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TASK_DEBUGGER_IGNORE_ERRORS

TASK_TIMEOUT

Description:

Set the maximum time (in seconds) for a task action to execute in. Timeout runs independently from templating or looping. It applies per each attempt of executing the task’s action and remains unchanged by the total time spent on a task. When the action execution exceeds the timeout, Ansible interrupts the process. This is registered as a failure due to outside circumstances, not a task failure, to receive appropriate response and recovery process. If set to 0 (the default) there is no timeout.

Type:

integer

Default:

0

Version Added:

2.10

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

task_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TASK_TIMEOUT

TRANSFORM_INVALID_GROUP_CHARS

Description:

Make ansible transform invalid characters in group names supplied by inventory sources.

Type:

string

Default:

never

Choices:
  • always:

    it will replace any invalid characters with ‘_’ (underscore) and warn the user

  • never:

    it will allow for the group name but warn about the issue

  • ignore:

    it does the same as ‘never’, without issuing a warning

  • silently:

    it does the same as ‘always’, without issuing a warning

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

force_valid_group_names

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_TRANSFORM_INVALID_GROUP_CHARS

USE_PERSISTENT_CONNECTIONS

Description:

Toggles the use of persistence for connections.

Type:

boolean

Default:

False

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

use_persistent_connections

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_USE_PERSISTENT_CONNECTIONS

VALIDATE_ACTION_GROUP_METADATA

Description:

A toggle to disable validating a collection’s ‘metadata’ entry for a module_defaults action group. Metadata containing unexpected fields or value types will produce a warning when this is True.

Type:

bool

Default:

True

Version Added:

2.12

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

validate_action_group_metadata

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VALIDATE_ACTION_GROUP_METADATA

VARIABLE_PLUGINS_ENABLED

Description:

Accept list for variable plugins that require it.

Type:

list

Default:

['host_group_vars']

Version Added:

2.10

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vars_plugins_enabled

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VARS_ENABLED

VARIABLE_PRECEDENCE

Description:

Allows to change the group variable precedence merge order.

Type:

list

Default:

['all_inventory', 'groups_inventory', 'all_plugins_inventory', 'all_plugins_play', 'groups_plugins_inventory', 'groups_plugins_play']

Version Added:

2.4

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

precedence

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_PRECEDENCE

VAULT_ENCRYPT_SALT

Description:

The salt to use for the vault encryption. If it is not provided, a random salt will be used.

Default:

None

Version Added:

2.15

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

vault_encrypt_salt

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ENCRYPT_SALT

VERBOSE_TO_STDERR

Description:

Force ‘verbose’ option to use stderr instead of stdout

Type:

bool

Default:

False

Version Added:

2.8

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

verbose_to_stderr

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_VERBOSE_TO_STDERR

WIN_ASYNC_STARTUP_TIMEOUT

Description:

For asynchronous tasks in Ansible (covered in Asynchronous Actions and Polling), this is how long, in seconds, to wait for the task spawned by Ansible to connect back to the named pipe used on Windows systems. The default is 5 seconds. This can be too low on slower systems, or systems under heavy load. This is not the total time an async command can run for, but is a separate timeout to wait for an async command to start. The task will only start to be timed against its async_timeout once it has connected to the pipe, so the overall maximum duration the task can take will be extended by the amount specified here.

Type:

integer

Default:

5

Version Added:

2.10

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

win_async_startup_timeout

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_WIN_ASYNC_STARTUP_TIMEOUT

Variables:
name:

ansible_win_async_startup_timeout

WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_COUNT

Description:

The maximum number of times to check Task Queue Manager worker processes to verify they have exited cleanly. After this limit is reached any worker processes still running will be terminated. This is for internal use only.

Type:

integer

Default:

0

Version Added:

2.10

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_COUNT

WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_DELAY

Description:

The number of seconds to sleep between polling loops when checking Task Queue Manager worker processes to verify they have exited cleanly. This is for internal use only.

Type:

float

Default:

0.1

Version Added:

2.10

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_DELAY

YAML_FILENAME_EXTENSIONS

Description:

Check all of these extensions when looking for ‘variable’ files which should be YAML or JSON or vaulted versions of these. This affects vars_files, include_vars, inventory and vars plugins among others.

Type:

list

Default:

['.yml', '.yaml', '.json']

Ini:
Section:

[defaults]

Key:

yaml_valid_extensions

Environment:
Variable:

ANSIBLE_YAML_FILENAME_EXT

Environment Variables

Other environment variables to configure plugins in collections can be found in Index of all Collection Environment Variables.

ANSIBLE_CONFIG

Override the default ansible config file

ANSIBLE_HOME

The default root path for Ansible config files on the controller.

See also ANSIBLE_HOME

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PATH

Specify where to look for the ansible-connection script. This location will be checked before searching $PATH.If null, ansible will start with the same directory as the ansible script.

See also ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PATH

ANSIBLE_COW_SELECTION

This allows you to choose a specific cowsay stencil for the banners or use ‘random’ to cycle through them.

See also ANSIBLE_COW_SELECTION

ANSIBLE_COW_ACCEPTLIST

Accept a list of cowsay templates that are ‘safe’ to use, set to an empty list if you want to enable all installed templates.

See also ANSIBLE_COW_ACCEPTLIST

Version Added:

2.11

ANSIBLE_FORCE_COLOR

This option forces color mode even when running without a TTY or the “nocolor” setting is True.

See also ANSIBLE_FORCE_COLOR

ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR

This setting allows suppressing colorizing output, which is used to give a better indication of failure and status information.

See also ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR

NO_COLOR

This setting allows suppressing colorizing output, which is used to give a better indication of failure and status information.

See also ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR

Version Added:

2.11

ANSIBLE_NOCOWS

If you have cowsay installed but want to avoid the ‘cows’ (why????), use this.

See also ANSIBLE_NOCOWS

ANSIBLE_COW_PATH

Specify a custom cowsay path or swap in your cowsay implementation of choice.

See also ANSIBLE_COW_PATH

ANSIBLE_PIPELINING

This is a global option, each connection plugin can override either by having more specific options or not supporting pipelining at all.Pipelining, if supported by the connection plugin, reduces the number of network operations required to execute a module on the remote server, by executing many Ansible modules without actual file transfer.It can result in a very significant performance improvement when enabled.However this conflicts with privilege escalation (become). For example, when using ‘sudo:’ operations you must first disable ‘requiretty’ in /etc/sudoers on all managed hosts, which is why it is disabled by default.This setting will be disabled if ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES is enabled.

See also ANSIBLE_PIPELINING

ANSIBLE_ANY_ERRORS_FATAL

Sets the default value for the any_errors_fatal keyword, if True, Task failures will be considered fatal errors.

See also ANY_ERRORS_FATAL

ANSIBLE_BECOME_ALLOW_SAME_USER

When False``(default), Ansible will skip using become if the remote user is the same as the become user, as this is normally a redundant operation. In other words root sudo to root.If ``True, this forces Ansible to use the become plugin anyways as there are cases in which this is needed.

See also BECOME_ALLOW_SAME_USER

ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASSWORD_FILE

The password file to use for the become plugin. --become-password-file.If executable, it will be run and the resulting stdout will be used as the password.

See also BECOME_PASSWORD_FILE

ANSIBLE_AGNOSTIC_BECOME_PROMPT

Display an agnostic become prompt instead of displaying a prompt containing the command line supplied become method.

See also AGNOSTIC_BECOME_PROMPT

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN

Chooses which cache plugin to use, the default ‘memory’ is ephemeral.

See also CACHE_PLUGIN

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_CONNECTION

Defines connection or path information for the cache plugin.

See also CACHE_PLUGIN_CONNECTION

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_PREFIX

Prefix to use for cache plugin files/tables.

See also CACHE_PLUGIN_PREFIX

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGIN_TIMEOUT

Expiration timeout for the cache plugin data.

See also CACHE_PLUGIN_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_SCAN_SYS_PATH

A boolean to enable or disable scanning the sys.path for installed collections.

See also COLLECTIONS_SCAN_SYS_PATH

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_PATH

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for collections content. Collections must be in nested subdirectories, not directly in these directories. For example, if COLLECTIONS_PATHS includes '{{ ANSIBLE_HOME ~ "/collections" }}', and you want to add my.collection to that directory, it must be saved as '{{ ANSIBLE_HOME} ~ "/collections/ansible_collections/my/collection" }}'.

See also COLLECTIONS_PATHS

Version Added:

2.10

ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_ON_ANSIBLE_VERSION_MISMATCH

When a collection is loaded that does not support the running Ansible version (with the collection metadata key requires_ansible).

See also COLLECTIONS_ON_ANSIBLE_VERSION_MISMATCH

ANSIBLE_COLOR_CHANGED

Defines the color to use on ‘Changed’ task status.

See also COLOR_CHANGED

ANSIBLE_COLOR_CONSOLE_PROMPT

Defines the default color to use for ansible-console.

See also COLOR_CONSOLE_PROMPT

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DEBUG

Defines the color to use when emitting debug messages.

See also COLOR_DEBUG

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DEPRECATE

Defines the color to use when emitting deprecation messages.

See also COLOR_DEPRECATE

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_ADD

Defines the color to use when showing added lines in diffs.

See also COLOR_DIFF_ADD

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_LINES

Defines the color to use when showing diffs.

See also COLOR_DIFF_LINES

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DIFF_REMOVE

Defines the color to use when showing removed lines in diffs.

See also COLOR_DIFF_REMOVE

ANSIBLE_COLOR_ERROR

Defines the color to use when emitting error messages.

See also COLOR_ERROR

ANSIBLE_COLOR_HIGHLIGHT

Defines the color to use for highlighting.

See also COLOR_HIGHLIGHT

ANSIBLE_COLOR_INCLUDED

Defines the color to use when showing ‘Included’ task status.

See also COLOR_INCLUDED

ANSIBLE_COLOR_OK

Defines the color to use when showing ‘OK’ task status.

See also COLOR_OK

ANSIBLE_COLOR_SKIP

Defines the color to use when showing ‘Skipped’ task status.

See also COLOR_SKIP

ANSIBLE_COLOR_UNREACHABLE

Defines the color to use on ‘Unreachable’ status.

See also COLOR_UNREACHABLE

ANSIBLE_COLOR_VERBOSE

Defines the color to use when emitting verbose messages. In other words, those that show with ‘-v’s.

See also COLOR_VERBOSE

ANSIBLE_COLOR_WARN

Defines the color to use when emitting warning messages.

See also COLOR_WARN

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_MODULE

Defines the color to use when emitting a module name in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_MODULE

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_REFERENCE

Defines the color to use when emitting cross-reference in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_REFERENCE

Defines the color to use when emitting a link in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_LINK

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_DEPRECATED

Defines the color to use when emitting a deprecated value in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_DEPRECATED

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_CONSTANT

Defines the color to use when emitting a constant in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_CONSTANT

ANSIBLE_COLOR_DOC_PLUGIN

Defines the color to use when emitting a plugin name in the ansible-doc output.

See also COLOR_DOC_PLUGIN

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PASSWORD_FILE

The password file to use for the connection plugin. --connection-password-file.

See also CONNECTION_PASSWORD_FILE

_ANSIBLE_COVERAGE_REMOTE_OUTPUT

Sets the output directory on the remote host to generate coverage reports into.Currently only used for remote coverage on PowerShell modules.This is for internal use only.

See also COVERAGE_REMOTE_OUTPUT

_ANSIBLE_COVERAGE_REMOTE_PATH_FILTER

A list of paths for files on the Ansible controller to run coverage for when executing on the remote host.Only files that match the path glob will have their coverage collected.Multiple path globs can be specified and are separated by :.Currently only used for remote coverage on PowerShell modules.This is for internal use only.

See also COVERAGE_REMOTE_PATHS

ANSIBLE_ACTION_WARNINGS

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when received from a task action (module or action plugin).These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

See also ACTION_WARNINGS

ANSIBLE_LOCALHOST_WARNING

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when there are no hosts in the inventory.These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

See also LOCALHOST_WARNING

ANSIBLE_LOG_VERBOSITY

This will set log verbosity if higher than the normal display verbosity, otherwise it will match that.

See also LOG_VERBOSITY

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_UNPARSED_WARNING

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when no inventory was loaded and notes that it will use an implicit localhost-only inventory.These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

See also INVENTORY_UNPARSED_WARNING

ANSIBLE_DOC_FRAGMENT_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Documentation Fragments Plugins.

See also DOC_FRAGMENT_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_ACTION_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Action Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_ACTION_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_ASK_PASS

This controls whether an Ansible playbook should prompt for a login password. If using SSH keys for authentication, you probably do not need to change this setting.

See also DEFAULT_ASK_PASS

ANSIBLE_ASK_VAULT_PASS

This controls whether an Ansible playbook should prompt for a vault password.

See also DEFAULT_ASK_VAULT_PASS

ANSIBLE_BECOME

Toggles the use of privilege escalation, allowing you to ‘become’ another user after login.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME

ANSIBLE_BECOME_ASK_PASS

Toggle to prompt for privilege escalation password.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME_ASK_PASS

ANSIBLE_BECOME_METHOD

Privilege escalation method to use when become is enabled.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME_METHOD

ANSIBLE_BECOME_EXE

executable to use for privilege escalation, otherwise Ansible will depend on PATH.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME_EXE

ANSIBLE_BECOME_FLAGS

Flags to pass to the privilege escalation executable.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME_FLAGS

ANSIBLE_BECOME_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Become Plugins.

See also BECOME_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_BECOME_USER

The user your login/remote user ‘becomes’ when using privilege escalation, most systems will use ‘root’ when no user is specified.

See also DEFAULT_BECOME_USER

ANSIBLE_CACHE_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Cache Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_CACHE_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Callback Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_CALLBACK_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_CALLBACKS_ENABLED

List of enabled callbacks, not all callbacks need enabling, but many of those shipped with Ansible do as we don’t want them activated by default.

See also CALLBACKS_ENABLED

Version Added:

2.11

ANSIBLE_CLICONF_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Cliconf Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_CLICONF_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_CONNECTION_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Connection Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_CONNECTION_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_DEBUG

Toggles debug output in Ansible. This is very verbose and can hinder multiprocessing. Debug output can also include secret information despite no_log settings being enabled, which means debug mode should not be used in production.

See also DEFAULT_DEBUG

ANSIBLE_EXECUTABLE

This indicates the command to use to spawn a shell under, which is required for Ansible’s execution needs on a target. Users may need to change this in rare instances when shell usage is constrained, but in most cases, it may be left as is.

See also DEFAULT_EXECUTABLE

ANSIBLE_FILTER_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Jinja2 Filter Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_FILTER_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_FORCE_HANDLERS

This option controls if notified handlers run on a host even if a failure occurs on that host.When false, the handlers will not run if a failure has occurred on a host.This can also be set per play or on the command line. See Handlers and Failure for more details.

See also DEFAULT_FORCE_HANDLERS

ANSIBLE_FORKS

Maximum number of forks Ansible will use to execute tasks on target hosts.

See also DEFAULT_FORKS

ANSIBLE_GATHERING

This setting controls the default policy of fact gathering (facts discovered about remote systems).This option can be useful for those wishing to save fact gathering time. Both ‘smart’ and ‘explicit’ will use the cache plugin.

See also DEFAULT_GATHERING

ANSIBLE_HASH_BEHAVIOUR

This setting controls how duplicate definitions of dictionary variables (aka hash, map, associative array) are handled in Ansible.This does not affect variables whose values are scalars (integers, strings) or arrays.**WARNING**, changing this setting is not recommended as this is fragile and makes your content (plays, roles, collections) nonportable, leading to continual confusion and misuse. Don’t change this setting unless you think you have an absolute need for it.We recommend avoiding reusing variable names and relying on the combine filter and vars and varnames lookups to create merged versions of the individual variables. In our experience, this is rarely needed and is a sign that too much complexity has been introduced into the data structures and plays.For some uses you can also look into custom vars_plugins to merge on input, even substituting the default host_group_vars that is in charge of parsing the host_vars/ and group_vars/ directories. Most users of this setting are only interested in inventory scope, but the setting itself affects all sources and makes debugging even harder.All playbooks and roles in the official examples repos assume the default for this setting.Changing the setting to merge applies across variable sources, but many sources will internally still overwrite the variables. For example include_vars will dedupe variables internally before updating Ansible, with ‘last defined’ overwriting previous definitions in same file.The Ansible project recommends you avoid ``merge`` for new projects.**It is the intention of the Ansible developers to eventually deprecate and remove this setting, but it is being kept as some users do heavily rely on it. New projects should **avoid ‘merge’.

See also DEFAULT_HASH_BEHAVIOUR

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY

Comma-separated list of Ansible inventory sources

See also DEFAULT_HOST_LIST

ANSIBLE_HTTPAPI_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for HttpApi Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_HTTPAPI_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Inventory Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_INVENTORY_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_JINJA2_EXTENSIONS

This is a developer-specific feature that allows enabling additional Jinja2 extensions.See the Jinja2 documentation for details. If you do not know what these do, you probably don’t need to change this setting :)

See also DEFAULT_JINJA2_EXTENSIONS

ANSIBLE_JINJA2_NATIVE

This option preserves variable types during template operations.

See also DEFAULT_JINJA2_NATIVE

ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES

Enables/disables the cleaning up of the temporary files Ansible used to execute the tasks on the remote.If this option is enabled it will disable ANSIBLE_PIPELINING.

See also DEFAULT_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES

ANSIBLE_LIBVIRT_LXC_NOSECLABEL

This setting causes libvirt to connect to LXC containers by passing --noseclabel parameter to virsh command. This is necessary when running on systems which do not have SELinux.

See also DEFAULT_LIBVIRT_LXC_NOSECLABEL

ANSIBLE_LOAD_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

Controls whether callback plugins are loaded when running /usr/bin/ansible. This may be used to log activity from the command line, send notifications, and so on. Callback plugins are always loaded for ansible-playbook.

See also DEFAULT_LOAD_CALLBACK_PLUGINS

ANSIBLE_LOCAL_TEMP

Temporary directory for Ansible to use on the controller.

See also DEFAULT_LOCAL_TMP

ANSIBLE_LOG_PATH

File to which Ansible will log on the controller.When not set the logging is disabled.

See also DEFAULT_LOG_PATH

ANSIBLE_LOG_FILTER

List of logger names to filter out of the log file.

See also DEFAULT_LOG_FILTER

ANSIBLE_LOOKUP_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Lookup Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_LOOKUP_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_MODULE_ARGS

This sets the default arguments to pass to the ansible adhoc binary if no -a is specified.

See also DEFAULT_MODULE_ARGS

ANSIBLE_LIBRARY

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Modules.

See also DEFAULT_MODULE_PATH

ANSIBLE_MODULE_UTILS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Module utils files, which are shared by modules.

See also DEFAULT_MODULE_UTILS_PATH

ANSIBLE_NETCONF_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Netconf Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_NETCONF_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_NO_LOG

Toggle Ansible’s display and logging of task details, mainly used to avoid security disclosures.

See also DEFAULT_NO_LOG

ANSIBLE_NO_TARGET_SYSLOG

Toggle Ansible logging to syslog on the target when it executes tasks. On Windows hosts, this will disable a newer style PowerShell modules from writing to the event log.

See also DEFAULT_NO_TARGET_SYSLOG

ANSIBLE_NULL_REPRESENTATION

What templating should return as a ‘null’ value. When not set it will let Jinja2 decide.

See also DEFAULT_NULL_REPRESENTATION

ANSIBLE_POLL_INTERVAL

For asynchronous tasks in Ansible (covered in Asynchronous Actions and Polling), this is how often to check back on the status of those tasks when an explicit poll interval is not supplied. The default is a reasonably moderate 15 seconds which is a tradeoff between checking in frequently and providing a quick turnaround when something may have completed.

See also DEFAULT_POLL_INTERVAL

ANSIBLE_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE

Option for connections using a certificate or key file to authenticate, rather than an agent or passwords, you can set the default value here to avoid re-specifying --private-key with every invocation.

See also DEFAULT_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE

ANSIBLE_PRIVATE_ROLE_VARS

By default, imported roles publish their variables to the play and other roles, this setting can avoid that.This was introduced as a way to reset role variables to default values if a role is used more than once in a playbook.Starting in version ‘2.17’ M(ansible.builtin.include_roles) and M(ansible.builtin.import_roles) can individually override this via the C(public) parameter.Included roles only make their variables public at execution, unlike imported roles which happen at playbook compile time.

See also DEFAULT_PRIVATE_ROLE_VARS

ANSIBLE_REMOTE_PORT

Port to use in remote connections, when blank it will use the connection plugin default.

See also DEFAULT_REMOTE_PORT

ANSIBLE_REMOTE_USER

Sets the login user for the target machinesWhen blank it uses the connection plugin’s default, normally the user currently executing Ansible.

See also DEFAULT_REMOTE_USER

ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Roles.

See also DEFAULT_ROLES_PATH

ANSIBLE_SELINUX_SPECIAL_FS

Some filesystems do not support safe operations and/or return inconsistent errors, this setting makes Ansible ‘tolerate’ those in the list without causing fatal errors.Data corruption may occur and writes are not always verified when a filesystem is in the list.

See also DEFAULT_SELINUX_SPECIAL_FS

Version Added:

2.9

ANSIBLE_STDOUT_CALLBACK

Set the main callback used to display Ansible output. You can only have one at a time.You can have many other callbacks, but just one can be in charge of stdout.See Callback plugins for a list of available options.

See also DEFAULT_STDOUT_CALLBACK

ANSIBLE_EDITOR

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return a file within an editor, this chooses the application to use.

See also EDITOR

Version Added:

2.15

EDITOR

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return a file within an editor, this chooses the application to use.

See also EDITOR

ANSIBLE_ENABLE_TASK_DEBUGGER

Whether or not to enable the task debugger, this previously was done as a strategy plugin.Now all strategy plugins can inherit this behavior. The debugger defaults to activating whena task is failed on unreachable. Use the debugger keyword for more flexibility.

See also ENABLE_TASK_DEBUGGER

ANSIBLE_TASK_DEBUGGER_IGNORE_ERRORS

This option defines whether the task debugger will be invoked on a failed task when ignore_errors=True is specified.True specifies that the debugger will honor ignore_errors, and False will not honor ignore_errors.

See also TASK_DEBUGGER_IGNORE_ERRORS

ANSIBLE_STRATEGY

Set the default strategy used for plays.

See also DEFAULT_STRATEGY

ANSIBLE_STRATEGY_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Strategy Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_STRATEGY_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_SU

Toggle the use of “su” for tasks.

See also DEFAULT_SU

ANSIBLE_SYSLOG_FACILITY

Syslog facility to use when Ansible logs to the remote target.

See also DEFAULT_SYSLOG_FACILITY

ANSIBLE_TERMINAL_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Terminal Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_TERMINAL_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_TEST_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Jinja2 Test Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_TEST_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_TIMEOUT

This is the default timeout for connection plugins to use.

See also DEFAULT_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_TRANSPORT

Can be any connection plugin available to your ansible installation.There is also a (DEPRECATED) special ‘smart’ option, that will toggle between ‘ssh’ and ‘paramiko’ depending on controller OS and ssh versions.

See also DEFAULT_TRANSPORT

ANSIBLE_ERROR_ON_UNDEFINED_VARS

When True, this causes ansible templating to fail steps that reference variable names that are likely typoed.Otherwise, any ‘{{ template_expression }}’ that contains undefined variables will be rendered in a template or ansible action line exactly as written.

See also DEFAULT_UNDEFINED_VAR_BEHAVIOR

ANSIBLE_VARS_PLUGINS

Colon-separated paths in which Ansible will search for Vars Plugins.

See also DEFAULT_VARS_PLUGIN_PATH

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ID_MATCH

If true, decrypting vaults with a vault id will only try the password from the matching vault-id.

See also DEFAULT_VAULT_ID_MATCH

ANSIBLE_VAULT_IDENTITY

The label to use for the default vault id label in cases where a vault id label is not provided.

See also DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ENCRYPT_SALT

The salt to use for the vault encryption. If it is not provided, a random salt will be used.

See also VAULT_ENCRYPT_SALT

ANSIBLE_VAULT_ENCRYPT_IDENTITY

The vault_id to use for encrypting by default. If multiple vault_ids are provided, this specifies which to use for encryption. The --encrypt-vault-id CLI option overrides the configured value.

See also DEFAULT_VAULT_ENCRYPT_IDENTITY

ANSIBLE_VAULT_IDENTITY_LIST

A list of vault-ids to use by default. Equivalent to multiple --vault-id args. Vault-ids are tried in order.

See also DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY_LIST

ANSIBLE_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE

The vault password file to use. Equivalent to --vault-password-file or --vault-id.If executable, it will be run and the resulting stdout will be used as the password.

See also DEFAULT_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE

ANSIBLE_VERBOSITY

Sets the default verbosity, equivalent to the number of -v passed in the command line.

See also DEFAULT_VERBOSITY

ANSIBLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS

Toggle to control the showing of deprecation warnings

See also DEPRECATION_WARNINGS

ANSIBLE_DEVEL_WARNING

Toggle to control showing warnings related to running devel.

See also DEVEL_WARNING

ANSIBLE_DIFF_ALWAYS

Configuration toggle to tell modules to show differences when in ‘changed’ status, equivalent to --diff.

See also DIFF_ALWAYS

ANSIBLE_DIFF_CONTEXT

Number of lines of context to show when displaying the differences between files.

See also DIFF_CONTEXT

ANSIBLE_DISPLAY_ARGS_TO_STDOUT

Normally ansible-playbook will print a header for each task that is run. These headers will contain the name: field from the task if you specified one. If you didn’t then ansible-playbook uses the task’s action to help you tell which task is presently running. Sometimes you run many of the same action and so you want more information about the task to differentiate it from others of the same action. If you set this variable to True in the config then ansible-playbook will also include the task’s arguments in the header.This setting defaults to False because there is a chance that you have sensitive values in your parameters and you do not want those to be printed.If you set this to True you should be sure that you have secured your environment’s stdout (no one can shoulder surf your screen and you aren’t saving stdout to an insecure file) or made sure that all of your playbooks explicitly added the no_log: True parameter to tasks that have sensitive values How do I keep secret data in my playbook? for more information.

See also DISPLAY_ARGS_TO_STDOUT

ANSIBLE_DISPLAY_SKIPPED_HOSTS

Toggle to control displaying skipped task/host entries in a task in the default callback.

See also DISPLAY_SKIPPED_HOSTS

ANSIBLE_DUPLICATE_YAML_DICT_KEY

By default, Ansible will issue a warning when a duplicate dict key is encountered in YAML.These warnings can be silenced by adjusting this setting to False.

See also DUPLICATE_YAML_DICT_KEY

ANSIBLE_ERROR_ON_MISSING_HANDLER

Toggle to allow missing handlers to become a warning instead of an error when notifying.

See also ERROR_ON_MISSING_HANDLER

ANSIBLE_FACTS_MODULES

Which modules to run during a play’s fact gathering stage, using the default of ‘smart’ will try to figure it out based on connection type.If adding your own modules but you still want to use the default Ansible facts, you will want to include ‘setup’ or corresponding network module to the list (if you add ‘smart’, Ansible will also figure it out).This does not affect explicit calls to the ‘setup’ module, but does always affect the ‘gather_facts’ action (implicit or explicit).

See also FACTS_MODULES

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_IGNORE

If set to yes, ansible-galaxy will not validate TLS certificates. This can be useful for testing against a server with a self-signed certificate.

See also GALAXY_IGNORE_CERTS

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER_TIMEOUT

The default timeout for Galaxy API calls. Galaxy servers that don’t configure a specific timeout will fall back to this value.

See also GALAXY_SERVER_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON

Role skeleton directory to use as a template for the init action in ansible-galaxy/ansible-galaxy role, same as --role-skeleton.

See also GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON_IGNORE

patterns of files to ignore inside a Galaxy role or collection skeleton directory.

See also GALAXY_ROLE_SKELETON_IGNORE

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON

Collection skeleton directory to use as a template for the init action in ansible-galaxy collection, same as --collection-skeleton.

See also GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON_IGNORE

patterns of files to ignore inside a Galaxy collection skeleton directory.

See also GALAXY_COLLECTION_SKELETON_IGNORE

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTIONS_PATH_WARNING

whether ansible-galaxy collection install should warn about --collections-path missing from configured COLLECTIONS_PATHS.

See also GALAXY_COLLECTIONS_PATH_WARNING

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER

URL to prepend when roles don’t specify the full URI, assume they are referencing this server as the source.

See also GALAXY_SERVER

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_SERVER_LIST

A list of Galaxy servers to use when installing a collection.The value corresponds to the config ini header [galaxy_server.{{item}}] which defines the server details.See Configuring the ansible-galaxy client for more details on how to define a Galaxy server.The order of servers in this list is used as the order in which a collection is resolved.Setting this config option will ignore the GALAXY_SERVER config option.

See also GALAXY_SERVER_LIST

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_TOKEN_PATH

Local path to galaxy access token file

See also GALAXY_TOKEN_PATH

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_DISPLAY_PROGRESS

Some steps in ansible-galaxy display a progress wheel which can cause issues on certain displays or when outputting the stdout to a file.This config option controls whether the display wheel is shown or not.The default is to show the display wheel if stdout has a tty.

See also GALAXY_DISPLAY_PROGRESS

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_CACHE_DIR

The directory that stores cached responses from a Galaxy server.This is only used by the ansible-galaxy collection install and download commands.Cache files inside this dir will be ignored if they are world writable.

See also GALAXY_CACHE_DIR

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_DISABLE_GPG_VERIFY

Disable GPG signature verification during collection installation.

See also GALAXY_DISABLE_GPG_VERIFY

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_GPG_KEYRING

Configure the keyring used for GPG signature verification during collection installation and verification.

See also GALAXY_GPG_KEYRING

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_IGNORE_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CODES

A list of GPG status codes to ignore during GPG signature verification. See L(https://github.com/gpg/gnupg/blob/master/doc/DETAILS#general-status-codes) for status code descriptions.If fewer signatures successfully verify the collection than GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT, signature verification will fail even if all error codes are ignored.

See also GALAXY_IGNORE_INVALID_SIGNATURE_STATUS_CODES

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT

The number of signatures that must be successful during GPG signature verification while installing or verifying collections.This should be a positive integer or all to indicate all signatures must successfully validate the collection.Prepend + to the value to fail if no valid signatures are found for the collection.

See also GALAXY_REQUIRED_VALID_SIGNATURE_COUNT

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL

The initial interval in seconds for polling the import status of a collection.This interval increases exponentially based on the GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR, with a maximum delay of 30 seconds.

See also GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL

ANSIBLE_GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR

The multiplier used to increase the GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_INTERVAL when checking the collection import status.

See also GALAXY_COLLECTION_IMPORT_POLL_FACTOR

ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING

Set this to “False” if you want to avoid host key checking by the underlying connection plugin Ansible uses to connect to the host.Please read the documentation of the specific connection plugin used for details.

See also HOST_KEY_CHECKING

ANSIBLE_HOST_PATTERN_MISMATCH

This setting changes the behaviour of mismatched host patterns, it allows you to force a fatal error, a warning or just ignore it.

See also HOST_PATTERN_MISMATCH

ANSIBLE_PYTHON_INTERPRETER

Path to the Python interpreter to be used for module execution on remote targets, or an automatic discovery mode. Supported discovery modes are auto (the default), auto_silent, auto_legacy, and auto_legacy_silent. All discovery modes employ a lookup table to use the included system Python (on distributions known to include one), falling back to a fixed ordered list of well-known Python interpreter locations if a platform-specific default is not available. The fallback behavior will issue a warning that the interpreter should be set explicitly (since interpreters installed later may change which one is used). This warning behavior can be disabled by setting auto_silent or auto_legacy_silent. The value of auto_legacy provides all the same behavior, but for backward-compatibility with older Ansible releases that always defaulted to /usr/bin/python, will use that interpreter if present.

See also INTERPRETER_PYTHON

ANSIBLE_TRANSFORM_INVALID_GROUP_CHARS

Make ansible transform invalid characters in group names supplied by inventory sources.

See also TRANSFORM_INVALID_GROUP_CHARS

ANSIBLE_INVALID_TASK_ATTRIBUTE_FAILED

If ‘false’, invalid attributes for a task will result in warnings instead of errors.

See also INVALID_TASK_ATTRIBUTE_FAILED

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_ANY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

If ‘true’, it is a fatal error when any given inventory source cannot be successfully parsed by any available inventory plugin; otherwise, this situation only attracts a warning.

See also INVENTORY_ANY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_ENABLED

List of enabled inventory plugins, it also determines the order in which they are used.

See also INVENTORY_ENABLED

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_EXPORT

Controls if ansible-inventory will accurately reflect Ansible’s view into inventory or its optimized for exporting.

See also INVENTORY_EXPORT

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_IGNORE

List of extensions to ignore when using a directory as an inventory source.

See also INVENTORY_IGNORE_EXTS

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_IGNORE_REGEX

List of patterns to ignore when using a directory as an inventory source.

See also INVENTORY_IGNORE_PATTERNS

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_UNPARSED_FAILED

If ‘true’ it is a fatal error if every single potential inventory source fails to parse, otherwise, this situation will only attract a warning.

See also INVENTORY_UNPARSED_IS_FAILED

ANSIBLE_MAX_DIFF_SIZE

Maximum size of files to be considered for diff display.

See also MAX_FILE_SIZE_FOR_DIFF

ANSIBLE_NETWORK_GROUP_MODULES

See also NETWORK_GROUP_MODULES

ANSIBLE_INJECT_FACT_VARS

Facts are available inside the ansible_facts variable, this setting also pushes them as their own vars in the main namespace.Unlike inside the ansible_facts dictionary where the prefix ansible_ is removed from fact names, these will have the exact names that are returned by the module.

See also INJECT_FACTS_AS_VARS

ANSIBLE_MODULE_IGNORE_EXTS

List of extensions to ignore when looking for modules to load.This is for rejecting script and binary module fallback extensions.

See also MODULE_IGNORE_EXTS

ANSIBLE_MODULE_STRICT_UTF8_RESPONSE

Enables whether module responses are evaluated for containing non-UTF-8 data.Disabling this may result in unexpected behavior.Only ansible-core should evaluate this configuration.

See also MODULE_STRICT_UTF8_RESPONSE

ANSIBLE_OLD_PLUGIN_CACHE_CLEAR

Previously Ansible would only clear some of the plugin loading caches when loading new roles, this led to some behaviors in which a plugin loaded in previous plays would be unexpectedly ‘sticky’. This setting allows the user to return to that behavior.

See also OLD_PLUGIN_CACHE_CLEARING

ANSIBLE_PAGER

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return output in a pageable fashion, this chooses the application to use.

See also PAGER

Version Added:

2.15

PAGER

for the cases in which Ansible needs to return output in a pageable fashion, this chooses the application to use.

See also PAGER

ANSIBLE_PARAMIKO_HOST_KEY_AUTO_ADD

See also PARAMIKO_HOST_KEY_AUTO_ADD

ANSIBLE_PARAMIKO_LOOK_FOR_KEYS

See also PARAMIKO_LOOK_FOR_KEYS

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONTROL_PATH_DIR

Path to the socket to be used by the connection persistence system.

See also PERSISTENT_CONTROL_PATH_DIR

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT

This controls how long the persistent connection will remain idle before it is destroyed.

See also PERSISTENT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_CONNECT_RETRY_TIMEOUT

This controls the retry timeout for persistent connection to connect to the local domain socket.

See also PERSISTENT_CONNECT_RETRY_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_PERSISTENT_COMMAND_TIMEOUT

This controls the amount of time to wait for a response from a remote device before timing out a persistent connection.

See also PERSISTENT_COMMAND_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_PLAYBOOK_DIR

A number of non-playbook CLIs have a --playbook-dir argument; this sets the default value for it.

See also PLAYBOOK_DIR

ANSIBLE_PLAYBOOK_VARS_ROOT

This sets which playbook dirs will be used as a root to process vars plugins, which includes finding host_vars/group_vars.

See also PLAYBOOK_VARS_ROOT

ANSIBLE_PYTHON_MODULE_RLIMIT_NOFILE

Attempts to set RLIMIT_NOFILE soft limit to the specified value when executing Python modules (can speed up subprocess usage on Python 2.x. See https://bugs.python.org/issue11284). The value will be limited by the existing hard limit. Default value of 0 does not attempt to adjust existing system-defined limits.

See also PYTHON_MODULE_RLIMIT_NOFILE

ANSIBLE_RETRY_FILES_ENABLED

This controls whether a failed Ansible playbook should create a .retry file.

See also RETRY_FILES_ENABLED

ANSIBLE_RETRY_FILES_SAVE_PATH

This sets the path in which Ansible will save .retry files when a playbook fails and retry files are enabled.This file will be overwritten after each run with the list of failed hosts from all plays.

See also RETRY_FILES_SAVE_PATH

ANSIBLE_RUN_VARS_PLUGINS

This setting can be used to optimize vars_plugin usage depending on the user’s inventory size and play selection.

See also RUN_VARS_PLUGINS

ANSIBLE_SHOW_CUSTOM_STATS

This adds the custom stats set via the set_stats plugin to the default output.

See also SHOW_CUSTOM_STATS

ANSIBLE_STRING_TYPE_FILTERS

This list of filters avoids ‘type conversion’ when templating variables.Useful when you want to avoid conversion into lists or dictionaries for JSON strings, for example.

See also STRING_TYPE_FILTERS

ANSIBLE_SYSTEM_WARNINGS

Allows disabling of warnings related to potential issues on the system running Ansible itself (not on the managed hosts).These may include warnings about third-party packages or other conditions that should be resolved if possible.

See also SYSTEM_WARNINGS

ANSIBLE_RUN_TAGS

default list of tags to run in your plays, Skip Tags has precedence.

See also TAGS_RUN

ANSIBLE_SKIP_TAGS

default list of tags to skip in your plays, has precedence over Run Tags

See also TAGS_SKIP

ANSIBLE_TARGET_LOG_INFO

A string to insert into target logging for tracking purposes

See also TARGET_LOG_INFO

ANSIBLE_TASK_TIMEOUT

Set the maximum time (in seconds) for a task action to execute in.Timeout runs independently from templating or looping. It applies per each attempt of executing the task’s action and remains unchanged by the total time spent on a task.When the action execution exceeds the timeout, Ansible interrupts the process. This is registered as a failure due to outside circumstances, not a task failure, to receive appropriate response and recovery process.If set to 0 (the default) there is no timeout.

See also TASK_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_COUNT

The maximum number of times to check Task Queue Manager worker processes to verify they have exited cleanly.After this limit is reached any worker processes still running will be terminated.This is for internal use only.

See also WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_COUNT

ANSIBLE_WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_DELAY

The number of seconds to sleep between polling loops when checking Task Queue Manager worker processes to verify they have exited cleanly.This is for internal use only.

See also WORKER_SHUTDOWN_POLL_DELAY

ANSIBLE_USE_PERSISTENT_CONNECTIONS

Toggles the use of persistence for connections.

See also USE_PERSISTENT_CONNECTIONS

ANSIBLE_VARS_ENABLED

Accept list for variable plugins that require it.

See also VARIABLE_PLUGINS_ENABLED

ANSIBLE_PRECEDENCE

Allows to change the group variable precedence merge order.

See also VARIABLE_PRECEDENCE

ANSIBLE_WIN_ASYNC_STARTUP_TIMEOUT

For asynchronous tasks in Ansible (covered in Asynchronous Actions and Polling), this is how long, in seconds, to wait for the task spawned by Ansible to connect back to the named pipe used on Windows systems. The default is 5 seconds. This can be too low on slower systems, or systems under heavy load.This is not the total time an async command can run for, but is a separate timeout to wait for an async command to start. The task will only start to be timed against its async_timeout once it has connected to the pipe, so the overall maximum duration the task can take will be extended by the amount specified here.

See also WIN_ASYNC_STARTUP_TIMEOUT

ANSIBLE_YAML_FILENAME_EXT

Check all of these extensions when looking for ‘variable’ files which should be YAML or JSON or vaulted versions of these.This affects vars_files, include_vars, inventory and vars plugins among others.

See also YAML_FILENAME_EXTENSIONS

ANSIBLE_NETCONF_SSH_CONFIG

This variable is used to enable bastion/jump host with netconf connection. If set to True the bastion/jump host ssh settings should be present in ~/.ssh/config file, alternatively it can be set to custom ssh configuration file path to read the bastion/jump host settings.

See also NETCONF_SSH_CONFIG

ANSIBLE_VALIDATE_ACTION_GROUP_METADATA

A toggle to disable validating a collection’s ‘metadata’ entry for a module_defaults action group. Metadata containing unexpected fields or value types will produce a warning when this is True.

See also VALIDATE_ACTION_GROUP_METADATA

ANSIBLE_VERBOSE_TO_STDERR

Force ‘verbose’ option to use stderr instead of stdout

See also VERBOSE_TO_STDERR