community.general.lastpass lookup – fetch data from LastPass

Note

This lookup plugin is part of the community.general collection (version 10.1.0).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.general. You need further requirements to be able to use this lookup plugin, see Requirements for details.

To use it in a playbook, specify: community.general.lastpass.

Synopsis

  • Use the lpass command line utility to fetch specific fields from LastPass.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the local controller node that executes this lookup.

  • lpass (command line utility)

  • must have already logged into LastPass

Terms

Parameter

Comments

Terms

list / elements=string / required

Key from which you want to retrieve the field.

Keyword parameters

This describes keyword parameters of the lookup. These are the values key1=value1, key2=value2 and so on in the following examples: lookup('community.general.lastpass', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...) and query('community.general.lastpass', key1=value1, key2=value2, ...)

Parameter

Comments

field

string

Field to return from LastPass.

Default: "password"

Notes

Note

  • When keyword and positional parameters are used together, positional parameters must be listed before keyword parameters: lookup('community.general.lastpass', term1, term2, key1=value1, key2=value2) and query('community.general.lastpass', term1, term2, key1=value1, key2=value2)

Examples

- name: get 'custom_field' from LastPass entry 'entry-name'
  ansible.builtin.debug:
    msg: "{{ lookup('community.general.lastpass', 'entry-name', field='custom_field') }}"

Return Value

Key

Description

Return value

list / elements=string

secrets stored

Returned: success

Authors

  • Andrew Zenk

Hint

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