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win_template - Templates a file out to a remote server.¶
Six additional variables can be used in templates: ansible_managed (configurable via the defaults section of ansible.cfg) contains a string which can be used to describe the template name, host, modification time of the template file and the owner uid, template_host contains the node name of the template’s machine, template_uid the owner, template_path the absolute path of the template, template_fullpath is the absolute path of the template, and template_run_date is the date that the template was rendered. Note that including a string that uses a date in the template will result in the template being marked ‘changed’ each time.
Location to render the template to on the remote machine.
force
(added in 2.4)
no
yes
yes
no
the default is yes, which will replace the remote file when contents are different than the source. If no, the file will only be transferred if the destination does not exist.
newline_sequence
(added in 2.4)
no
\r\n
\n
\r
\r\n
Specify the newline sequence to use for templating files.
src
yes
Path of a Jinja2 formatted template on the local server. This can be a relative or absolute path.
trim_blocks
(added in 2.4)
no
no
If this is set to True the first newline after a block is removed (block, not variable tag!).
variable_end_string
(added in 2.4)
no
}}
The string marking the end of a print statement.
variable_start_string
(added in 2.4)
no
{{
The string marking the beginning of a print statement.
-name:Create a file from a Jinja2 templatewin_template:src:/mytemplates/file.conf.j2dest:C:\temp\file.conf-name:Create a Unix-style file from a Jinja2 templatewin_template:src:unix/config.conf.j2dest:C:\share\unix\config.confnewline_sequence:'\n'
For other platforms you can use template which uses ‘n’ as newline_sequence.
Templates are loaded with trim_blocks=True.
Beware fetching files from windows machines when creating templates because certain tools, such as Powershell ISE, and regedit’s export facility add a Byte Order Mark as the first character of the file, which can cause tracebacks.
To find Byte Order Marks in files, use Format-Hex<file>-Count16 on Windows, and use od-a-tx1-N16<file> on Linux.
Also, you can override jinja2 settings by adding a special header to template file. i.e. #jinja2:variable_start_string:'[%',variable_end_string:'%]',trim_blocks:False which changes the variable interpolation markers to [% var %] instead of {{ var }}. This is the best way to prevent evaluation of things that look like, but should not be Jinja2. raw/endraw in Jinja2 will not work as you expect because templates in Ansible are recursively evaluated.
This module is flagged as stableinterface which means that the maintainers for this module guarantee that no backward incompatible interface changes will be made.
For more information about Red Hat’s this support of this module, please
refer to this knowledge base article<https://access.redhat.com/articles/rhel-top-support-policies>