Documentation

14. The awx-manage Utility

The awx-manage utility is used to access detailed internal information of the controller. Commands for awx-manage should run as the awx user only.

Warning

Running awx-manage commands via playbook is not recommended or supported.

14.1. Inventory Import

awx-manage is a mechanism by which a controller administrator can import inventory directly into the controller, for those who cannot use Custom Inventory Scripts.

To use awx-manage properly, you must first create an inventory in the controller to use as the destination for the import.

For help with awx-manage, run the following command: awx-manage inventory_import [--help]

The inventory_import command synchronizes a controller inventory object with a text-based inventory file, dynamic inventory script, or a directory of one or more of the above as supported by core Ansible.

When running this command, specify either an --inventory-id or --inventory-name, and the path to the Ansible inventory source (--source).

awx-manage inventory_import --source=/ansible/inventory/ --inventory-id=1

By default, inventory data already stored in the controller blends with data from the external source. To use only the external data, specify --overwrite. To specify that any existing hosts get variable data exclusively from the --source, specify --overwrite_vars. The default behavior adds any new variables from the external source, overwriting keys that already exist, but preserves any variables that were not sourced from the external data source.

awx-manage inventory_import --source=/ansible/inventory/ --inventory-id=1 --overwrite

Note

Edits and additions to Inventory host variables persist beyond an inventory sync as long as --overwrite_vars is not set.

14.2. Cleanup of old data

awx-manage has a variety of commands used to clean old data from the controller. The controller administrators can use the controller Management Jobs interface for access or use the command line.

  • awx-manage cleanup_jobs [--help]

This permanently deletes the job details and job output for jobs older than a specified number of days.

  • awx-manage cleanup_activitystream [--help]

This permanently deletes any activity stream data older than a specific number of days.

14.3. Cluster management

Refer to the Clustering section for details on the awx-manage provision_instance and awx-manage deprovision_instance commands.

Note

Do not run other awx-manage commands unless instructed by Ansible Support.

14.4. Token and session management

automation controller supports the following commands for OAuth2 token management:

14.4.1. create_oauth2_token

Use this command to create OAuth2 tokens (specify actual username for example_user below):

$ awx-manage create_oauth2_token --user example_user

New OAuth2 token for example_user: j89ia8OO79te6IAZ97L7E8bMgXCON2

Make sure you provide a valid user when creating tokens. Otherwise, you will get an error message that you tried to issue the command without specifying a user, or supplying a username that does not exist.

14.4.2. revoke_oauth2_tokens

Use this command to revoke OAuth2 tokens (both application tokens and personal access tokens (PAT)). By default, it revokes all application tokens (but not their associated refresh tokens), and revokes all personal access tokens. However, you can also specify a user for whom to revoke all tokens.

To revoke all existing OAuth2 tokens:

$ awx-manage revoke_oauth2_tokens

To revoke all OAuth2 tokens & their refresh tokens:

$ awx-manage revoke_oauth2_tokens --revoke_refresh

To revoke all OAuth2 tokens for the user with id=example_user (specify actual username for example_user below):

$ awx-manage revoke_oauth2_tokens --user example_user

To revoke all OAuth2 tokens and refresh token for the user with id=example_user:

$ awx-manage revoke_oauth2_tokens --user example_user --revoke_refresh

14.4.3. cleartokens

Use this command to clear tokens which have already been revoked. Refer to Django’s Oauth Toolkit documentation on cleartokens for more detail.

14.4.4. expire_sessions

Use this command to terminate all sessions or all sessions for a specific user. Consider using this command when a user changes role in an organization, is removed from assorted groups in LDAP/AD, or the administrator wants to ensure the user can no longer execute jobs due to membership in these groups.

$ awx-manage expire_sessions

This command terminates all sessions by default. The users associated with those sessions will be consequently logged out. To only expire the sessions of a specific user, you can pass their username using the --user flag (specify actual username for example_user below):

$ awx-manage expire_sessions --user example_user

14.4.5. clearsessions

Use this command to delete all sessions that have expired. Refer to Django’s documentation on clearsessions for more detail.

For more information on OAuth2 token management in the controller user interface, see the Applications section of the Automation Controller User Guide.

14.5. Analytics gathering

Use this command to gather analytics on-demand outside of the predefined window (default is 4 hours):

$ awx-manage gather_analytics --ship

For customers with disconnected environments who want to collect usage information about unique hosts automated across a time period, use this command:

awx-manage host_metric --since YYYY-MM-DD --until YYYY-MM-DD --json

The parameters --since and --until specify date ranges and are optional, but one of them has to be present. The --json flag specifies the output format and is optional.