Ansible OpenStack collection aka openstack.cloud
provides Ansible modules and Ansible plugins for managing OpenStack
clouds. It is supported and maintained by the OpenStack community.
NOTE: We need and value your contributions! Maintaining this collection is a community effort. We are all both users and developers of this collection at the same time. If you find a bug, please report it. If you have fixed a bug, please submit a patch. If you need new functionality which is not covered by this collection yet, please extend an existing module or submit a new one. Our Contributing section below has tons of docs to check out. Please get in touch!
Our codebase has been split into two separate release series, 2.x.x
and 1.x.x
:
2.x.x
releases of Ansible OpenStack collection are compatible with OpenStack SDK1.x.x
and its release candidates0.99.0
and later only (OpenStack Zed and later). Ourmaster
branch tracks our2.x.x
releases.1.x.x
releases of Ansible OpenStack collection are compatible with OpenStack SDK0.x.x
prior to0.99.0
only (OpenStack Yoga and earlier). Ourstable/1.0.0
branch tracks our1.x.x
releases.2.x.x
releases of Ansible OpenStack collection are not backward compatible to1.x.x
releases⚠️
For rationale and details please read our branching docs. Both branches will be developed in
parallel for the time being. Patches from master
will be backported to stable/1.0.0
on a best effort basis but
expect new features to be introduced in our master
branch only. Contributions are welcome for both branches!
For using this collection, first you have to install both Python packages ansible
and openstacksdk
on your Ansible
controller:
pip install "ansible>=2.9" "openstacksdk>=1.0.0"
OpenStack SDK has to be available on the Ansible host running the OpenStack modules. Depending on the Ansible playbook and roles you use, this host is not necessarily the Ansible controller. Sometimes Ansible might invoke a non-standard Python interpreter on the target Ansible host. Using Python 3.6 is required for modules in this collection.
Always use the last stable version of OpenStack SDK if possible, also when running against older OpenStack deployments. OpenStack SDK is backward compatible to older OpenStack deployments, so its safe to run last version of the SDK against older OpenStack clouds. The installed version of the OpenStack SDK does not have to match your OpenStack cloud, but it has to match the release series of this collection which you are using. For notes about our release series and branches please read the introduction above.
Before using this collection, you have to install it with ansible-galaxy
:
ansible-galaxy collection install openstack.cloud
You can also include it in a requirements.yml
file:
collections:
- name: openstack.cloud
And then install it with:
ansible-galaxy collection install -r requirements.yml
To use a module from the Ansible OpenStack collection, call them by their Fully Qualified Collection Name (FQCN), composed of their namespace, collection name and module name:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: Create server in an OpenStack cloud
openstack.cloud.server:
name: vm
state: present
cloud: openstack
region_name: ams01
image: Ubuntu Server 14.04
flavor_ram: 4096
boot_from_volume: True
volume_size: 75
Or you can add the full namespace and collection name in the collections
element:
---
- hosts: localhost
collections:
- openstack.cloud
tasks:
- name: Create server in an OpenStack cloud
server_volume:
state: present
cloud: openstack
server: Mysql-server
volume: mysql-data
device: /dev/vdb
For powerful generic CRUD-style resource management use Ansible module
openstack.cloud.resource
:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: Create security group
openstack.cloud.resource:
cloud: openstack
service: network
type: security_group
attributes:
name: ansible_security_group
description: 'ansible security group'
- name: Update security group description
openstack.cloud.resource:
cloud: openstack
service: network
type: security_group
attributes:
name: ansible_security_group
description: 'ansible neutron security group'
- name: Delete security group
openstack.cloud.resource:
cloud: openstack
service: network
type: security_group
attributes:
name: ansible_security_group
state: absent
For generic resource listing use Ansible module openstack.cloud.resources
:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: List images
openstack.cloud.resources:
cloud: openstack
service: image
type: image
- name: List compute flavors
openstack.cloud.resources:
cloud: openstack
service: compute
type: flavor
- name: List networks with name 'public'
openstack.cloud.resources:
cloud: openstack
service: network
type: network
parameters:
name: public
Ansible module defaults are supported as well:
---
- module_defaults:
group/openstack.cloud.openstack:
cloud: devstack-admin
#
#
# Listing modules individually is required for
# backward compatibility with Ansible 2.9 only
openstack.cloud.compute_flavor_info:
cloud: devstack-admin
openstack.cloud.server_info:
cloud: devstack-admin
block:
- name: List compute flavors
openstack.cloud.compute_flavor_info:
- name: List servers
openstack.cloud.server_info:
See collection docs at Ansible's main page:
Thank you for your interest in our Ansible OpenStack collection
There are many ways in which you can participate in the project, for example:
- Report and verify bugs and help with solving issues.
- Submit and review patches.
- Follow OpenStack's How To Contribute guide.
Please read our Contributions and Development Guide (
We have a Special Interest Group for the Ansible OpenStack collection. Join us in #openstack-ansible-sig
on
OFTC IRC 🍪
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
See LICENCE to see the full text.