Create and manage virtual machines easily, via a simple manifest. Currently supports Linode. AWS support coming soon.
Ansible core includes powerful modules and inventory scripts that make working with cloud providers relatively easy. However, a number of these modules don't handle idempotency gracefully. That is, if one defines (for example) an EC2 instance task, and run Ansible, it will create a VM. If Ansible is run again, without entering the newly created VMs identifier, a second VM will be created.
This module seeks to improve on that stuation by building a dynamic inventory, and mapping human-readable names to machine-readable resource IDs. By wrapping around Ansible's native cloud modules, we can work with a consistent, idempotent, cross-provider framework for managing cloud infrastructure. Better yet, it simplifies such usage by setting reasonable (configurable) defaults, and allowing the use of human-readable names across resources.
Drumkit is recommended, and included as a git submodule. If you did not use the --recursive
option when cloning this repository, you can install Drumkit by running the following:
git submodule update --init
Cloud providers require various forms of security tokens to ensure only authorized users can access their APIs. To use this role's cloud provisioning functionality, you can create the following files to contain your tokens:
linode.api.key
aws.access.key
aws.access.secret
These files are ignored by Git, so as not to be committed into your infrastructure repo by mistake.
When you bootstrap Drumkit (by running . d
) the values contained in those files will be assigned to the necessary environmental variables (i.e., LINODE_API_KEY
, AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
) to allow Ansible to connect to your cloud provider accounts.
cloud:
linode:
test1:
plan: 1 # Linode 1024 # Optional, defaults to '1'.
datacenter: 2 # Dallas, TX # Optional, defaults to '2'.
distro: 124 # ubuntu/trusty # Optional, defaults to '124'.
state: "running" # Optional, defaults to 'present'.
test2: {} # Only a name is required.
A list of virtual machines and their attributes. Since Ansible cloud modules run on localhost, you might want to keep this variable in host_vars/localhost.yml
or hosts/localhost.yml
.
linode_set_hostnames: True
Sets whether to set hostnames and build /etc/hosts on Linode VMs. Defaults to 'True'.
linode_manage_hostname_dns_records: True
Sets whether to create and manage default DNS records for hostnames of Linode VMs. Defaults to 'True'.
linode_zone: example.com
The DNS zone to create in the Linode DNS Manager, and to use in building Linode VM FQDNs.
linode_zone_soa_email: [email protected]
SOA Email record for the specified zone.
linode_state: 'present'
The default state to set for Linode VMs.
op: 'linode'
The type of operation to perform.
None.
Include in localhost as you would any other cloud role.
- hosts: localhost
vars:
...
cloud:
linode:
test1:
plan: 1 # Linode 1024
datacenter: 2 # Dallas, TX
distro: 124 # ubuntu/trusty
state: "running"
test2: {} # Use defaults.
...
roles:
- ...
- ergonlogic.cloud
- ...
- Add (and test) sanity check that:
- Two or more linodes don't share a human-readable name (could cause undefined behaviour)
- Emit warning if Linode VMs exist that are not defined in the manifest
- Add more specific checks when testing linode creation (size, distro, etc.)
- Test hostname and domain functionality
- Add reverse DNS setup.
GPLv3 or later
This role was created in 2016 by Christopher Gervais.