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Ansible + Vagrant

Basic and Advanced examples using Ansible and Vagrant.

Audience

This project aims education as fundamental with a nonprofit goal. If you'd like to learn how Ansible fits with Vagrant you might find useful code in here.

Requirements

Tested with:

  • Vagrant 1.7.2
  • VirtualBox 4.3.26
  • Ansible 1.9.0.1

Setting up your working tree

$ git clone https://github.com/wefner/ansible-vagrant.git
$ cd ansible-vagrant/
$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-host-shell
$ vagrant box add chef/centos-6.5 --provider virtualbox

(optional) edit ~/.ssh/config

# For vagrant virtual machines
Host 172.16.1.* *.vagrant.dev
StrictHostKeyChecking no
ServerAliveInterval 60
UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null
User vagrant
LogLevel ERROR

$ vagrant up

Vagrantfile

ADV setup

You can add as per more hosts you desire by modifying hosts array.

Required fields

  • name: hostname of the guest
  • group: ansible group of the guest
  • forwards: ports to be forwarded to the guest. You can append more ports by comma separated
  • sshport: it's strongly recommended to choose those to prevent ssh issues to guests
  • ip: static ip of the guest

Optional fields

  • disk: add an extra 500MB disk to the guest.

You may face some bugs if the disk is already present and you vagrant up without using --provison flag.

Guest process

inventory hash will have inside its defined group in hosts array, appending each hostname accordingly into the group. There's also a predefined all group keeping all hostnames.

Guest creation will take all variables defined in hosts and Virtualbox will start the process. I've just stated 500MB disk size for GlusterFS purposes which will run to Webservers allowing us storage clustering.

Guest comes with minimum CentOS 6.5 and it will trigger libselinux.sh script after guest is booted. It will instal libselinux-python package due to SELinux is enabled as per default. This is because Ansible needs this installed on remote servers if you are attempting to use several Ansible modules.

At the bottom of it, there's Ansible provisioning that will run playbooks just after the previous script. In this case, I find convenience connecting passwordless to servers. Find instructions inside tools directory.

Finally, copying Ansible inventory to a more handy path.

Pre-steps

Deployment host

  • Install ansible

If you are running on OSX, you can easily install Ansible by typing

sudo pip install ansible

Beware you'll need sshpass installed. You can install it with brew or macports too.

./configure
make
sudo make install

After that, you can just clone this repo and run the first command.

Destination host

  • Make sure your destination machine has a vagrant user
  • Distribute credentials to the machine. Suggested way of action would be to execute ssh-copy-id vagrant@<host>

You can define this before running vagrant up Vagrant * If you do not want to copy the your private key, a password will be prompted.

  • Verify you can connect to that machine without a password
  • Make sure vagrant user can execute root commands with sudo and that they have the !requiretty flag activated (probably by making sure the vagrant user is in the wheels group and then making sure that /etc/sudoers has uncommented the line about wheel group users being able to execute commands like in %wheel ALL=NOPASSWD: ALL !requiretty).
    • If there's no RSA authentication, you should provide -K option to ask for sudo password.

Generating the secret.txt file

Issue the following command

echo PASSWORD > secret.txt

on the execution directory (usually, code). Replace PASSWORD with the vault password. I'll use vagrant as password in this repository. It's recommended you play with .gitignore so that this file is not commited.

Dry-run Mode to show differences

In order to check all changes done in any configuration file (glusterfs, httpd, nginx...) of a new version we can use --check --diff. This check mode is just a simulation, it will not make any changes on remote systems and thanks to --diff argument if any templated files on the remote system are changed, the ansible-playbook CLI will report back the textual changes made to the file. It is important to use --tags configuration to obtain the expected result.

Note that shell module will not be dry-run resulting in that task will be skipped.

Settings hierarchy

Settings hold the real values that will be set in the templates. If multiple variables of the same name are defined in different places, they win in a certain order, which is:

  • -e variables always win
  • then comes "most everything else"
  • then comes variables defined in inventory
  • then comes facts discovered about a system
  • then "role defaults", which are the most "defaulty" and lose in priority to everything.

Roles

There are many roles under a playbook. Each role will have the following structure. Let's have a look at this example

PATH=code/roles/role1/

You can always append more folders and get a different structure inside every main folder to keep your code organized. These are the main folders we are using. There is also the option of group_vars folder but we'll not go that far just yet.

Name folders are restricted so they must be named as you see them. At least, the main ones as shown below:

┌─ defaults                 	# Default variables if nothing is specified. See `Setting hierarchy` for further info.
│   ├── main.yml         		# YAML file where you'll specify the default behaviour of every variable.
├── files 						# Files that will be copied to the remote as they are.
│   ├── crontab         		# Let's say you want to upload this crontab file as it is. Without modification.
├── handlers           			# Shortcuts such as `reboot <service_name>`. Will be used by `notify:` module under tasks.
├── tasks        				# Main goal here. Develop your task for this role. What should your role do?
└── templates                   # Templates Jinja2 or anything that `template:` module will use.
    ├── apache              	# Apache templates go here
    ├───── virtualhost.conf.j2  # You have some variables inside that will be replaced like ``{{ server_name }}``
    └── logrotate               # Logrotate files go here

Now you know a little bit about how to configure your role. A role can be Ojo, Mano, Oreja... and every role have its tasks with its files.

Let's say you have one role that will deploy an Apache with some virtualhosts. You just need the virtualhost itself inside files folder and use the copy: module to copy it to the remote inside your tasks:main.yml file. That's easy if you just have one environment and you want that file exactly as you have it. The tricky thing turns out as your environment grows because you might need some parameters inside that you want to change. So either you modify the file as many environments you have or you just can have one single file with variables. Cool, that's what I thought.

Since our virtualhost will be a template, it should be placed inside the templates folder as it is shown in the example above. Example:

$ cat virtualhost.conf.j2
ServerName {{ server_name }}
Listen {{ ssl_port }}

You can define variables basically anywhere but they will not have the same priority. Will not go that deep. Just imagine you have at somewhere a variable called server_name but you have several ServerNames that you want to define. We can do that with:

PATH=code/enviro/webservers/group_vars/all

PATH=code/enviro/backends/group_vars/all

  • server_name: api.example.com
  • ssl_port: 4443

Now, if your webservers hostnames apply to the role1, will take webservers variables. On the other hand, if they are backends... guess!

So basically is the main and global idea about roles and parsing variables according to what you want to do or how you want your Ansible playbooks look like.

Tasks

As you might already know, tasks are actually where the fun is. You want to define those to implement your automation. You can find several examples in this repo which are pretty friendly to read.

You could define variables and a whole deployment in one task file but that is pretty lame and not recommendend. So all you've created before such as variables, hosts and the like, will be read from the tasks. A task is just how you want your deployment to be, the logical part. It will take the most suitable variable by your needs and will determine if the actual task make either sense or not to be executed.

Handlers

These are mainly shortcuts called by tasks. Quite useful. Example:

Handler definition in code/roles/httpd/handlers/main.yml

- name: reload httpd
  service: name=httpd state=reloaded

Handler usage in code/roles/httpd/tasks/main.yml

- name: Copy certificate key
  copy: src=cert.key dest=/etc/httpd/ssl/
  notify: reload httpd

Ansible-Vault

This program comes with the whole Ansible suite and its goal is to encrypt sensitive data stored in files. Proxy certificates and SSH keys are stored there as encrypted so that it can safe on repositories.

You will find it under vars/certs.yml. You can either encrypt, decrypt, or edit a vaulted file.

$ ansible-vault edit vars/certs.yml

Since this is for education purposes, vagrant is the master password for this file.

When the file is opened, its hash will change so git will expect changes even if you modified nothing so you might want to consider git stash before committing changes.

Techdebt

Common

  • provision machines without disk
  • inventory in json dump
  • dynamic inventory
  • fdisk extra_disk automatically

Glusterfs

  • glusterfs run tasks on one node only
  • glusterfs manual installation
  • glusterfs peer run only on slaves

Clustering

  • SSH passwordless among instances
  • httpd cluster
  • mysql cluster
  • dynamic pcs cluster auth
  • nginx cluster

References:

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