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Using OpenStack-Ansible within your project¶
Including OpenStack-Ansible in your project¶
Including the openstack-ansible repository within another project can be done in several ways:
A git submodule pointed to a released tag.
A script to automatically perform a git checkout of OpenStack-Ansible.
When including OpenStack-Ansible in a project, consider using a parallel
directory structure as shown in the ansible.cfg
files section.
Also note that copying files into directories such as env.d
or
conf.d
should be handled via some sort of script within the extension
project.
Including OpenStack-Ansible with your Ansible structure¶
You can create your own playbook, variable, and role structure while still
including the OpenStack-Ansible roles and libraries by setting environment
variables or by adjusting /usr/local/bin/openstack-ansible.rc
.
The relevant environment variables for OpenStack-Ansible are as follows:
ANSIBLE_LIBRARY
This variable should point to
/etc/ansible/plugins/library
. Doing so allows roles and playbooks to access OpenStack-Ansible’s included Ansible modules.ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH
This variable should point to
/etc/ansible/roles
by default. This allows Ansible to properly look up any OpenStack-Ansible roles that extension roles may reference.ANSIBLE_INVENTORY
This variable should point to
openstack-ansible/inventory/dynamic_inventory.py
. With this setting, extensions have access to the same dynamic inventory that OpenStack-Ansible uses.
The paths to the openstack-ansible
top level directory can be
relative in this file.
Consider this directory structure:
my_project
|
|- custom_stuff
| |
| |- playbooks
|- openstack-ansible
| |
| |- playbooks
The environment variables set would use
../openstack-ansible/playbooks/<directory>
.
Adding new or overriding roles in your OpenStack-Ansible installation¶
By default OpenStack-Ansible uses its ansible-role-requirements file to fetch the roles it requires for the installation process.
The roles will be fetched into the standard ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH
,
which defaults to /etc/ansible/roles
.
ANSIBLE_ROLE_FILE
is an environment variable pointing to
the location of a YAML file which ansible-galaxy can consume,
specifying which roles to download and install.
The default value for this is ansible-role-requirements.yml
.
You can override the ansible-role-requirement file used by defining
the environment variable ANSIBLE_ROLE_FILE
before running the
bootstrap-ansible.sh
script.
It is now the responsibility of the deployer to maintain appropriate versions pins of the ansible roles if an upgrade is required.
Adding new collections in your OpenStack-Ansible installation¶
The Victoria release of openstack-ansible adds an optional new config
file which defaults to
/etc/openstack_deploy/user-collection-requirements.yml
. It should be
in the native format of the ansible-galaxy requirements file and can be
used to add new collections to the deploy host.
You can override location of the user-collection-requirements.yml
by
setting USER_COLLECTION_FILE
environment variable before running the
bootstrap-ansible.sh
script.
Maintaining local forks of ansible roles¶
The Train release of openstack-ansible adds an optional new config file
which defaults to /etc/openstack_deploy/user-role-requirements.yml
.
It is in the same format as ansible-role-requirements.yml
and can be
used to add new roles or selectively override existing ones. New roles
listed in user-role-requirements.yml
will be merged with those
in ansible-role-requirements.yml
, and roles with matching names
will override those in ansible-role-requirements.yml
. It is easy
for a deployer to keep this file under their own version control and out
of the openstack-ansible tree.
This allows a deployer to either add new ansible roles, or override the location or SHA of existing individual roles without replacing the original file entirely. It is also straightforward to include the