Overview
An Ansible® Playbook is a blueprint of automation tasks, which are IT actions executed with limited manual effort across an inventory of IT solutions. Playbooks tell Ansible what to do to which devices.
Instead of manually applying the same action to hundreds or thousands of similar technologies across IT environments, executing a playbook automatically completes the same action for the specified type of inventory—such as a set of routers. Playbooks also serve as frameworks of prewritten code that developers can use ad-hoc or as a starting template.
Playbooks are regularly used to automate IT infrastructure—such as operating systems and Kubernetes platforms—networks, security systems, and code repositories like GitHub. IT staff can use playbooks to program applications, services, server nodes, and other devices, without the manual overhead of creating everything from scratch.
And playbooks—as well as the conditions, variables, and tasks within them—can be saved, shared, or reused indefinitely. This makes it easier for IT teams to codify operational knowledge and ensure that the same actions are performed consistently.
How do Ansible Playbooks work?
Ansible Playbooks are lists of tasks that automatically execute for your specified inventory or groups of hosts. One or more Ansible tasks can be combined to make a play—an ordered grouping of tasks mapped to specific hosts—and tasks are executed in the order in which they are written. A playbook can include 1 or more plays as well as Ansible Roles—bundles of tasks and associated automation assets that can be run in multiple plays or reused across playbooks.
Tasks are executed by modules, each of which performs a specific task in a playbook. A module contains metadata that determines when and where a task is executed, as well as which user executes it. There are thousands of Ansible modules that perform all kinds of IT tasks, such as:
Cloud management
oci_vcn creates, deletes, or updates virtual cloud networks in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure environments. Similarly, vmware_cluster adds, removes, or updates VMware vSphere clusters.
User management
selogin maps Linux® operating system (OS) users to SELinux user, and gitlab_user creates, updates, or deletes GitLab users.
Security
Openssh_cert generates an OpenSSH host or user certificates, and ipa_config manages global FreeIPA configuration settings.
Communication
mail can automatically send emails based on certain criteria, and snow_record creates, deletes, or updates a single record in ServiceNow.
Hear from an expert
A practical example of an Ansible Playbook
Ansible is capable of communicating with many different device classifications, from cloud-based REST APIs, to Linux and Windows systems, networking hardware, and much more. This is a sample of 2 Ansible modules automatically updating 2 types of servers:
--- - name: Update web servers hosts: webservers become: true tasks: - name: Ensure apache is at the latest version ansible.builtin.yum: name: httpd state: latest - name: Write the apache config file ansible.builtin.template: src: /srv/httpd.j2 dest: /etc/httpd.conf mode: "0644" - name: Update db servers hosts: databases become: true tasks: - name: Ensure postgresql is at the latest version ansible.builtin.yum: name: postgresql state: latest - name: Ensure that postgresql is started ansible.builtin.service: name: postgresql state: started
The playbook contains 2 plays:
- The first checks whether or not web server software is up to date and runs the update if necessary.
- The second checks whether or not database server software is up to date and runs the update if necessary.
How do I use Ansible Playbooks?
Ansible uses the YAML syntax. Depending on whom you ask, YAML stands for yet another markup language or YAML ain’t markup language (a recursive acronym). There are also 2 different, but perfectly acceptable YAML file extensions: .yaml or .yml.
There are 2 ways of using Ansible Playbooks: from the command line interface (CLI) or using the Red Hat® Ansible Automation Platform’s push-button deployments.
Because YAML is a human-readable language, IT professionals with specific domain expertise—like in network, security, or cloud—can create playbooks without having to learn a complicated coding language.
From the CLI
After installing the open source Ansible project or Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform—which is as straightforward as typing `sudo yum install ansible` in the Red Hat Enterprise Linux CLI—all you need to do is use the ansible-playbook command to run Ansible Playbooks.
From within the platform
The Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform web-based user interface includes push-button Ansible Playbook deployments that are used as part of larger jobs or job templates. These deployments come with additional safeguards that are particularly helpful to users who are newer to IT automation—or those without as much experience working in the CLI.
There’s a lot more to do with automation.
Why Red Hat?
Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform is a unified platform that can automate full processes across your IT domains for a variety of use cases—including infrastructure, hybrid cloud, security, and networks, all the way to edge locations. Ansible Automation Platform includes all the tools needed to implement enterprise-wide automation, including an event-driven solution, playbooks, and analytics. And it allows your teams to centralize and control your IT infrastructure with a visual dashboard, role-based access control, and other features that will help reduce operational complexity.
With a Red Hat subscription, you get certified, supported content from Red Hat and our partners, access to hosted management services, and life cycle technical support to scale automation across your organization. And you’ll get expert knowledge gained from our success with thousands of customers.
The introduction of Red Hat Ansible Lightspeed with IBM watsonx Code Assistant makes Ansible even more accessible to beginners and helps experienced automation teams learn, create, and maintain Ansible Automation Platform content more efficiently. This generative AI service accepts prompts entered by a user and then interacts with IBM watsonx foundation models to produce code recommendations built on Ansible best practices—helping you convert subject matter expertise into trusted, reliable Ansible code that scales across teams and domains.
The built-in capabilities of Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform provide an accelerator in a box. It’s the de facto standard that many of our vendors and partners also use to write scripts to install, configure, and maintain their technology.
How much time could automation save you?
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