ERIC_ECCLI Platform Options

Extreme ERIC_ECCLI is part of the community.network collection and only supports CLI connections today. This page offers details on how to use ansible.netcommon.network_cli on ERIC_ECCLI in Ansible.

Connections available

CLI
Protocol SSH
Credentials

uses SSH keys / SSH-agent if present

accepts -u myuser -k if using password

Indirect Access via a bastion (jump host)
Connection Settings ansible_connection: ansible.netcommon.network_cli
Enable Mode
(Privilege Escalation)
not supported by ERIC_ECCLI
Returned Data Format stdout[0].

ERIC_ECCLI does not support ansible_connection: local. You must use ansible_connection: ansible.netcommon.network_cli.

Using CLI in Ansible

Example CLI group_vars/eric_eccli.yml

ansible_connection: ansible.netcommon.network_cli
ansible_network_os: community.network.eric_eccli
ansible_user: myuser
ansible_password: !vault...
ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o ProxyCommand="ssh -W %h:%p -q bastion01"'
  • If you are using SSH keys (including an ssh-agent) you can remove the ansible_password configuration.
  • If you are accessing your host directly (not through a bastion/jump host) you can remove the ansible_ssh_common_args configuration.
  • If you are accessing your host through a bastion/jump host, you cannot include your SSH password in the ProxyCommand directive. To prevent secrets from leaking out (for example in ps output), SSH does not support providing passwords via environment variables.

Example CLI task

- name: run show version on remote devices (eric_eccli)
  community.network.eric_eccli_command:
     commands: show version
  when: ansible_network_os == 'community.network.eric_eccli'

Warning

Never store passwords in plain text. We recommend using SSH keys to authenticate SSH connections. Ansible supports ssh-agent to manage your SSH keys. If you must use passwords to authenticate SSH connections, we recommend encrypting them with Ansible Vault.