Module format and documentation¶
If you want to contribute your module to most Ansible collections, you must write your module in Python and follow the standard format described below. (Unless you’re writing a Windows module, in which case the Windows guidelines apply.) In addition to following this format, you should review our submission checklist, programming tips, and strategy for maintaining Python 2 and Python 3 compatibility, as well as information about testing before you open a pull request.
Every Ansible module written in Python must begin with seven standard sections in a particular order, followed by the code. The sections in order are:
Note
Why don’t the imports go first?
Keen Python programmers may notice that contrary to PEP 8’s advice we don’t put imports
at the top of the file. This is because the DOCUMENTATION
through RETURN
sections are not used by the module code itself; they are essentially extra docstrings for the file. The imports are placed after these special variables for the same reason as PEP 8 puts the imports after the introductory comments and docstrings. This keeps the active parts of the code together and the pieces which are purely informational apart. The decision to exclude E402 is based on readability (which is what PEP 8 is about). Documentation strings in a module are much more similar to module level docstrings, than code, and are never utilized by the module itself. Placing the imports below this documentation and closer to the code, consolidates and groups all related code in a congruent manner to improve readability, debugging and understanding.
Warning
Copy old modules with care!
Some older Ansible modules have imports
at the bottom of the file, Copyright
notices with the full GPL prefix, and/or DOCUMENTATION
fields in the wrong order. These are legacy files that need updating - do not copy them into new modules. Over time we are updating and correcting older modules. Please follow the guidelines on this page!
Python shebang & UTF-8 coding¶
Begin your Ansible module with #!/usr/bin/python
- this “shebang” allows ansible_python_interpreter
to work. Follow the shebang immediately with # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
to clarify that the file is UTF-8 encoded.
Copyright and license¶
After the shebang and UTF-8 coding, add a copyright line with the original copyright holder and a license declaration. The license declaration should be ONLY one line, not the full GPL prefix.:
#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright: (c) 2018, Terry Jones <terry.jones@example.org>
# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
Major additions to the module (for instance, rewrites) may add additional copyright lines. Any legal review will include the source control history, so an exhaustive copyright header is not necessary. Please do not edit the existing copyright year. This simplifies project administration and is unlikely to cause any interesting legal issues. When adding a second copyright line for a significant feature or rewrite, add the newer line above the older one:
#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright: (c) 2017, [New Contributor(s)]
# Copyright: (c) 2015, [Original Contributor(s)]
# GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
ANSIBLE_METADATA block¶
Since we moved to collections we have deprecated the METADATA functionality, it is no longer required for modules, but it will not break anything if present.
DOCUMENTATION block¶
After the shebang, the UTF-8 coding, the copyright line, and the license section comes the DOCUMENTATION
block. Ansible’s online module documentation is generated from the DOCUMENTATION
blocks in each module’s source code. The DOCUMENTATION
block must be valid YAML. You may find it easier to start writing your DOCUMENTATION
string in an editor with YAML syntax highlighting before you include it in your Python file. You can start by copying our example documentation string into your module file and modifying it. If you run into syntax issues in your YAML, you can validate it on the YAML Lint website.
- Module documentation should briefly and accurately define what each module and option does, and how it works with others in the underlying system. Documentation should be written for broad audience–readable both by experts and non-experts.
- Descriptions should always start with a capital letter and end with a full stop. Consistency always helps.
- Verify that arguments in doc and module spec dict are identical.
- For password / secret arguments
no_log=True
should be set. - For arguments that seem to contain sensitive information but do not contain secrets, such as “password_length”, set
no_log=False
to disable the warning message. - If an option is only sometimes required, describe the conditions. For example, “Required when I(state=present).”
- If your module allows
check_mode
, reflect this fact in the documentation.
To create clear, concise, consistent, and useful documentation, follow the style guide.
Each documentation field is described below. Before committing your module documentation, please test it at the command line and as HTML:
- As long as your module file is available locally, you can use
ansible-doc -t module my_module_name
to view your module documentation at the command line. Any parsing errors will be obvious - you can view details by adding-vvv
to the command. - You should also test the HTML output of your module documentation.
Documentation fields¶
All fields in the DOCUMENTATION
block are lower-case. All fields are required unless specified otherwise:
module: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
short_description: | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
description: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
version_added: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
author: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
deprecated: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
options: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
requirements: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
seealso: |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
notes: |
|
Linking and other format macros within module documentation¶
You can link from your module documentation to other module docs, other resources on docs.ansible.com, and resources elsewhere on the internet with the help of some pre-defined macros. The correct formats for these macros are:
L()
for links with a heading. For example:See L(Ansible Tower,https://www.ansible.com/products/tower).
As of Ansible 2.10, do not useL()
for relative links between Ansible documentation and collection documentation.U()
for URLs. For example:See U(https://www.ansible.com/products/tower) for an overview.
R()
for cross-references with a heading (added in Ansible 2.10). For example:See R(Cisco IOS Platform Guide,ios_platform_options)
. Use the RST anchor for the cross-reference. See Adding anchors for details.M()
for module names. For example:See also M(ansible.builtin.yum) or M(community.general.apt_rpm)
.
There are also some macros which do not create links but we use them to display certain types of content in a uniform way:
I()
for option names. For example:Required if I(state=present).
This is italicized in the documentation.C()
for files and option values. For example:If not set the environment variable C(ACME_PASSWORD) will be used.
This displays with a mono-space font in the documentation.B()
currently has no standardized usage. It is displayed in boldface in the documentation.HORIZONTALLINE
is used sparingly as a separator in long descriptions. It becomes a horizontal rule (the<hr>
html tag) in the documentation.
Note
For links between modules and documentation within a collection, you can use any of the options above. For links outside of your collection, use R()
if available. Otherwise, use U()
or L()
with full URLs (not relative links). For modules, use M()
with the FQCN or ansible.builtin
as shown in the example. If you are creating your own documentation site, you will need to use the intersphinx extension to convert R()
and M()
to the correct links.
Note
To refer to a group of modules in a collection, use
R()
. When a collection is not the right granularity, useC(..)
:-
Refer to the R(community.kubernetes collection, plugins_in_community.kubernetes) for information on managing kubernetes clusters.
-The C(win_*) modules (spread across several collections) allow you to manage various aspects of windows hosts.
Note
Because it stands out better, use seealso
for general references over the use of notes or adding links to the description.
Documentation fragments¶
If you are writing multiple related modules, they may share common documentation, such as authentication details, file mode settings, notes:
or seealso:
entries. Rather than duplicate that information in each module’s DOCUMENTATION
block, you can save it once as a doc_fragment plugin and use it in each module’s documentation. In Ansible, shared documentation fragments are contained in a ModuleDocFragment
class in lib/ansible/plugins/doc_fragments/ or the equivalent directory in a collection. To include a documentation fragment, add extends_documentation_fragment: FRAGMENT_NAME
in your module documentation. Use the fully qualified collection name for the FRAGMENT_NAME (for example, community.kubernetes.k8s_auth_options
).
Modules should only use items from a doc fragment if the module will implement all of the interface documented there in a manner that behaves the same as the existing modules which import that fragment. The goal is that items imported from the doc fragment will behave identically when used in another module that imports the doc fragment.
By default, only the DOCUMENTATION
property from a doc fragment is inserted into the module documentation. It is possible to define additional properties in the doc fragment in order to import only certain parts of a doc fragment or mix and match as appropriate. If a property is defined in both the doc fragment and the module, the module value overrides the doc fragment.
Here is an example doc fragment named example_fragment.py
:
class ModuleDocFragment(object):
# Standard documentation
DOCUMENTATION = r'''
options:
# options here
'''
# Additional section
OTHER = r'''
options:
# other options here
'''
To insert the contents of OTHER
in a module:
extends_documentation_fragment: example_fragment.other
Or use both :
extends_documentation_fragment:
- example_fragment
- example_fragment.other
New in version 2.8.
Since Ansible 2.8, you can have user-supplied doc_fragments by using a doc_fragments
directory adjacent to play or role, just like any other plugin.
For example, all AWS modules should include:
extends_documentation_fragment:
- aws
- ec2
Using documentation fragments in collections describes how to incorporate documentation fragments in a collection.
EXAMPLES block¶
After the shebang, the UTF-8 coding, the copyright line, the license section, and the DOCUMENTATION
block comes the EXAMPLES
block. Here you show users how your module works with real-world examples in multi-line plain-text YAML format. The best examples are ready for the user to copy and paste into a playbook. Review and update your examples with every change to your module.
Per playbook best practices, each example should include a name:
line:
EXAMPLES = r'''
- name: Ensure foo is installed
namespace.collection.modulename:
name: foo
state: present
'''
The name:
line should be capitalized and not include a trailing dot.
Use a fully qualified collection name (FQCN) as a part of the module’s name like in the example above. For modules in ansible-base
, use the ansible.builtin.
identifier, for example ansible.builtin.debug
.
If your examples use boolean options, use yes/no values. Since the documentation generates boolean values as yes/no, having the examples use these values as well makes the module documentation more consistent.
If your module returns facts that are often needed, an example of how to use them can be helpful.
RETURN block¶
After the shebang, the UTF-8 coding, the copyright line, the license section, DOCUMENTATION
and EXAMPLES
blocks comes the RETURN
block. This section documents the information the module returns for use by other modules.
If your module doesn’t return anything (apart from the standard returns), this section of your module should read: RETURN = r''' # '''
Otherwise, for each value returned, provide the following fields. All fields are required unless specified otherwise.
return name: | Name of the returned field.
|
---|
Here are two example RETURN
sections, one with three simple fields and one with a complex nested field:
RETURN = r'''
dest:
description: Destination file/path.
returned: success
type: str
sample: /path/to/file.txt
src:
description: Source file used for the copy on the target machine.
returned: changed
type: str
sample: /home/httpd/.ansible/tmp/ansible-tmp-1423796390.97-147729857856000/source
md5sum:
description: MD5 checksum of the file after running copy.
returned: when supported
type: str
sample: 2a5aeecc61dc98c4d780b14b330e3282
'''
RETURN = r'''
packages:
description: Information about package requirements.
returned: success
type: complex
contains:
missing:
description: Packages that are missing from the system.
returned: success
type: list
sample:
- libmysqlclient-dev
- libxml2-dev
badversion:
description: Packages that are installed but at bad versions.
returned: success
type: list
sample:
- package: libxml2-dev
version: 2.9.4+dfsg1-2
constraint: ">= 3.0"
'''
Python imports¶
After the shebang, the UTF-8 coding, the copyright line, the license, and the sections for DOCUMENTATION
, EXAMPLES
, and RETURN
, you can finally add the python imports. All modules must use Python imports in the form:
from module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule
The use of “wildcard” imports such as from module_utils.basic import *
is no longer allowed.
Testing module documentation¶
To test Ansible documentation locally please follow instruction.