Roles¶
Roles let you automatically load related vars, files, tasks, handlers, and other Ansible artifacts based on a known file structure. Once you group your content in roles, you can easily reuse them and share them with other users.
Role directory structure¶
An Ansible role has a defined directory structure with seven main standard directories. You must include at least one of these directories in each role. You can omit any directories the role does not use. For example:
# playbooks
site.yml
webservers.yml
fooservers.yml
roles/
common/
tasks/
handlers/
library/
files/
templates/
vars/
defaults/
meta/
webservers/
tasks/
defaults/
meta/
By default Ansible will look in each directory within a role for a main.yml
file for relevant content (also main.yaml
and main
):
tasks/main.yml
- the main list of tasks that the role executes.handlers/main.yml
- handlers, which may be used within or outside this role.library/my_module.py
- modules, which may be used within this role (see Embedding modules and plugins in roles for more information).defaults/main.yml
- default variables for the role (see Using Variables for more information). These variables have the lowest priority of any variables available, and can be easily overridden by any other variable, including inventory variables.vars/main.yml
- other variables for the role (see Using Variables for more information).files/main.yml
- files that the role deploys.templates/main.yml
- templates that the role deploys.meta/main.yml
- metadata for the role, including role dependencies.
You can add other YAML files in some directories. For example, you can place platform-specific tasks in separate files and refer to them in the tasks/main.yml
file:
# roles/example/tasks/main.yml
- name: Install the correct web server for RHEL
import_tasks: redhat.yml
when: ansible_facts['os_family']|lower == 'redhat'
- name: Install the correct web server for Debian
import_tasks: debian.yml
when: ansible_facts['os_family']|lower == 'debian'
# roles/example/tasks/redhat.yml
- name: Install web server
ansible.builtin.yum:
name: "httpd"
state: present
# roles/example/tasks/debian.yml
- name: Install web server
ansible.builtin.apt:
name: "apache2"
state: present
Roles may also include modules and other plugin types in a directory called library
. For more information, please refer to Embedding modules and plugins in roles below.
Storing and finding roles¶
By default, Ansible looks for roles in two locations:
- in a directory called
roles/
, relative to the playbook file - in
/etc/ansible/roles
If you store your roles in a different location, set the roles_path configuration option so Ansible can find your roles. Checking shared roles into a single location makes them easier to use in multiple playbooks. See Configuring Ansible for details about managing settings in ansible.cfg.
Alternatively, you can call a role with a fully qualified path:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- role: '/path/to/my/roles/common'
Using roles¶
You can use roles in three ways:
- at the play level with the
roles
option: This is the classic way of using roles in a play. - at the tasks level with
include_role
: You can reuse roles dynamically anywhere in thetasks
section of a play usinginclude_role
. - at the tasks level with
import_role
: You can reuse roles statically anywhere in thetasks
section of a play usingimport_role
.
Using roles at the play level¶
The classic (original) way to use roles is with the roles
option for a given play:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- common
- webservers
When you use the roles
option at the play level, for each role ‘x’:
- If roles/x/tasks/main.yml exists, Ansible adds the tasks in that file to the play.
- If roles/x/handlers/main.yml exists, Ansible adds the handlers in that file to the play.
- If roles/x/vars/main.yml exists, Ansible adds the variables in that file to the play.
- If roles/x/defaults/main.yml exists, Ansible adds the variables in that file to the play.
- If roles/x/meta/main.yml exists, Ansible adds any role dependencies in that file to the list of roles.
- Any copy, script, template or include tasks (in the role) can reference files in roles/x/{files,templates,tasks}/ (dir depends on task) without having to path them relatively or absolutely.
When you use the roles
option at the play level, Ansible treats the roles as static imports and processes them during playbook parsing. Ansible executes your playbook in this order:
- Any
pre_tasks
defined in the play. - Any handlers triggered by pre_tasks.
- Each role listed in
roles:
, in the order listed. Any role dependencies defined in the role’smeta/main.yml
run first, subject to tag filtering and conditionals. See Using role dependencies for more details. - Any
tasks
defined in the play. - Any handlers triggered by the roles or tasks.
- Any
post_tasks
defined in the play. - Any handlers triggered by post_tasks.
Note
If using tags with tasks in a role, be sure to also tag your pre_tasks, post_tasks, and role dependencies and pass those along as well, especially if the pre/post tasks and role dependencies are used for monitoring outage window control or load balancing. See Tags for details on adding and using tags.
You can pass other keywords to the roles
option:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- common
- role: foo_app_instance
vars:
dir: '/opt/a'
app_port: 5000
tags: typeA
- role: foo_app_instance
vars:
dir: '/opt/b'
app_port: 5001
tags: typeB
When you add a tag to the role
option, Ansible applies the tag to ALL tasks within the role.
When using vars:
within the roles:
section of a playbook, the variables are added to the play variables, making them available to all tasks within the play before and after the role. This behavior can be changed by DEFAULT_PRIVATE_ROLE_VARS.
Including roles: dynamic reuse¶
You can reuse roles dynamically anywhere in the tasks
section of a play using include_role
. While roles added in a roles
section run before any other tasks in a playbook, included roles run in the order they are defined. If there are other tasks before an include_role
task, the other tasks will run first.
To include a role:
---
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Print a message
ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "this task runs before the example role"
- name: Include the example role
include_role:
name: example
- name: Print a message
ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "this task runs after the example role"
You can pass other keywords, including variables and tags, when including roles:
---
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Include the foo_app_instance role
include_role:
name: foo_app_instance
vars:
dir: '/opt/a'
app_port: 5000
tags: typeA
...
When you add a tag to an include_role
task, Ansible applies the tag only to the include itself. This means you can pass --tags
to run only selected tasks from the role, if those tasks themselves have the same tag as the include statement. See Selectively running tagged tasks in re-usable files for details.
You can conditionally include a role:
---
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Include the some_role role
include_role:
name: some_role
when: "ansible_facts['os_family'] == 'RedHat'"
Importing roles: static reuse¶
You can reuse roles statically anywhere in the tasks
section of a play using import_role
. The behavior is the same as using the roles
keyword. For example:
---
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Print a message
ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "before we run our role"
- name: Import the example role
import_role:
name: example
- name: Print a message
ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "after we ran our role"
You can pass other keywords, including variables and tags, when importing roles:
---
- hosts: webservers
tasks:
- name: Import the foo_app_instance role
import_role:
name: foo_app_instance
vars:
dir: '/opt/a'
app_port: 5000
...
When you add a tag to an import_role
statement, Ansible applies the tag to all tasks within the role. See Tag inheritance: adding tags to multiple tasks for details.
Running a role multiple times in one playbook¶
Ansible only executes each role once, even if you define it multiple times, unless the parameters defined on the role are different for each definition. For example, Ansible only runs the role foo
once in a play like this:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- foo
- bar
- foo
You have two options to force Ansible to run a role more than once.
Passing different parameters¶
You can pass different parameters in each role definition as:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- { role: foo, vars: { message: "first" } }
- { role: foo, vars: { message: "second" } }
or
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- role: foo
vars:
message: "first"
- role: foo
vars:
message: "second"
In this example, because each role definition has different parameters, Ansible runs foo
twice.
Using allow_duplicates: true
¶
Add allow_duplicates: true
to the meta/main.yml
file for the role:
# playbook.yml
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- foo
- foo
# roles/foo/meta/main.yml
---
allow_duplicates: true
In this example, Ansible runs foo
twice because we have explicitly enabled it to do so.
Using role dependencies¶
Role dependencies let you automatically pull in other roles when using a role. Ansible does not execute role dependencies when you include or import a role. You must use the roles
keyword if you want Ansible to execute role dependencies.
Role dependencies are stored in the meta/main.yml
file within the role directory. This file should contain a list of roles and parameters to insert before the specified role. For example:
# roles/myapp/meta/main.yml
---
dependencies:
- role: common
vars:
some_parameter: 3
- role: apache
vars:
apache_port: 80
- role: postgres
vars:
dbname: blarg
other_parameter: 12
Ansible always executes role dependencies before the role that includes them. Ansible executes recursive role dependencies as well. If one role depends on a second role, and the second role depends on a third role, Ansible executes the third role, then the second role, then the first role.
Running role dependencies multiple times in one playbook¶
Ansible treats duplicate role dependencies like duplicate roles listed under roles:
: Ansible only executes role dependencies once, even if defined multiple times, unless the parameters, tags, or when clause defined on the role are different for each definition. If two roles in a playbook both list a third role as a dependency, Ansible only runs that role dependency once, unless you pass different parameters, tags, when clause, or use allow_duplicates: true
in the dependent (third) role. See Galaxy role dependencies for more details.
For example, a role named car
depends on a role named wheel
as follows:
---
dependencies:
- role: wheel
vars:
n: 1
- role: wheel
vars:
n: 2
- role: wheel
vars:
n: 3
- role: wheel
vars:
n: 4
And the wheel
role depends on two roles: tire
and brake
. The meta/main.yml
for wheel would then contain the following:
---
dependencies:
- role: tire
- role: brake
And the meta/main.yml
for tire
and brake
would contain the following:
---
allow_duplicates: true
The resulting order of execution would be as follows:
tire(n=1)
brake(n=1)
wheel(n=1)
tire(n=2)
brake(n=2)
wheel(n=2)
...
car
To use allow_duplicates: true
with role dependencies, you must specify it for the dependent role, not for the parent role. In the example above, allow_duplicates: true
appears in the meta/main.yml
of the tire
and brake
roles. The wheel
role does not require allow_duplicates: true
, because each instance defined by car
uses different parameter values.
Note
See Using Variables for details on how Ansible chooses among variable values defined in different places (variable inheritance and scope).
Embedding modules and plugins in roles¶
If you write a custom module (see Should you develop a module?) or a plugin (see Developing plugins), you might wish to distribute it as part of a role. For example, if you write a module that helps configure your company’s internal software, and you want other people in your organization to use this module, but you do not want to tell everyone how to configure their Ansible library path, you can include the module in your internal_config role.
To add a module or a plugin to a role: Alongside the ‘tasks’ and ‘handlers’ structure of a role, add a directory named ‘library’ and then include the module directly inside the ‘library’ directory.
Assuming you had this:
roles/
my_custom_modules/
library/
module1
module2
The module will be usable in the role itself, as well as any roles that are called after this role, as follows:
---
- hosts: webservers
roles:
- my_custom_modules
- some_other_role_using_my_custom_modules
- yet_another_role_using_my_custom_modules
If necessary, you can also embed a module in a role to modify a module in Ansible’s core distribution. For example, you can use the development version of a particular module before it is released in production releases by copying the module and embedding the copy in a role. Use this approach with caution, as API signatures may change in core components, and this workaround is not guaranteed to work.
The same mechanism can be used to embed and distribute plugins in a role, using the same schema. For example, for a filter plugin:
roles/
my_custom_filter/
filter_plugins
filter1
filter2
These filters can then be used in a Jinja template in any role called after ‘my_custom_filter’.
Sharing roles: Ansible Galaxy¶
Ansible Galaxy is a free site for finding, downloading, rating, and reviewing all kinds of community-developed Ansible roles and can be a great way to get a jumpstart on your automation projects.
The client ansible-galaxy
is included in Ansible. The Galaxy client allows you to download roles from Ansible Galaxy, and also provides an excellent default framework for creating your own roles.
Read the Ansible Galaxy documentation page for more information
See also
- Galaxy User Guide
- How to create new roles, share roles on Galaxy, role management
- YAML Syntax
- Learn about YAML syntax
- Working with playbooks
- Review the basic Playbook language features
- Tips and tricks
- Tips and tricks for playbooks
- Using Variables
- Variables in playbooks
- Conditionals
- Conditionals in playbooks
- Loops
- Loops in playbooks
- Tags
- Using tags to select or skip roles/tasks in long playbooks
- Collection Index
- Browse existing collections, modules, and plugins
- Should you develop a module?
- Extending Ansible by writing your own modules
- GitHub Ansible examples
- Complete playbook files from the GitHub project source
- Mailing List
- Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups