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-<section>
- <p>
- Every time that I do a clean install on my machine it takes a few hours till I
- get to point where I was before formatting it, install all packages, select
- themes, icons, fonts, install IDEs, extensions and so on. After doing it a few
- times I came to the conclusion that I would save time by spending time
- automating this chore, and as a result, I could tinker a little more with my
- system and not worry about spending a weekend re-installing everything (which
- have happened more time that I'd like to remember).
- </p>
- <p>
- So after a few attempts using python and bash I ended with many files and
- keep everything organized and concise turned out to be more tedious than the
- setup itself. So there comes <a href="https://www.ansible.com/">Ansible</a>.
- It is an enterprise-graded software used to automate tasks. It has A LOT OF
- features and it can be really helpful if you're a sysadmin but for now we're
- going to focuson
- <a href="https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_intro.html#ansible-pull">
- Ansible Pull
- </a>
- and
- <a href="https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks.html">
- Playbooks
- </a>. As better described:
- <blockquote>
- [Ansible-Pull] is used to up a remote copy of ansible on each managed
- node, each set to run via cron and update playbook source via a source
- repository. This inverts the default push architecture of Ansible into a
- pull architecture, which has near-limitless scaling potential.
-
- Playbooks are Ansible’s configuration, deployment, and orchestration
- language. They can describe a policy you want your remote systems to
- enforce, or a set of steps in a general IT process.
- (<a href="https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/cli/ansible-pull.html">source</a>)
- </blockquote>
- </p>
- <p>
- The goal is to pull and run a playbook remotely using a git repository. The
- playbook will describe the tasks needed to setup our machine from scratch.
- <br/>
- But first lets tinker a bit a with playbooks locally with ansible-playbook,
- to do so we need to add localhost to ansible's hosts list. Add it to
- /etc/ansible/hosts:
-<pre><code>[all]
-localhost</code></pre>
- </p>
- <p>
- As an experiment we're going to write a asks to install vim. Currently, I'm
- using Fedora thus we going to use dnf modeule to install packages, but if
- you're using another distribution look for a equivalent module like apt
- module for Ubuntu.
-
- The playbook to install is quite simple:
-
-<pre><code># main.yaml
-- hosts: all
- tasks:
- - name: install vim
- dnf:
- name: vim
- state: latest</code></pre>
- <dl>
- <dt>host</dt>
- <dd>it is required and it has to match our hosts otherwise the playbook won't run.</dd>
- <dt>taks</dt>
- <dd>
- it is the list of tasks that the playbook will perform, in this case
- will be dnf install vim.
- </dd>
- </dl>
- </p>
- <p>
- To run a playbook use the command ansible-playbook commando to run main.yml
- direct from disk, do to so just run the following command:
-<pre><code>sudo ansible-playbook --connection=local main.yml</code></pre>
- </p>
- <p>
- After a few seconds, vim will be installed on your machine.
-<pre><code>PLAY [all] *************************************************************
-
-TASK [Gathering Facts] *************************************************
-ok: [localhost]
-
-TASK [install vim] *****************************************************
-ok: [localhost]
-
-PLAY RECAP *************************************************************
-localhost : ok=2 changed=0 unreachable=0 failed=0</code></pre>
- </p>
- <p>
- This is the first step, next part we shall create a more complex playbook and
- setup repository to run it remotely using ansible-pull.
- </p>
-</section>