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Workshop Exercise - Templates

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Table of Contents

Objective

This exercise will cover Jinja2 templating. Ansible uses Jinja2 templating to modify files before they are distributed to managed hosts. Jinja2 is one of the most used template engines for Python (http://jinja.pocoo.org/).

Guide

Step 1 - Using Templates in Playbooks

When a template for a file has been created, it can be deployed to the managed hosts using the template module, which supports the transfer of a local file from the control node to the managed hosts.

As an example of using templates you will change the motd file to contain host-specific data.

First create the directory templates to hold template resources in ~/ansible-files/:

[student<X>@ansible ansible-files]$ mkdir templates

Then in the ~/ansible-files/templates/ directory create the template file motd-facts.j2:

Welcome to {{ ansible_hostname }}.
{{ ansible_distribution }} {{ ansible_distribution_version}}
deployed on {{ ansible_architecture }} architecture.

The template file contains the basic text that will later be copied over. It also contains variables which will be replaced on the target machines individually.

Next we need a playbook to use this template. In the ~/ansible-files/ directory create the Playbook motd-facts.yml:

---
- name: Fill motd file with host data
  hosts: node1
  become: true
  tasks:
    - template:
        src: motd-facts.j2
        dest: /etc/motd
        owner: root
        group: root
        mode: 0644

You have done this a couple of times by now:

You should see how Ansible replaces the variables with the facts it discovered from the system.

Step 2 - Challenge Lab

Add a line to the template to list the current kernel of the managed node.

Tip

Do a grep -i for kernel

Warning

Solution below!


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