The Vagrant Ansible provisioner allows you to provision the guest using [Ansible](http://ansible.com) playbooks by executing **`ansible-playbook` from the Vagrant host**.
If you are not familiar with Ansible and Vagrant already, I recommend starting with the <ahref="/docs/provisioning/shell.html">shell provisioner</a>. However, if you are comfortable with Vagrant already, Vagrant is a great way to learn Ansible.
- Your Vagrant host should ideally provide a recent version of OpenSSH that [supports ControlPersist](https://docs.ansible.com/faq.html#how-do-i-get-ansible-to-reuse-connections-enable-kerberized-ssh-or-have-ansible-pay-attention-to-my-local-ssh-config-file).
If installing Ansible directly on the Vagrant host is not an option in your development environment, you might be looking for the <ahref="/docs/provisioning/ansible_local.html">Ansible Local provisioner</a> alternative.
This page only documents the specific parts of the `ansible` (remote) provisioner. General Ansible concepts like Playbook or Inventory are shortly explained in the [introduction to Ansible and Vagrant](/docs/provisioning/ansible_intro.html).
This section lists the _specific_ options for the Ansible (remote) provisioner. In addition to the options listed below, this provisioner supports the [**common options** for both Ansible provisioners](/docs/provisioning/ansible_common.html).
-`ask_become_pass` (boolean) - require Ansible to [prompt for a password](https://docs.ansible.com/intro_getting_started.html#remote-connection-information) when switching to another user with the [become/sudo mechanism](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/become.html).
-`ask_sudo_pass` (boolean) - Backwards compatible alias for the [ask_become_pass](#ask_become_pass) option.
<divclass="alert alert-warning">
<strong>Deprecation:</strong>
The `ask_sudo_pass` option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Please use the [**`ask_become_pass`**](#ask_become_pass) option instead.
-`force_remote_user` (boolean) - require Vagrant to set the `ansible_ssh_user` setting in the generated inventory, or as an extra variable when a static inventory is used. All the Ansible `remote_user` parameters will then be overridden by the value of `config.ssh.username` of the [Vagrant SSH Settings](/docs/vagrantfile/ssh_settings.html).
If this option is set to `false` Vagrant will set the Vagrant SSH username as a default Ansible remote user, but `remote_user` parameters of your Ansible plays or tasks will still be taken into account and thus override the Vagrant configuration.
It is an *unsafe wildcard* that can be used to pass additional SSH settings to Ansible via `ANSIBLE_SSH_ARGS` environment variable, overriding any other SSH arguments (e.g. defined in an [`ansible.cfg` configuration file](https://docs.ansible.com/intro_configuration.html#ssh-args)).
Vagrant is designed to provision [multi-machine environments](/docs/multi-machine) in sequence, but the following configuration pattern can be used to take advantage of Ansible parallelism:
If you apply this parallel provisioning pattern with a static Ansible inventory, you will have to organize the things so that [all the relevant private keys are provided to the `ansible-playbook` command](https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/pull/5765#issuecomment-120247738). The same kind of considerations applies if you are using multiple private keys for a same machine (see [`config.ssh.private_key_path` SSH setting](/docs/vagrantfile/ssh_settings.html)).
The Ansible provisioner is implemented with native OpenSSH support in mind, and there is no official support for [paramiko](https://github.com/paramiko/paramiko/) (A native Python SSHv2 protocol library).
With a custom inventory, the private key must be specified (e.g. via an `ansible.cfg` configuration file, `--private-key` argument, or as part of your inventory file):