260 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
260 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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page_title: "Ansible - Provisioning"
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sidebar_current: "provisioning-ansible"
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---
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# Ansible Provisioner
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**Provisioner name: `"ansible"`**
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The ansible provisioner allows you to provision the guest using
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[Ansible](http://ansible.com) playbooks by executing `ansible-playbook` from the Vagrant host.
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Ansible playbooks are [YAML](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML) documents that
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comprise the set of steps to be orchestrated on one or more machines. This documentation
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page will not go into how to use Ansible or how to write Ansible playbooks, since Ansible
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is a complete deployment and configuration management system that is beyond the scope of
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a single page of documentation.
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<div class="alert alert-warn">
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<p>
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<strong>Warning:</strong> If you're not familiar with Ansible and Vagrant already,
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I recommend starting with the <a href="/v2/provisioning/shell.html">shell
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provisioner</a>. However, if you're comfortable with Vagrant already, Vagrant
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is a great way to learn Ansible.
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</p>
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</div>
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## Setup Requirements
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* [Install Ansible](http://docs.ansible.com/intro_installation.html#installing-the-control-machine) on your Vagrant host.
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* Your Vagrant host should ideally provide a recent version of OpenSSH that [supports ControlPersist](http://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)
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## Inventory File
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When using Ansible, it needs to know on which machines a given playbook should run. It does
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this by way of an [inventory](http://docs.ansible.com/intro_inventory.html) file which lists those machines. In the context of Vagrant,
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there are two ways to approach working with inventory files.
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The first and simplest option is to not provide one to Vagrant at all. Vagrant will generate an
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inventory file encompassing all of the virtual machines it manages, and use it for provisioning
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machines. The generated inventory file is stored as part of your local Vagrant environment in `.vagrant/provisioners/ansible/inventory/vagrant_ansible_inventory`.
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The `ansible.groups` option can be used to pass a hash of group
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names and group members to be included in the generated inventory file. Group variables
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are intentionally not supported, as this practice is not recommended.
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For example:
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```
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ansible.groups = {
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"group1" => ["machine1"],
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"group2" => ["machine2", "machine3"],
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"all_groups:children" => ["group1", "group2", "group3"]
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}
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```
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Note that unmanaged machines and undefined groups are not added to the inventory.
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For example, `group3` in the above example would not be added to the inventory file.
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A generated inventory might look like:
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```
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# Generated by Vagrant
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machine1 ansible_ssh_host=127.0.0.1 ansible_ssh_port=2200
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machine2 ansible_ssh_host=127.0.0.1 ansible_ssh_port=2201
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[group1]
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machine1
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[group2]
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machine2
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[all_groups:children]
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group1
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group2
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```
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The second option is for situations where you'd like to have more control over the inventory management.
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With the `ansible.inventory_path` option, you can reference a specific inventory resource (e.g. a static inventory file, a [dynamic inventory script](http://docs.ansible.com/intro_dynamic_inventory.html) or even [multiple inventories stored in the same directory](http://docs.ansible.com/intro_dynamic_inventory.html#using-multiple-inventory-sources)). Vagrant will then use this inventory information instead of generating it.
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A very simple inventory file for use with Vagrant might look like:
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```
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default ansible_ssh_host=192.168.111.222
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```
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Where the above IP address is one set in your Vagrantfile:
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```
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config.vm.network :private_network, ip: "192.168.111.222"
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```
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Note that machine names in `Vagrantfile` and `ansible.inventory_path` file should correspond,
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unless you use `ansible.limit` option to reference the correct machines.
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## Playbook
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The second component of a successful Ansible provisioner setup is the Ansible playbook
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which contains the steps that should be run on the guest. Ansible's
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[playbook documentation](http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks.html) goes into great
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detail on how to author playbooks, and there are a number of
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[best practices](http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_best_practices.html) that can be applied to use
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Ansible's powerful features effectively. A playbook that installs and starts (or restarts
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if it was updated) the NTP daemon via YUM looks like:
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```
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---
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- hosts: all
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tasks:
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- name: ensure ntpd is at the latest version
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yum: pkg=ntp state=latest
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notify:
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- restart ntpd
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handlers:
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- name: restart ntpd
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service: name=ntpd state=restarted
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```
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You can of course target other operating systems that don't have YUM by changing the
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playbook tasks. Ansible ships with a number of [modules](http://docs.ansible.com/modules.html)
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that make running otherwise tedious tasks dead simple.
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## Running Ansible
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To run Ansible against your Vagrant guest, the basic Vagrantfile configuration looks like:
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```ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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config.vm.provision "ansible" do |ansible|
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ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
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end
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end
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```
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Since an Ansible playbook can include many files, you may also collect the related files in
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a directory structure like this:
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```
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$ tree
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.
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|-- Vagrantfile
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|-- provisioning
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| |-- group_vars
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| |-- all
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| |-- playbook.yml
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```
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In such an arrangement, the `ansible.playbook` path should be adjusted accordingly:
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```ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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config.vm.provision "ansible" do |ansible|
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ansible.playbook = "provisioning/playbook.yml"
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end
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end
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```
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Vagrant will try to run the `playbook.yml` playbook against all machines defined in your Vagrantfile.
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**Backward Compatibility Note**:
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Up to Vagrant 1.4, the Ansible provisioner could potentially connect (multiple times) to all hosts from the inventory file.
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This behaviour is still possible by setting `ansible.limit = 'all'` (see more details below).
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## Additional Options
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The Ansible provisioner also includes a number of additional options that can be set,
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all of which get passed to the `ansible-playbook` command that ships with Ansible.
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* `ansible.extra_vars` can be used to pass additional variables (with highest priority) to the playbook. This parameter can be a path to a JSON or YAML file, or a hash. For example:
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```
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ansible.extra_vars = {
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ntp_server: "pool.ntp.org",
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nginx: {
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port: 8008,
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workers: 4
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}
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}
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```
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These variables take the highest precedence over any other variables.
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* `ansible.sudo` can be set to `true` to cause Ansible to perform commands using sudo.
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* `ansible.sudo_user` can be set to a string containing a username on the guest who should be used
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by the sudo command.
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* `ansible.ask_sudo_pass` can be set to `true` to require Ansible to prompt for a sudo password.
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* `ansible.ask_vault_pass` can be set to `true` to require Ansible to prompt for a vault password.
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* `ansible.vault_password_file` can be set to a string containing the path of a file containing the password used by Ansible Vault.
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* `ansible.limit` can be set to a string or an array of machines or groups from the inventory file to further control which hosts are affected. Note that:
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* As of Vagrant 1.5, the machine name (taken from Vagrantfile) is set as **default limit** to ensure that `vagrant provision` steps only affect the expected machine. Setting `ansible.limit` will override this default.
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* Setting `ansible.limit = 'all'` can be used to make Ansible connect to all machines from the inventory file.
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* `ansible.verbose` can be set to increase Ansible's verbosity to obtain detailed logging:
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* `'v'`, verbose mode
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* `'vv'`
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* `'vvv'`, more
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* `'vvvv'`, connection debugging
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* `ansible.tags` can be set to a string or an array of tags. Only plays, roles and tasks tagged with these values will be executed.
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* `ansible.skip_tags` can be set to a string or an array of tags. Only plays, roles and tasks that *do not match* these values will be executed.
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* `ansible.start_at_task` can be set to a string corresponding to the task name where the playbook provision will start.
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* `ansible.raw_arguments` can be set to an array of strings corresponding to a list of `ansible-playbook` arguments (e.g. `['--check', '-M /my/modules']`). It is an *unsafe wildcard* that can be used to apply Ansible options that are not (yet) supported by this Vagrant provisioner. As of Vagrant 1.7, `raw_arguments` has the highest priority and its values can potentially override or break other Vagrant settings.
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* `ansible.raw_ssh_args` can be set to an array of strings corresponding to a list of OpenSSH client parameters (e.g. `['-o ControlMaster=no']`). It is an *unsafe wildcard* that can be used to pass additional SSH settings to Ansible via `ANSIBLE_SSH_ARGS` environment variable.
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* `ansible.host_key_checking` can be set to `true` which will enable host key checking. As of Vagrant 1.5, the default value is `false` and as of Vagrant 1.7 the user kownn host file (e.g. `~/.ssh/known_hosts`) is no longer read nor modified. In other words: by default, the Ansible provisioner behaves the same as Vagrant native commands (e.g `vagrant ssh`).
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## Tips and Tricks
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### Ansible Parallel Execution
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Vagrant is designed to provision [multi-machine environments](/v2/multi-machine) in sequence, but the following configuration pattern can be used to take advantage of Ansible parallelism:
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```
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config.vm.define 'machine2' do |machine|
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machine.vm.hostname = 'machine2'
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machine.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.77.22"
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end
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config.vm.define 'machine1' do |machine|
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machine.vm.hostname = 'machine1'
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machine.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.77.21"
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machine.vm.provision :ansible do |ansible|
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ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
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# Disable default limit (required with Vagrant 1.5+)
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ansible.limit = 'all'
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end
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end
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```
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### Provide a local `ansible.cfg` file
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Certain settings in Ansible are (only) adjustable via a [configuration file](http://docs.ansible.com/intro_configuration.html), and you might want to ship such a file in your Vagrant project.
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As `ansible-playbook` command looks for local `ansible.cfg` configuration file in its *current directory* (but not in the directory that contains the main playbook), you have to store this file adjacent to your Vagrantfile.
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Note that it is also possible to reference an Ansible configuration file via `ANSIBLE_CONFIG` environment variable, if you want to be flexible about the location of this file.
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### Why does the Ansible provisioner connect as the wrong user?
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It is good to know that the following Ansible settings always override the `config.ssh.username` option defined in [Vagrant SSH Settings](/v2/vagrantfile/ssh_settings.html):
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* `ansible_ssh_user` variable
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* `remote_user` (or `user`) play attribute
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* `remote_user` task attribute
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Be aware that copying snippets from the Ansible documentation might lead to this problem, as `root` is used as the remote user in many [examples](http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_intro.html#hosts-and-users).
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Example of an SSH error (with `vvv` log level), where an undefined remote user `xyz` has replaced `vagrant`:
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```
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TASK: [my_role | do something] *****************
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<127.0.0.1> ESTABLISH CONNECTION FOR USER: xyz
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<127.0.0.1> EXEC ['ssh', '-tt', '-vvv', '-o', 'ControlMaster=auto',...
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fatal: [ansible-devbox] => SSH encountered an unknown error. We recommend you re-run the command using -vvvv, which will enable SSH debugging output to help diagnose the issue.
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```
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In a situation like the above, to override the `remote_user` specified in a play you can use the following line in your Vagrantfile `vm.provision` block:
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```
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ansible.extra_vars = { ansible_ssh_user: 'vagrant' }
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```
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