Ansible/Hosts: Difference between revisions
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* [[Ansible/Splitting Hosts File]] - when the hosts file gets long and number of machines being managed gets large, you may need to split the hosts file into parts. | * [[Ansible/Splitting Hosts File]] - when the hosts file gets long and number of machines being managed gets large, you may need to split the hosts file into parts. | ||
==Ansible and AWS== | |||
* [[Ansible/AWS Hosts]] - how to use Ansible when the hosts are managed by AWS | |||
=Examples= | =Examples= | ||
Revision as of 19:29, 8 November 2018
Topics and pages related to the Ansible hosts file
Topics
- Ansible/Groups - a page covering how to use the Ansible hosts file to collect servers into groups, useful for defining roles, tasks, and deployment environments
- Ansible/Group Variables - applying variables to an entire group
- Ansible/Host Naming - naming hosts, pets vs cattle, etc.
- Ansible/Splitting Hosts File - when the hosts file gets long and number of machines being managed gets large, you may need to split the hosts file into parts.
Ansible and AWS
- Ansible/AWS Hosts - how to use Ansible when the hosts are managed by AWS
Examples
Basic
- Ansible/Nginx Playbook - an Ansible hosts file demonstrating a simple one-machine Nginx server
Advanced
- Ansible/Full Stack Playbook - an Ansible hosts file demonstrating a complex grouping strategy to organize the deployment of a full stack web application into 3 different environments