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📦 Ansible Bundler

Ansible Bundler embeds together a full playbook and its dependencies so you can run it it from a single binary on any* computer, having just Python as a host dependency - you don't even need Ansible! Think of it as makeself for Ansible playbooks.

The closest that Ansible provides natively for this is ansible-pull, but it requires the host to have Ansible properly installed, and you need to manage the playbook location yourself.

While playbooks were never meant to be used as standalone packages, Ansible offers tools to help on more complex deployments, such as Tower and AWX (Tower's open-source upstream project).

* Well, we currently only support Unix based OSes.

Use case

Ansible is awesome. It's so powerful and flexible that we can use from server provisioning to automating mundane tasks such as bootstraping your own computer.

One thing that it lacks though is the ability to be used for simple auto scaling deployments where you just want to pull a playbook and run it easily. Currently, you need to setup Ansible, ensure you have a repository to download the files, manage the right permissions to it and then run ansible-pull. This can get harder when you have more complex playbooks with several dependencies.

Ansible Bundler makes these steps easier by having a single binary that takes care of setting up Ansible on the host and executing the playbook without having to do anything globally (such as installing ansible). You can simply pull the playbook binary and execute it right away.

Usage

Generate a new self-contained playbook:
$ bundle-playbook -f playbook.yml
Run it on the host:
$ ./playbook.run

You will need Python on the host in order to run the final executable. 👍

Advanced build
$ bundle-playbook --playbook-file=playbook.yml \
  --requirements-file=requirements.yml \
  --vars-file=vars.yml \
  --ansible-version=2.8.0 \
  --python-package=boto3 \
  --extra-deps=files

By default, all files on roles folder in the same path as the playbook.yml are automatically included. If you need more dependent files, you can specify them using --extra-deps (short -d).

Run bundle-playbook --help to get a list of all possible parameters.

Binary interface

The built playbook binary has a few options that you can use at runtime. Here are the options you can currently use:

--help            Show this help message and exit
--debug           Run the packaged bundler with verbose logging
--keep-temp       Keep extracted files into the tempfolder after finishing. This is 
                  useful for debugging purposes
-e <EXTRA_VARS>, --extra-vars=<EXTRA_VARS>
                  Set additional variables as key=value or YAML/JSON, or a filename if
                  prepended with @. You can pass this parameter multiple times. This will
                  take precedence on the variables that have been previously defined on
                  the packaged playbook.

Installation

Currently you can download and install it using the pre-built packages that are available in RPM and DEB formats on Github releases. They should work on most RHEL-based distros (CentOS, Fedora, Amazon Linux, etc) as well as on Debian-based distros (Ubuntu, Mint, etc). There's also a AUR available if you're using Arch.

If your distro is not compatible with the prebuilt packages, please refer to Building below.

Building

You will need Docker installed on your machine. When you have it installed, you can proceed installing the dependencies with:

$ make deps

This is only required once. After that you're good to go. You can currently build the package in a directory structure that you can later copy to your root filesystem. This is very useful as a base for building OS packages for most package managers such as RPM or DEB.

$ make

The output will be at build/pkg

In fact, we offer support for building deb and rpm artifacts out of the box:

$ make deb rpm

The output will be at build/dist

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate. For more information, please refer to Contributing.

License

This project is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License - see the LICENSE.md file for details.