Ansible is a tool to automate configuration and management of one or more hosts. Etckeeper is a tool to put file changes under the /etc
directory into version control.
This repository contrains Ansible actions so that when an Ansible task changes something
under the /etc
directory, those changes are checked in into version control.
If you install a package with the
package module
(or
apt,
yum
or
dnf)
then
etckeeper
will be automatically called and changes in /etc
will be committed.
However changes caused by other modules like for instance
lineinfile
or
user
are not committed automatically.
With the three actions etckeeper-pre-task
, etckeeper-commit-task
, and
etckeeper-post-task
you can make sure that any changes in /etc
triggered
by an ansible task are commited.
Here is an example of how to capture changes made by the user
module:
---
- hosts: all
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- etckeeper-pre-task:
- name: Remove user Darl McBribe
user:
name: dmcbribe
state: absent
remove: yes
register: user_result
- etckeeper-post-task:
when: user_result.changed
If there were uncommitted changes when the playbook started, those were checked in
with commit message saving uncommitted changes in /etc prior to ansible task run
.
If the user were removed, that change would be checked in with a commit with message
saving uncommitted changes in /etc prior to ansible task run
.
To set a custom message on a commit:
---
- hosts: all
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- etckeeper-commit-task:
msg: Etckeeper commit in role_name taskfile before some_change
Etckeeper must be installed and initialized. Notice however that if etckeeper is not installed on a host, the actions does not fail so it is safe to add them to a playbook even if not all hosts use etckeeper.
The actions need to be run as root.
TBD
There is nothing to configure for the actions.
You are welcome to create pull requests if you think there is something that can be improved.
- Figure out how to share code between the three files.
Because handler invocations are delayed to the end, multiple calls are joined and reduced to one, and handlers might not be called under some circumstances.
But I do not want to pepper my playbooks with calls to etckeeper actions around all tasks that can modify /etc
.
You should and you have to. If you think that you rather would have one commit for
all changes made by a playbook, you are forgetting that any calls to package
et al. will create individual
commits inbetween thus ruining that idea.
It is possible to achieve this idea if you first check out a new playbook run branch, create commits on that one and then at the end do a non-fast-forward merge back to master. But you still should create individual commit for individual changes, which is good version control practice in any case.
Now if you really want to put in minium effort, it is possible to put just one call to etckeeper-pre-task at the very beginning and one unconditional call to etckeeper-post-task at the very end. That will work fine, just not giving you the full granularity you could have had.
The latest version is 1.0.1. See the changelog for details.
Håkon Løvdal [email protected]
GPL version 3 or (at your option) any later version. (summary)