pulls playbooks from a VCS repo and executes them for the local host
usage: ansible-pull [-h] [--version] [-v] [-k] [--private-key PRIVATE_KEY_FILE] [-u REMOTE_USER] [-c CONNECTION] [-T TIMEOUT] [--ssh-common-args SSH_COMMON_ARGS] [--sftp-extra-args SFTP_EXTRA_ARGS] [--scp-extra-args SCP_EXTRA_ARGS] [--ssh-extra-args SSH_EXTRA_ARGS] [--vault-id VAULT_IDS] [--ask-vault-password | --vault-password-file VAULT_PASSWORD_FILES] [-e EXTRA_VARS] [-t TAGS] [--skip-tags SKIP_TAGS] [-i INVENTORY] [--list-hosts] [-l SUBSET] [-M MODULE_PATH] [-K] [--purge] [-o] [-s SLEEP] [-f] [-d DEST] [-U URL] [--full] [-C CHECKOUT] [--accept-host-key] [-m MODULE_NAME] [--verify-commit] [--clean] [--track-subs] [--check] [--diff] [playbook.yml [playbook.yml ...]]
Used to pull a remote copy of ansible on each managed node, each set to run via cron and update playbook source via a source repository. This inverts the default push architecture of ansible into a pull architecture, which has near-limitless scaling potential.
The setup playbook can be tuned to change the cron frequency, logging locations, and parameters to ansible-pull. This is useful both for extreme scale-out as well as periodic remediation. Usage of the ‘fetch’ module to retrieve logs from ansible-pull runs would be an excellent way to gather and analyze remote logs from ansible-pull.
--accept-host-key
adds the hostkey for the repo url if not already added
--ask-vault-password, --ask-vault-pass
ask for vault password
--check
don’t make any changes; instead, try to predict some of the changes that may occur
--clean
modified files in the working repository will be discarded
--diff
when changing (small) files and templates, show the differences in those files; works great with –check
--full
Do a full clone, instead of a shallow one.
--list-hosts
outputs a list of matching hosts; does not execute anything else
--private-key <PRIVATE_KEY_FILE>, --key-file <PRIVATE_KEY_FILE>
use this file to authenticate the connection
--purge
purge checkout after playbook run
--scp-extra-args <SCP_EXTRA_ARGS>
specify extra arguments to pass to scp only (e.g. -l)
--sftp-extra-args <SFTP_EXTRA_ARGS>
specify extra arguments to pass to sftp only (e.g. -f, -l)
--skip-tags
only run plays and tasks whose tags do not match these values
--ssh-common-args <SSH_COMMON_ARGS>
specify common arguments to pass to sftp/scp/ssh (e.g. ProxyCommand)
--ssh-extra-args <SSH_EXTRA_ARGS>
specify extra arguments to pass to ssh only (e.g. -R)
--track-subs
submodules will track the latest changes. This is equivalent to specifying the –remote flag to git submodule update
--vault-id
the vault identity to use
--vault-password-file, --vault-pass-file
vault password file
--verify-commit
verify GPG signature of checked out commit, if it fails abort running the playbook. This needs the corresponding VCS module to support such an operation
--version
show program’s version number, config file location, configured module search path, module location, executable location and exit
-C <CHECKOUT>, --checkout <CHECKOUT>
branch/tag/commit to checkout. Defaults to behavior of repository module.
-K, --ask-become-pass
ask for privilege escalation password
-M, --module-path
prepend colon-separated path(s) to module library (default=~/.ansible/plugins/modules:/usr/share/ansible/plugins/modules)
-T <TIMEOUT>, --timeout <TIMEOUT>
override the connection timeout in seconds (default=10)
-U <URL>, --url <URL>
URL of the playbook repository
-c <CONNECTION>, --connection <CONNECTION>
connection type to use (default=smart)
-d <DEST>, --directory <DEST>
absolute path of repository checkout directory (relative paths are not supported)
-e, --extra-vars
set additional variables as key=value or YAML/JSON, if filename prepend with @
-f, --force
run the playbook even if the repository could not be updated
-h, --help
show this help message and exit
-i, --inventory, --inventory-file
specify inventory host path or comma separated host list. –inventory-file is deprecated
-k, --ask-pass
ask for connection password
-l <SUBSET>, --limit <SUBSET>
further limit selected hosts to an additional pattern
-m <MODULE_NAME>, --module-name <MODULE_NAME>
Repository module name, which ansible will use to check out the repo. Choices are (‘git’, ‘subversion’, ‘hg’, ‘bzr’). Default is git.
-o, --only-if-changed
only run the playbook if the repository has been updated
-s <SLEEP>, --sleep <SLEEP>
sleep for random interval (between 0 and n number of seconds) before starting. This is a useful way to disperse git requests
-t, --tags
only run plays and tasks tagged with these values
-u <REMOTE_USER>, --user <REMOTE_USER>
connect as this user (default=None)
-v, --verbose
verbose mode (-vvv for more, -vvvv to enable connection debugging)
The following environment variables may be specified.
ANSIBLE_CONFIG
– Override the default ansible config file
Many more are available for most options in ansible.cfg
/etc/ansible/ansible.cfg
– Config file, used if present
~/.ansible.cfg
– User config file, overrides the default config if present
Ansible was originally written by Michael DeHaan.
See the AUTHORS
file for a complete list of contributors.
Ansible is released under the terms of the GPLv3+ License.
ansible(1), ansible-config(1), ansible-console(1), ansible-doc(1), ansible-galaxy(1), ansible-inventory(1), ansible-playbook(1), ansible-pull(1), ansible-vault(1),
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2021 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/cli/ansible-pull.html