query
and wantlist=True
Lookup plugins are an Ansible-specific extension to the Jinja2 templating language. You can use lookup plugins to access data from outside sources (files, databases, key/value stores, APIs, and other services) within your playbooks. Like all templating, lookups execute and are evaluated on the Ansible control machine. Ansible makes the data returned by a lookup plugin available using the standard templating system. You can use lookup plugins to load variables or templates with information from external sources.
Note
wantlist=True
to lookups to use in Jinja2 template “for” loops.Warning
|quote
filter to ensure safe usage.Ansible enables all lookup plugins it can find. You can activate a custom lookup by either dropping it into a lookup_plugins
directory adjacent to your play, inside the plugins/lookup/
directory of a collection you have installed, inside a standalone role, or in one of the lookup directory sources configured in ansible.cfg.
You can use lookup plugins anywhere you can use templating in Ansible: in a play, in variables file, or in a Jinja2 template for the template module.
vars: file_contents: "{{lookup('file', 'path/to/file.txt')}}"
Lookups are an integral part of loops. Wherever you see with_
, the part after the underscore is the name of a lookup. For this reason, most lookups output lists and take lists as input; for example, with_items
uses the items lookup:
tasks: - name: count to 3 debug: msg={{item}} with_items: [1, 2, 3]
You can combine lookups with filters, tests and even each other to do some complex data generation and manipulation. For example:
tasks: - name: valid but useless and over complicated chained lookups and filters debug: msg="find the answer here:\n{{ lookup('url', 'https://google.com/search/?q=' + item|urlencode)|join(' ') }}" with_nested: - "{{lookup('consul_kv', 'bcs/' + lookup('file', '/the/question') + ', host=localhost, port=2000')|shuffle}}" - "{{lookup('sequence', 'end=42 start=2 step=2')|map('log', 4)|list)}}" - ['a', 'c', 'd', 'c']
New in version 2.6.
You can control how errors behave in all lookup plugins by setting errors
to ignore
, warn
, or strict
. The default setting is strict
, which causes the task to fail if the lookup returns an error. For example:
To ignore lookup errors:
- name: if this file does not exist, I do not care .. file plugin itself warns anyway ... debug: msg="{{ lookup('file', '/nosuchfile', errors='ignore') }}"
[WARNING]: Unable to find '/nosuchfile' in expected paths (use -vvvvv to see paths) ok: [localhost] => { "msg": "" }
To get a warning instead of a failure:
- name: if this file does not exist, let me know, but continue debug: msg="{{ lookup('file', '/nosuchfile', errors='warn') }}"
[WARNING]: Unable to find '/nosuchfile' in expected paths (use -vvvvv to see paths) [WARNING]: An unhandled exception occurred while running the lookup plugin 'file'. Error was a <class 'ansible.errors.AnsibleError'>, original message: could not locate file in lookup: /nosuchfile ok: [localhost] => { "msg": "" }
To get a fatal error (the default):
- name: if this file does not exist, FAIL (this is the default) debug: msg="{{ lookup('file', '/nosuchfile', errors='strict') }}"
[WARNING]: Unable to find '/nosuchfile' in expected paths (use -vvvvv to see paths) fatal: [localhost]: FAILED! => {"msg": "An unhandled exception occurred while running the lookup plugin 'file'. Error was a <class 'ansible.errors.AnsibleError'>, original message: could not locate file in lookup: /nosuchfile"}
query
and wantlist=True
New in version 2.5.
In Ansible 2.5, a new Jinja2 function called query
was added for invoking lookup plugins. The difference between lookup
and query
is largely that query
will always return a list. The default behavior of lookup
is to return a string of comma separated values. lookup
can be explicitly configured to return a list using wantlist=True
.
This feature provides an easier and more consistent interface for interacting with the new loop
keyword, while maintaining backwards compatibility with other uses of lookup
.
The following examples are equivalent:
lookup('dict', dict_variable, wantlist=True) query('dict', dict_variable)
As demonstrated above, the behavior of wantlist=True
is implicit when using query
.
Additionally, q
was introduced as a shortform of query
:
q('dict', dict_variable)
You can use ansible-doc -t lookup -l
to see the list of available plugins. Use ansible-doc -t lookup <plugin name>
to see specific documents and examples.
See also
An introduction to playbooks
Ansible inventory plugins
Ansible callback plugins
Jinja2 filter plugins
Jinja2 test plugins
Jinja2 lookup plugins
Have a question? Stop by the google group!
#ansible IRC chat channel
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.10/plugins/lookup.html