Note
This module is part of ansible-base
and included in all Ansible installations. In most cases, you can use the short module name winrm even without specifying the collections:
keyword. Despite that, we recommend you use the FQCN for easy linking to the module documentation and to avoid conflicting with other collections that may have the same module name.
New in version 2.0: of ansible.builtin
ansible_winrm_<option>
.The below requirements are needed on the local controller node that executes this connection.
Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Configuration | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
connection_timeout integer | var: ansible_winrm_connection_timeout | Sets the operation and read timeout settings for the WinRM connection. Corresponds to the operation_timeout_sec and read_timeout_sec args in pywinrm so avoid setting these vars with this one.The default value is whatever is set in the installed version of pywinrm. | |
kerberos_command string | Default: "kinit" | var: ansible_winrm_kinit_cmd | kerberos command to use to request a authentication ticket |
kerberos_mode string |
| var: ansible_winrm_kinit_mode | kerberos usage mode. The managed option means Ansible will obtain kerberos ticket. While the manual one means a ticket must already have been obtained by the user. If having issues with Ansible freezing when trying to obtain the Kerberos ticket, you can either set this to manual and obtain it outside Ansible or install pexpect through pip and try again. |
kinit_args string added in 2.11 of ansible.builtin | var: ansible_winrm_kinit_args | Extra arguments to pass to kinit when getting the Kerberos authentication ticket.By default no extra arguments are passed into kinit unless ansible_winrm_kerberos_delegation is also set. In that case -f is added to the kinit args so a forwardable ticket is retrieved.If set, the args will overwrite any existing defaults for kinit , including -f for a delegated ticket. | |
path string | Default: "/wsman" | var: ansible_winrm_path | URI path to connect to |
pipelining boolean |
"ANSIBLE_PIPELINING" | ini entries: [defaults] env:ANSIBLE_PIPELINING var: ansible_pipelining | Pipelining reduces the number of connection operations required to execute a module on the remote server, by executing many Ansible modules without actual file transfers. This can result in a very significant performance improvement when enabled. However this can conflict with privilege escalation (become). For example, when using sudo operations you must first disable 'requiretty' in the sudoers file for the target hosts, which is why this feature is disabled by default. |
port integer | Default: 5986 | var: ansible_port var: ansible_winrm_port | port for winrm to connect on remote target The default is the https (5986) port, if using http it should be 5985 |
remote_addr string | Default: "inventory_hostname" | var: ansible_host var: ansible_winrm_host | Address of the windows machine |
remote_password string | var: ansible_password var: ansible_winrm_pass var: ansible_winrm_password | Authentication password for the remote_user . Can be supplied as CLI option.aliases: password | |
remote_user string | var: ansible_user var: ansible_winrm_user | The user to log in as to the Windows machine | |
scheme string |
| var: ansible_winrm_scheme | URI scheme to use If not set, then will default to https or http if port is 5985 . |
transport list / elements=string | var: ansible_winrm_transport | List of winrm transports to attempt to use (ssl, plaintext, kerberos, etc) If None (the default) the plugin will try to automatically guess the correct list The choices available depend on your version of pywinrm |
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2021 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.11/collections/ansible/builtin/winrm_connection.html