This section shows you how to collection information from a running virtual machine.
You’ve already followed How to run a virtual machine and your virtual machine runs VMware Tools.
In this example, we use the vcenter_vm_guest_*
module to collect information about the associated resources.
Here we use vcenter_vm_guest_localfilesystem_info
to retrieve the details about the filesystem of the guest. In this example we also use a retries
loop. The VMware Tools may take a bit of time to start and by doing so, we give the VM a bit more time.
- name: Get guest filesystem information vmware.vmware_rest.vcenter_vm_guest_localfilesystem_info: vm: '{{ test_vm1_info.id }}' register: _result until: - _result is not failed retries: 60 delay: 5
{ "value": [ { "value": { "mappings": [], "free_space": 774766592, "capacity": 2515173376 }, "key": "/" } ], "changed": false }
You can use vcenter_vm_guest_identity_info
to get details like the OS family or the hostname of the running VM.
- name: Get guest identity information vmware.vmware_rest.vcenter_vm_guest_identity_info: vm: '{{ test_vm1_info.id }}' register: _result
{ "value": { "full_name": { "args": [], "default_message": "Red Hat Fedora (64-bit)", "id": "vmsg.guestos.fedora64Guest.label" }, "name": "FEDORA_64", "ip_address": "192.168.122.242", "family": "LINUX", "host_name": "localhost.localdomain" }, "changed": false }
vcenter_vm_guest_networking_info
will return the OS network configuration.
- name: Get guest networking information vmware.vmware_rest.vcenter_vm_guest_networking_info: vm: '{{ test_vm1_info.id }}' register: _result
{ "value": { "dns": { "ip_addresses": [ "10.0.2.3" ], "search_domains": [ "localdomain" ] }, "dns_values": { "domain_name": "localdomain", "host_name": "localhost.localdomain" } }, "changed": false }
vcenter_vm_guest_networking_interfaces_info
will return a list of NIC configurations.
See also How to attach a VM to a network.
- name: Get guest network interfaces information vmware.vmware_rest.vcenter_vm_guest_networking_interfaces_info: vm: '{{ test_vm1_info.id }}' register: _result
{ "value": [ { "mac_address": "00:50:56:b3:49:5c", "ip": { "ip_addresses": [ { "ip_address": "192.168.122.242", "prefix_length": 24, "state": "PREFERRED" }, { "ip_address": "fe80::b8d0:511b:897f:65a2", "prefix_length": 64, "state": "UNKNOWN" } ] }, "nic": "4000" } ], "changed": false }
Use vcenter_vm_guest_networking_routes_info
to explore the route table of your vitual machine.
- name: Get guest network routes information vmware.vmware_rest.vcenter_vm_guest_networking_routes_info: vm: '{{ test_vm1_info.id }}' register: _result
{ "value": [ { "gateway_address": "192.168.122.1", "interface_index": 0, "prefix_length": 0, "network": "0.0.0.0" }, { "interface_index": 0, "prefix_length": 24, "network": "192.168.122.0" }, { "interface_index": 0, "prefix_length": 64, "network": "fe80::" }, { "interface_index": 0, "prefix_length": 128, "network": "fe80::b8d0:511b:897f:65a2" }, { "interface_index": 0, "prefix_length": 8, "network": "ff00::" } ], "changed": false }
© 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/scenario_guides/vmware_rest_scenarios/vm_tool_information.html