By default Ansible runs tasks synchronously, holding the connection to the remote node open until the action is completed. This means within a playbook, each task blocks the next task by default, meaning subsequent tasks will not run until the current task completes. This behavior can create challenges. For example, a task may take longer to complete than the SSH session allows for, causing a timeout. Or you may want a long-running process to execute in the background while you perform other tasks concurrently. Asynchronous mode lets you control how long-running tasks execute.
You can execute long-running operations in the background with ad hoc tasks. For example, to execute long_running_operation
asynchronously in the background, with a timeout (-B
) of 3600 seconds, and without polling (-P
):
$ ansible all -B 3600 -P 0 -a "/usr/bin/long_running_operation --do-stuff"
To check on the job status later, use the async_status
module, passing it the job ID that was returned when you ran the original job in the background:
$ ansible web1.example.com -m async_status -a "jid=488359678239.2844"
Ansible can also check on the status of your long-running job automatically with polling. In most cases, Ansible will keep the connection to your remote node open between polls. To run for 30 minutes and poll for status every 60 seconds:
$ ansible all -B 1800 -P 60 -a "/usr/bin/long_running_operation --do-stuff"
Poll mode is smart so all jobs will be started before polling begins on any machine. Be sure to use a high enough --forks
value if you want to get all of your jobs started very quickly. After the time limit (in seconds) runs out (-B
), the process on the remote nodes will be terminated.
Asynchronous mode is best suited to long-running shell commands or software upgrades. Running the copy module asynchronously, for example, does not do a background file transfer.
Playbooks also support asynchronous mode and polling, with a simplified syntax. You can use asynchronous mode in playbooks to avoid connection timeouts or to avoid blocking subsequent tasks. The behavior of asynchronous mode in a playbook depends on the value of poll
.
If you want to set a longer timeout limit for a certain task in your playbook, use async
with poll
set to a positive value. Ansible will still block the next task in your playbook, waiting until the async task either completes, fails or times out. However, the task will only time out if it exceeds the timeout limit you set with the async
parameter.
To avoid timeouts on a task, specify its maximum runtime and how frequently you would like to poll for status:
--- - hosts: all remote_user: root tasks: - name: Simulate long running op (15 sec), wait for up to 45 sec, poll every 5 sec ansible.builtin.command: /bin/sleep 15 async: 45 poll: 5
Note
The default poll value is set by the DEFAULT_POLL_INTERVAL setting. There is no default for the async time limit. If you leave off the ‘async’ keyword, the task runs synchronously, which is Ansible’s default.
Note
As of Ansible 2.3, async does not support check mode and will fail the task when run in check mode. See Validating tasks: check mode and diff mode on how to skip a task in check mode.
If you want to run multiple tasks in a playbook concurrently, use async
with poll
set to 0. When you set poll: 0
, Ansible starts the task and immediately moves on to the next task without waiting for a result. Each async task runs until it either completes, fails or times out (runs longer than its async
value). The playbook run ends without checking back on async tasks.
To run a playbook task asynchronously:
--- - hosts: all remote_user: root tasks: - name: Simulate long running op, allow to run for 45 sec, fire and forget ansible.builtin.command: /bin/sleep 15 async: 45 poll: 0
Note
Do not specify a poll value of 0 with operations that require exclusive locks (such as yum transactions) if you expect to run other commands later in the playbook against those same resources.
Note
Using a higher value for --forks
will result in kicking off asynchronous tasks even faster. This also increases the efficiency of polling.
If you need a synchronization point with an async task, you can register it to obtain its job ID and use the async_status module to observe it in a later task. For example:
- name: Run an async task ansible.builtin.yum: name: docker-io state: present async: 1000 poll: 0 register: yum_sleeper - name: Check on an async task async_status: jid: "{{ yum_sleeper.ansible_job_id }}" register: job_result until: job_result.finished retries: 100 delay: 10
Note
If the value of async:
is not high enough, this will cause the “check on it later” task to fail because the temporary status file that the async_status:
is looking for will not have been written or no longer exist
To run multiple asynchronous tasks while limiting the number of tasks running concurrently:
##################### # main.yml ##################### - name: Run items asynchronously in batch of two items vars: sleep_durations: - 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 durations: "{{ item }}" include_tasks: execute_batch.yml loop: "{{ sleep_durations | batch(2) | list }}" ##################### # execute_batch.yml ##################### - name: Async sleeping for batched_items ansible.builtin.command: sleep {{ async_item }} async: 45 poll: 0 loop: "{{ durations }}" loop_control: loop_var: "async_item" register: async_results - name: Check sync status async_status: jid: "{{ async_result_item.ansible_job_id }}" loop: "{{ async_results.results }}" loop_control: loop_var: "async_result_item" register: async_poll_results until: async_poll_results.finished retries: 30
See also
Options for controlling playbook execution
An introduction to playbooks
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#ansible IRC chat channel
© 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/user_guide/playbooks_async.html