Ansible allows you to use conditionals to control the flow of your playbooks. Ansible networking command modules use the following unique conditional statements.
eq
- Equalneq
- Not equalgt
- Greater thange
- Greater than or equallt
- Less thanle
- Less than or equalcontains
- Object contains specified itemConditional statements evaluate the results from the commands that are executed remotely on the device. Once the task executes the command set, the wait_for
argument can be used to evaluate the results before returning control to the Ansible playbook.
For example:
--- - name: wait for interface to be admin enabled eos_command: commands: - show interface Ethernet4 | json wait_for: - "result[0].interfaces.Ethernet4.interfaceStatus eq connected"
In the above example task, the command show interface Ethernet4 | json
is executed on the remote device and the results are evaluated. If the path (result[0].interfaces.Ethernet4.interfaceStatus)
is not equal to “connected”, then the command is retried. This process continues until either the condition is satisfied or the number of retries has expired (by default, this is 10 retries at 1 second intervals).
The commands module can also evaluate more than one set of command results in an interface. For instance:
--- - name: wait for interfaces to be admin enabled eos_command: commands: - show interface Ethernet4 | json - show interface Ethernet5 | json wait_for: - "result[0].interfaces.Ethernet4.interfaceStatus eq connected" - "result[1].interfaces.Ethernet5.interfaceStatus eq connected"
In the above example, two commands are executed on the remote device, and the results are evaluated. By specifying the result index value (0 or 1), the correct result output is checked against the conditional.
The wait_for
argument must always start with result and then the command index in []
, where 0
is the first command in the commands list, 1
is the second command, 2
is the third and so on.
Network devices may require that you answer a prompt before performing a change on the device. Individual network modules such as ios_command and nxos_command can handle this with a prompt
parameter.
Note
prompt
is a Python regex. If you add special characters such as ?
in the prompt
value, the prompt won’t match and you will get a timeout. To avoid this, ensure that the prompt
value is a Python regex that matches the actual device prompt. Any special characters must be handled correctly in the prompt
regex.
You can also use the cli_command to handle multiple prompts.
--- - name: multiple prompt, multiple answer (mandatory check for all prompts) cli_command: command: "copy sftp sftp://user@host//user/test.img" check_all: True prompt: - "Confirm download operation" - "Password" - "Do you want to change that to the standby image" answer: - 'y' - <password> - 'y'
You must list the prompt and the answers in the same order (that is, prompt[0] is answered by answer[0]).
In the above example, check_all: True
ensures that the task gives the matching answer to each prompt. Without that setting, a task with multiple prompts would give the first answer to every prompt.
In the following example, the second answer would be ignored and y
would be the answer given to both prompts. That is, this task only works because both answers are identical. Also notice again that prompt
must be a Python regex, which is why the ?
is escaped in the first prompt.
--- - name: reboot ios device cli_command: command: reload prompt: - Save\? - confirm answer: - y - y
See also
wait_for
, wait_for_connection
, and prompt
for network devices.cli_command
.
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.9/network/user_guide/network_working_with_command_output.html