Netconf plugins are abstractions over the Netconf interface to network devices. They provide a standard interface for Ansible to execute tasks on those network devices.
These plugins generally correspond one-to-one to network device platforms. The appropriate netconf plugin will thus be automatically loaded based on the ansible_network_os
variable. If the platform supports standard Netconf implementation as defined in the Netconf RFC specification the default
netconf plugin will be used. In case if the platform supports propriety Netconf RPC’s in that case the interface can be defined in platform specific netconf plugin.
You can extend Ansible to support other network devices by dropping a custom plugin into the netconf_plugins
directory.
The netconf plugin to use is determined automatically from the ansible_network_os
variable. There should be no reason to override this functionality.
Most netconf plugins can operate without configuration. A few have additional options that can be set to impact how tasks are translated into netconf commands. A ncclient device specific handler name can be set in the netconf plugin or else the value of default
is used as per ncclient device handler.
Plugins are self-documenting. Each plugin should document its configuration options.
You can use ansible-doc -t netconf -l
to see the list of available plugins. Use ansible-doc -t netconf <plugin name>
to see detailed documentation and examples.
See also
© 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/plugins/netconf.html