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You're reading from  Ansible for Real-Life Automation

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803235417
Edition1st Edition
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Gineesh Madapparambath
Gineesh Madapparambath
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Gineesh Madapparambath

Gineesh Madapparambath has over 15 years of experience in IT service management and consultancy with experience in planning, deploying, and supporting Linux-based projects. He has designed, developed, and deployed automation solutions based on Ansible and Ansible Automation Platform (formerly Ansible Tower) for bare metal and virtual server building, patching, container management, network operations, and custom monitoring. Gineesh has coordinated, designed, and deployed servers in data centers globally and has cross-cultural experience in classic, private cloud (OpenStack and VM ware), and public cloud environments (AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud Platform). Gineesh has handled multiple roles such as systems engineer, automation specialist, infrastructure designer, and content author. His primary focus is on IT and application automation using Ansible, containerization using OpenShift (and Kubernetes), and infrastructure automation using Terraform.
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Using API calls for automation

In Chapter 6, Automating Microsoft Windows and Network Devices, you learned about the different ways Ansible can talk to managed nodes, platforms, or applications. So as long as there is a supported method to access the target system, it is possible use Ansible to automate these tasks. In the previous chapters, you learned about the integration between Ansible and other tools such as Jira, ServiceNow, Kubernetes, public or private cloud platforms, and so on. For such platforms, most of those modules use HTTP/HTTPS API calls to execute operations. This means that if there are no modules available to automate your operations but there is an API method, you can use the same raw API calls from your Ansible playbook.

Python SDK and API Calls

Please remember that not all modules use direct or native API calls to execute the operations; some modules use Python libraries and software development kits (SDKs) to implement these tasks. For example, the FortiOS...

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Ansible for Real-Life Automation
Published in: Sep 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803235417

Author (1)

author image
Gineesh Madapparambath

Gineesh Madapparambath has over 15 years of experience in IT service management and consultancy with experience in planning, deploying, and supporting Linux-based projects. He has designed, developed, and deployed automation solutions based on Ansible and Ansible Automation Platform (formerly Ansible Tower) for bare metal and virtual server building, patching, container management, network operations, and custom monitoring. Gineesh has coordinated, designed, and deployed servers in data centers globally and has cross-cultural experience in classic, private cloud (OpenStack and VM ware), and public cloud environments (AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud Platform). Gineesh has handled multiple roles such as systems engineer, automation specialist, infrastructure designer, and content author. His primary focus is on IT and application automation using Ansible, containerization using OpenShift (and Kubernetes), and infrastructure automation using Terraform.
Read more about Gineesh Madapparambath