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You're reading from  Ansible for Real-Life Automation

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803235417
Edition1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1)
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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Automation feasibility and usability

We all need to understand that not all use cases or repeated jobs are suitable for automation. We need to study and confirm the feasibility of implementing the use case using Ansible automation.

Once you find the use cases, you can ask yourself several questions to understand the feasibility of implementation and usability of your automation use cases.

How complex is the use case?

You need to Consider the complexity of the use case or workflow you are trying to automate. If the use case is too complex, then you can split it into smaller use cases. You need to start with smaller use cases to avoid any possible delay or obstruction.

For example, if you want to automate the Linux operating system (OS) patching task, then split the job into multiple use cases as follows:

  1. Take a virtual machine snapshot.
  2. Back up the configuration.
  3. OS patching tasks.
  4. Verification of the OS after patching and reboot.
  5. Restore snapshot...
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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