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Ansible for Real-Life Automation

You're reading from  Ansible for Real-Life Automation

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235417
Pages 480 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Gineesh Madapparambath Gineesh Madapparambath
Profile icon Gineesh Madapparambath

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Using Ansible as Your Automation Tool
2. Chapter 1: Ansible Automation – Introduction 3. Chapter 2: Starting with Simple Automation 4. Chapter 3: Automating Your Daily Jobs 5. Chapter 4: Exploring Collaboration in Automation Development 6. Part 2: Finding Use Cases and Integrations
7. Chapter 5: Expanding Your Automation Landscape 8. Chapter 6: Automating Microsoft Windows and Network Devices 9. Chapter 7: Managing Your Virtualization and Cloud Platforms 10. Chapter 8: Helping the Database Team with Automation 11. Chapter 9: Implementing Automation in a DevOps Workflow 12. Chapter 10: Managing Containers Using Ansible 13. Chapter 11: Managing Kubernetes Using Ansible 14. Chapter 12: Integrating Ansible with Your Tools 15. Chapter 13: Using Ansible for Secret Management 16. Part 3: Managing Your Automation Development Flow with Best Practices
17. Chapter 14: Keeping Automation Simple and Efficient 18. Chapter 15: Automating Non-Standard Platforms and Operations 19. Chapter 16: Ansible Automation Best Practices for Production 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Identifying manual tasks to be automated

In the previous chapter, you learned how to use Ansible ad hoc commands to manually execute tasks on remotely managed nodes using Ansible modules. Now, you will learn how to start with simple Ansible playbooks and tasks. Remember, you need to add your managed node details to your inventory file before you can execute any Ansible tasks.

We will start with a simple automation job to understand the basics of the Ansible playbook. For this example, we are assuming you have installed and configured the chronyd application. The chrony application is an implementation of the Network Time Protocol (NTP). chronyd is the default NTP client and server in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 and is available in many Linux distributions.

For our example Ansible playbook, we will do the following:

  1. Install the chrony package on all nodes.
  2. Adjust the chrony configurations.
  3. Start the chronyd service and enable...
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