37 KiB
Ansible AWX
Gotchas
-
When one does not define values in a resource, it will use the setting defined by the underlying dependency (if any).
E.g.: not setting a schedule'sjob_type(or setting it tonull) makes the job it starts use the job template'sjob_typesetting. -
Consider using only AMD64 nodes to host the containers for AWX instances.
As of 2024-04-11, AWX does not appear to provide ARM64 images for all its containers.
One'll need to build their own missing ARM64 images and specify those during deployment. Good luck with that! -
K8S tolerations set in AWX custom resources only affect K8S-based AWX instances' deployments.
They are not applied to other resources like automation Jobs.Job-related specific K8S settings need to be configured in the
pod_spec_overrideattribute of Instance Groups of type Container Group.
Refer Job execution. -
Variables configured in job templates are given to the
ansible-playbookcommand for the job using its-e, --extra-varsoption.These variables will have the highest precedence of all variables, and as such it is their value that will be used throughout the whole execution. They will not be overridden by any other definition for similarly named variables (not at play, host, block nor task level; not even the
set_factsmodule will override them).
Refer Ansible variables. -
Once a variable is defined in a job template, it will be passed to the ansible command for the job, even if its value is set to
null(it will be an empty string).When launching a job that allows for variables editing, the edited variables will be merged on top of the initial setting.
As such, values configured in the job template can at most be overridden, but never deleted. They also cannot be set tonull, sincenullvalues in the override will not be considered in the merge, resulting in the job template's predefined value being picked.
Setup
Deployment
Starting from version 18.0, the AWX Kubernetes Operator is the preferred way to deploy
AWX instances.
It is meant to provide a Kubernetes-native installation method for AWX via the AWX Custom Resource Definition (CRD).
Deploying AWS instances is just a matter of:
- Installing the operator on the K8S cluster.
Make sure to include Ansible's CRDs. - Create a resource of kind
AWX.
Whenever a resource of the AWX kind is created, the kubernetes operator executes an Ansible role that creates all
the other resources an AWX instance requires to start in the cluster.
See Iterating on the installer without deploying the operator.
The operator can be configured to automatically deploy a default AWX instance once running, but its input options are
limited. This prevents changing specific settings for the AWX instance one might need to set.
Creating resources of the AWX kind, instead, allows to include their specific configuration, and hence for more of its
settings to be customized. It should™ also be less prone to deployment errors.
Requirements:
- An existing K8S cluster with AMD64 nodes (see Gotchas).
- A DB instance, either in the cluster or external to it.
If internal, one shall be able to create PersistentVolumeClaims and PersistentVolumes in the cluster for it (unless data persistence is not a wanted feature). - The ability for the cluster to create load balancers (if setting the service type to load balancer).
Deploy the operator with kustomize
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
# Specify the version tag to use
/tmp/awx$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
resources:
- github.com/ansible/awx-operator/config/default?ref=2.14.0
# https://github.com/ansible/awx-operator/releases
EOF
# Start the operator
/tmp/awx$ kubectl apply -k '.'
namespace/awx created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
/tmp/awx$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-8b7dfcb58-k7jt8 2/2 Running 0 10m
Deploy the operator with helm
# Add the operator's repository.
$ helm repo add 'awx-operator' 'https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/'
"awx-operator" has been added to your repositories
$ helm repo update 'awx-operator'
Hang tight while we grab the latest from your chart repositories...
...Successfully got an update from the "awx-operator" chart repository
Update Complete. ⎈Happy Helming!⎈
$ helm search repo 'awx-operator'
NAME CHART VERSION APP VERSION DESCRIPTION
awx-operator/awx-operator 2.14.0 2.14.0 A Helm chart for the AWX Operator
# Install the operator.
$ helm -n 'awx' upgrade -i --create-namespace 'my-awx-operator' 'awx-operator/awx-operator' --version '2.14.0'
Release "my-awx-operator" does not exist. Installing it now.
NAME: my-awx-operator
LAST DEPLOYED: Mon Apr 8 15:34:00 2024
NAMESPACE: awx
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
AWX Operator installed with Helm Chart version 2.14.0
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-75b667b745-g9g9c 2/2 Running 0 17m
Deploy the operator with a kustomized Helm chart
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
/tmp/awx$ cat <<EOF > 'namespace.yaml'
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: awx
EOF
/tmp/awx$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
helmCharts:
- name: awx-operator
repo: https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/
version: 2.19.0
releaseName: awx-operator
includeCRDs: true # Important. Not namespaced. Watch out upon removal.
resources:
- namespace.yaml
EOF
# Start the operator
/tmp/awx$ helm repo add 'awx-operator' 'https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/'
/tmp/awx$ kubectl kustomize --enable-helm '.' | kubectl apply -f -
namespace/awx created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
/tmp/awx$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-8b7dfcb58-k7jt8 2/2 Running 0 10m
Once the operator is installed, AWX instances can be created by leveraging the AWX CRD.
Basic definition for a quick testing instance
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx-demo
spec:
no_log: false
service_type: NodePort
node_selector: |
kubernetes.io/arch: amd64
Definition for an instance on AWS' EKS
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx
spec:
no_log: false
admin_email: infra@example.org
postgres_configuration_secret: awx-postgres-configuration
node_selector: |
kubernetes.io/arch: amd64
service_type: LoadBalancer
ingress_type: ingress
ingress_annotations: |
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: alb
Due to the operator being the one creating its resources, one's control is limited to what one can define in the AWX
resource's spec key.
See the installer role's defaults and any page under the Advanced configuration section in the
operator's documentation for details.
Useful specs:
| Spec | Description | Reason |
|---|---|---|
no_log: false |
See resource creation tasks' output in the operators'logs | Debug |
node_selector: … |
Select nodes to run on | Use only specific nodes (see warning at the beginning) |
Deploy AWX instances with kubectl
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
/tmp/awx$ kubectl apply -f 'awx-demo.yaml'
Deploy AWX instances with kustomize
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
/tmp/awx$ yq -iy '.resources+=["awx-demo.yaml"]' 'kustomization.yaml'
/tmp/awx$ kubectl apply -k '.'
Deploy AWX instances using the operator's helm chart's integrated definition
# Update the operator by telling it to also deploy the AWX instance.
$ helm -n 'awx' upgrade -i --create-namespace 'my-awx-operator' 'awx-operator/awx-operator' --version '2.14.0' \
--set 'AWX.enabled=true' --set 'AWX.name=awx-demo'
Release "my-awx-operator" has been upgraded. Happy Helming!
NAME: my-awx-operator
LAST DEPLOYED: Mon Apr 8 15:37:47 2024
NAMESPACE: awx
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 2
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
AWX Operator installed with Helm Chart version 2.14.0
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-demo-migration-24.1.0-qhbq2 0/1 Completed 0 12m
awx-demo-postgres-15-0 1/1 Running 0 13m
awx-demo-task-87756dfbc-chx9t 4/4 Running 0 12m
awx-demo-web-69d6d5d6c-wdxlv 3/3 Running 0 12m
awx-operator-controller-manager-75b667b745-g9g9c 2/2 Running 0 17m
The default user is admin.
Get the password from the {instance}-admin-password secret:
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get secret 'awx-demo-admin-password' -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
L2ZUgNTwtswVW3gtficG1Hd443l3Kicq
Connect to the instance once it is up:
kubectl -n 'awx' port-forward 'service/awx-service' '8080:http'
open 'http://localhost:8080'
Update
The documentation suggests to:
- Temporarily set up the operator to automatically update any AWX instance it manages.
- Delete the AWX instance resource.
This will force the operator to pull fresh, updated images for the new deployment. - Restore the operator's settings to the previous version.
Removal
Remove the AWX resource associated to the instance to delete it:
$ kubectl delete awx 'awx-demo'
awx.awx.ansible.com "awx-demo" deleted
Remove the operator if not needed anymore:
# Using `kustomize`
kubectl delete -k '/tmp/awx'
# Using `helm`
helm -n 'awx' uninstall 'my-awx-operator'
# Using the kustomized helm chart
kubectl kustomize --enable-helm '.' | kubectl delete -f -
Eventually, remove the namespace too to clean all things up:
kubectl delete ns 'awx'
Testing
Run: follow the basic installation guide
1. ARM, Mac OS X, minikube, kustomize: failed: ARM images for AWX not available
$ minikube start --cpus=4 --memory=6g --addons=ingress
…
🌟 Enabled addons: storage-provisioner, default-storageclass, ingress
🏄 Done! kubectl is now configured to use "minikube" cluster and "default" namespace by default
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
$ # There was no ARM version of the 'kube-rbac-proxy' image upstream, so it was impossible to just use the `make deploy`
$ # command as explained in the basic install.
$ # Defaulting to use 'quay.io' as repository as the ARM version of that image is available there.
$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
resources:
- github.com/ansible/awx-operator/config/default?ref=2.14.0
# https://github.com/ansible/awx-operator/releases
images:
- name: quay.io/ansible/awx-operator
newTag: 2.14.0 # same as awx-operator in resources
- name: gcr.io/kubebuilder/kube-rbac-proxy
# no ARM version upstream, defaulting to quay.io
newName: quay.io/brancz/kube-rbac-proxy
newTag: v0.16.0-arm64
EOF
$ kubectl apply -k '.'
namespace/awx created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-8b7dfcb58-k7jt8 2/2 Running 0 3m42s
$ cat <<EOF > 'awx-demo.yaml'
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx-demo
spec:
service_type: nodeport
EOF
$ yq -iy '.resources+=["awx-demo.yaml"]' 'kustomization.yaml'
$ kubectl apply -k '.' # this failed because awx has no ARM images yet
$ # Fine. I'll do it myself.
$ git clone 'https://github.com/ansible/awx.git'
$ cd 'awx'
$ make awx-kube-build
…
ERROR: failed to solve: process "/bin/sh -c make sdist && /var/lib/awx/venv/awx/bin/pip install dist/awx.tar.gz" did not complete successfully: exit code: 2
make: *** [awx-kube-build] Error 1
$ # (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
2. AMD64, OpenSUSE Leap 15.5, minikube, kustomize
$ minikube start --cpus=4 --memory=6g --addons=ingress
😄 minikube v1.29.0 on Opensuse-Leap 15.5
…
🌟 Enabled addons: storage-provisioner, default-storageclass, ingress
🏄 Done! kubectl is now configured to use "minikube" cluster and "default" namespace by default
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
$ # Simulating the need to use a custom repository for the sake of testing, so I cannot just use the `make deploy`
$ # command as explained in the basic install.
$ # In this case, the repository will be 'quay.io'.
$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
resources:
- github.com/ansible/awx-operator/config/default?ref=2.14.0
# https://github.com/ansible/awx-operator/releases
images:
- name: quay.io/ansible/awx-operator
newTag: 2.14.0 # same as awx-operator in resources
EOF
$ minikube kubectl -- apply -k '.'
namespace/awx created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-75b667b745-hjfc7 2/2 Running 0 3m43s
$ cat <<EOF > 'awx-demo.yaml'
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx-demo
spec:
service_type: nodeport
EOF
$ yq -iy '.resources+=["awx-demo.yaml"]' 'kustomization.yaml'
$ minikube kubectl -- apply -k '.'
serviceaccount/awx-operator-controller-manager unchanged
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager unchanged
awx.awx.ansible.com/awx-demo created
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get podsminikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-demo-migration-24.1.0-kqxcj 0/1 Completed 0 9s
awx-demo-postgres-15-0 1/1 Running 0 61s
awx-demo-task-7fcbb46c5d-ckf9d 4/4 Running 0 48s
awx-demo-web-58668794c8-rfd7d 3/3 Running 0 49s
awx-operator-controller-manager-75b667b745-hjfc7 2/2 Running 0 93s
$ # Default user is 'admin'.
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get secret 'awx-demo-admin-password' -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
L2ZUgNTwtswVW3gtficG1Hd443l3Kicq
$ xdg-open $(minikube service -n 'awx' 'awx-demo-service' --url)
$ minikube kubectl -- delete -k '.'
Run: follow the helm installation guide
1. AMD64, OpenSUSE Leap 15.5, minikube, helm
$ minikube start --cpus=4 --memory=6g --addons=ingress
😄 minikube v1.29.0 on Opensuse-Leap 15.5
…
🌟 Enabled addons: storage-provisioner, default-storageclass, ingress
🏄 Done! kubectl is now configured to use "minikube" cluster and "default" namespace by default
$ helm repo add 'awx-operator' 'https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/'
"awx-operator" has been added to your repositories
$ helm repo update 'awx-operator'
Hang tight while we grab the latest from your chart repositories...
...Successfully got an update from the "awx-operator" chart repository
Update Complete. ⎈Happy Helming!⎈
$ helm search repo 'awx-operator'
NAME CHART VERSION APP VERSION DESCRIPTION
awx-operator/awx-operator 2.14.0 2.14.0 A Helm chart for the AWX Operator
$ helm -n 'awx' upgrade -i --create-namespace 'my-awx-operator' 'awx-operator/awx-operator' --version '2.14.0'
Release "my-awx-operator" does not exist. Installing it now.
NAME: my-awx-operator
LAST DEPLOYED: Mon Apr 8 15:34:00 2024
NAMESPACE: awx
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
AWX Operator installed with Helm Chart version 2.14.0
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-8b7dfcb58-k7jt8 2/2 Running 0 3m
$ helm -n 'awx' upgrade -i --create-namespace 'my-awx-operator' 'awx-operator/awx-operator' --version '2.14.0' \
--set 'AWX.enabled=true' --set 'AWX.name=awx-demo'
Release "my-awx-operator" has been upgraded. Happy Helming!
NAME: my-awx-operator
LAST DEPLOYED: Mon Apr 8 15:37:47 2024
NAMESPACE: awx
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 2
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
AWX Operator installed with Helm Chart version 2.14.0
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-demo-migration-24.1.0-qhbq2 0/1 Completed 0 12m
awx-demo-postgres-15-0 1/1 Running 0 13m
awx-demo-task-87756dfbc-chx9t 4/4 Running 0 12m
awx-demo-web-69d6d5d6c-wdxlv 3/3 Running 0 12m
awx-operator-controller-manager-8b7dfcb58-k7jt8 2/2 Running 0 17m
$ # Default user is 'admin'.
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get secret 'awx-demo-admin-password' -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
PoU9pFR2J5oFqymgX9I3I8swFgfZVkam
$ xdg-open $(minikube service -n 'awx' 'awx-demo-service' --url)
$ helm -n 'awx' uninstall 'my-awx-operator'
$ minikube kubectl -- delete ns 'awx'
Run: kustomized helm chart
Warning
Remember to include the CRDs from the helm chart.
1. AMD64, OpenSUSE Leap 15.5, minikube
$ minikube start --cpus=4 --memory=6g --addons=ingress
😄 minikube v1.29.0 on Opensuse-Leap 15.5
…
🌟 Enabled addons: storage-provisioner, default-storageclass, ingress
🏄 Done! kubectl is now configured to use "minikube" cluster and "default" namespace by default
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
$ cat <<EOF > 'namespace.yaml'
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: awx
EOF
$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
resources:
- namespace.yaml
helmCharts:
- name: awx-operator
repo: https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/
version: 2.14.0
releaseName: awx-operator
includeCRDs: true
EOF
$ minikube kubectl -- apply -f <(minikube kubectl -- kustomize --enable-helm)
namespace/awx created
customresourcedefinition.apiextensions.k8s.io/awxbackups.awx.ansible.com created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-787d4945fb-fdffx 2/2 Running 0 3m36s
$ cat <<EOF > 'awx-demo.yaml'
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx-demo
spec:
service_type: nodeport
EOF
$ yq -iy '.resources+=["awx-demo.yaml"]' 'kustomization.yaml'
$ minikube kubectl -- apply -f <(minikube kubectl -- kustomize --enable-helm)
namespace/awx unchanged
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager unchanged
awx.awx.ansible.com/awx-demo created
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-demo-migration-24.1.0-zwv8w 0/1 Completed 0 115s
awx-demo-postgres-15-0 1/1 Running 0 10m
awx-demo-task-9c4655cb9-cmz87 4/4 Running 0 8m3s
awx-demo-web-77f65cc65f-qhqrm 3/3 Running 0 8m4s
awx-operator-controller-manager-787d4945fb-fdffx 2/2 Running 0 14m
$ # Default user is 'admin'.
$ minikube kubectl -- -n 'awx' get secret 'awx-demo-admin-password' -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
DgHIaA9onZj106osEmvECigzsBqutHqI
$ xdg-open $(minikube service -n 'awx' 'awx-demo-service' --url)
$ minikube kubectl -- delete -f <(minikube kubectl -- kustomize --enable-helm)
1. AMD64, Mac OS X, EKS
$ mkdir -p '/tmp/awx'
$ cd '/tmp/awx'
$ cat <<EOF > 'namespace.yaml'
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: awx
EOF
$ cat <<EOF > 'kustomization.yaml'
---
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
namespace: awx
resources:
- namespace.yaml
helmCharts:
- name: awx-operator
repo: https://ansible.github.io/awx-operator/
version: 2.19.1
releaseName: awx-operator
includeCRDs: true
EOF
$ kubectl kustomize --enable-helm | kubectl apply -f -
namespace/awx created
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager created
$ kubectl get pods -n 'awx'
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-operator-controller-manager-3361cfab38-tdgt3 2/2 Running 0 13s
$ cat <<EOF > 'awx-demo.yaml'
---
apiVersion: awx.ansible.com/v1beta1
kind: AWX
metadata:
name: awx-demo
spec:
admin_email: me@example.org
no_log: false
node_selector: |
kubernetes.io/arch: amd64
service_type: LoadBalancer
ingress_type: ingress
ingress_annotations: |
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: alb
EOF
$ yq -iy '.resources+=["awx-demo.yaml"]' 'kustomization.yaml'
$ kubectl kustomize --enable-helm | kubectl apply -f -
namespace/awx unchanged
…
deployment.apps/awx-operator-controller-manager unchanged
awx.awx.ansible.com/awx-demo created
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
awx-demo-migration-24.1.0-zwv8w 0/1 Completed 0 115s
awx-demo-postgres-15-0 1/1 Running 0 10m
awx-demo-task-8e34efc56-w5rc5 4/4 Running 0 8m3s
awx-demo-web-545gbdgg7b-q2q4m 3/3 Running 0 8m4s
awx-operator-controller-manager-3361cfab38-tdgt3 2/2 Running 0 14m
$ # Default user is 'admin'.
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get secret 'awx-demo-admin-password' -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
IDwYOgL9k2ckaXmqMm6PT4d6TXdJcocd
$ kubectl -n 'awx' get ingress 'awx-demo-ingress' -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[*].hostname}' \
| xargs -I{} open http://{}
$ kubectl kustomize --enable-helm | kubectl delete -f -
namespace "awx" deleted
…
awx.awx.ansible.com "awx-demo" deleted
deployment.apps "awx-operator-controller-manager" deleted
Job execution
Unless explicitly defined in Job Templates or Schedules, Jobs using a containerized execution environment are executed by the default container group.
Normally, the default container group does not limit where a Job's pod is executed, nor limits its assigned
resources.
By explicitly configuring this container group, one can change the settings for Jobs that do not ask for custom
executors.
E.g., one could set affinity and tolerations to assign Jobs to specific nodes by default, and set specific default resource limits.
# ansible playbook
- name: Configure instance group 'default'
tags: configure_instance_group_default_spot
awx.awx.instance_group:
name: default
is_container_group: true
pod_spec_override: |-
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
namespace: awx
spec:
serviceAccountName: default
automountServiceAccountToken: false
containers:
- image: 012345678901.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/infrastructure/awx-ee:latest
name: worker
args:
- ansible-runner
- worker
- '--private-data-dir=/runner'
resources:
requests:
cpu: 250m
memory: 100Mi
limits:
cpu: 1830m
memory: 1425Mi
tolerations:
- key: example.org/reservation.app
operator: Equal
value: awx
effect: NoSchedule
- key: awx.example.org/reservation.component
operator: Equal
value: job
effect: NoSchedule
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: example.org/reservation.app
operator: In
values:
- awx
- key: awx.example.org/reservation.component
operator: In
values:
- job
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- weight: 1
preference:
matchExpressions:
- key: awx/component
- key: eks.amazonaws.com/capacityType
operator: In
values:
- SPOT
- name: Configure instance group 'ondemand'
tags: configure instance_group_ondemand
awx.awx.instance_group:
name: ondemand
is_container_group: true
pod_spec_override: |-
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
namespace: awx
spec:
serviceAccountName: default
automountServiceAccountToken: false
containers:
- image: 012345678901.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/infrastructure/awx-ee:latest
name: worker
args:
- ansible-runner
- worker
- '--private-data-dir=/runner'
resources:
requests:
cpu: 250m
memory: 100Mi
limits:
cpu: 1830m
memory: 1425Mi
tolerations:
- key: example.org/reservation.app
operator: Equal
value: awx
effect: NoSchedule
- key: awx.example.org/reservation.component
operator: Equal
value: job
effect: NoSchedule
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: example.org/reservation.app
operator: In
values:
- awx
- key: awx.example.org/reservation.component
operator: In
values:
- job
- key: eks.amazonaws.com/capacityType
operator: In
values:
- ON_DEMAND
Workflow automation
Refer How to use workflow job templates in Ansible, Workflow job templates and Workflows.
Also see Passing Ansible variables in Workflows using set_stats.
Workflow Job Templates coordinate the linking and execution of multiple resources by:
- Synchronizing repositories with code for Projects.
- Synchronize Inventories.
- Having different Jobs run sequentially or in parallel.
- Running Jobs based on the success or failure of one or more previous Jobs.
- Requesting an admin's approval to proceed with one or more executions.
Each action is a node on a Workflow Job Template.
Creation process
flowchart LR
job_template("Job Template")
playbook("Playbook")
project("Project")
workflow_job_template("Workflow Job Template")
workflow_node("Workflow Node")
playbook --> project --> job_template --> workflow_node --> workflow_job_template
All the playbooks used in the workflow must be visible to AWX, meaning that one or more projects containing them must be already configured in the instance.
Workflows need nodes to refer. Nodes reference a job template, which in turn refer a playbook to run.
The AWX UI does not allow creating nodes directly, but it can be done via the visualizer.
- Open Resources > Templates in the sidebar.
- Click on the Add button and choose Add job template to add every job template that is needed.
Repeat as required. - Click on the Add button and choose Add workflow template.
- Fill in the form with the resources all nodes should share, and save.
The visualizer will open. - In the visualizer, create the needed nodes.
Pass data between workflow nodes
Refer Passing Ansible variables in Workflows using set_stats.
Leverage the set_stats builtin module.
Important
Make sure the module's
per_hostargument remainsfalse(the default) for this to work.
The next play running in the flow will be given what is defined the module's data argument as variables.
Example
Considering a workflow where Node1 needs to pass data to Node2:
-
Playbook for Node1:
--- - name: Get an AWS S3 object's information and pass them along hosts: [ … ] tasks: [ … ] post_tasks: - name: Pass the S3 object's information along when found tags: - always # important if one plans to test workflows by leveraging tags - pass_data_along when: s3_object_info is defined ansible.builtin.set_stats: data: s3_object_info: "{{ s3_object_info }}" -
Playbook for Node2:
--- - name: Do something knowing an AWS S3 object exists because it got passed along hosts: [ … ] pre_tasks: - name: Ensure the S3 object exists beforehand and is in the STANDARD storage tier tags: - always # important if one plans to test workflows by leveraging tags - ensure_s3_object_is_usable ansible.builtin.assert: that: - s3_object_info.object_data.content_length | default(0) > 0 - s3_object_info.object_data.storage_class | default('') == 'STANDARD' tasks: [ … ]
API
Refer AWX API Reference and How to use AWX REST API to execute jobs.
AWX offers the awx client CLI tool:
# Install the 'awx' client
pipx install 'awxkit'
pip3 install --user 'awxkit'
Tip
Normally
awxwould require setting the configuration every command like so:awx --conf.host https://awx.example.org --conf.username 'admin' --conf.password 'password' config awx --conf.host https://awx.example.org --conf.username 'admin' --conf.password 'password' export --schedulesExport settings to environment variables to avoid having to set them on the command line all the time:
export TOWER_HOST='https://awx.example.org' TOWER_USERNAME='admin' TOWER_PASSWORD='password'
# Show the client's configuration
awx config
# List all available endpoints
curl -fs --user 'admin:password' 'https://awx.example.org/api/v2/' | jq '.' -
# List instance groups
awx instance_groups list
# Show instance groups
awx instance_groups get 'default'
# List jobs
awx jobs list
awx jobs list -f 'yaml'
awx jobs list -f 'human' --filter 'name,created,status'
awx jobs list -f 'jq' --filter '.results[] | .name + " is " + .status'
# Show job templates
awx job_templates list
curl -fs --user 'admin:password' 'https://awx.example.org/api/v2/job_templates/' | jq '.' -
awx job_templates get 'Some Job'
# Show notification templates
awx notification_templates list
curl -fs --user 'admin:password' 'https://awx.example.org/api/v2/notification_templates/' | jq '.' -
# Show schedules
awx schedules list
awx schedules --schedules 'schedule-1' 'schedule-n'
awx schedules get 'Some Schedule'
curl -fs --user 'admin:password' 'https://awx.example.org/api/v2/schedules/' | jq '.' -
# Export data
awx export
awx export --job_templates 'job-template-1' 'job-template-n' --schedules
curl -fs --user 'admin:password' 'https://awx.example.org/api/v2/export/' | jq '.' -
Refer AWX Command Line Interface for more information.
Further readings
Sources
- AWX's documentation
- AWX's repository
- The Operator's documentation
- The Operator's repository
- Basic install
- arm64 image pulled shows amd64 as its arch
- Helm install on existing cluster
- Iterating on the installer without deploying the operator
- Installer role's defaults
- AWX API Reference
- How to use AWX REST API to execute jobs
- Automation Job isn't created with tolerations from AWX manifest