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Practical Ansible

You're reading from   Practical Ansible Learn how to automate infrastructure, manage configuration, and deploy applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781805129974
Length 420 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Fabio Alessandro Locati Fabio Alessandro Locati
Author Profile Icon Fabio Alessandro Locati
Fabio Alessandro Locati
James Freeman James Freeman
Author Profile Icon James Freeman
James Freeman
Daniel Oh Daniel Oh
Author Profile Icon Daniel Oh
Daniel Oh
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Learning the Fundamentals of Ansible FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Ansible 3. Chapter 2: Understanding the Fundamentals of Ansible 4. Chapter 3: Defining Your Inventory 5. Chapter 4: Playbooks and Roles 6. Part 2:Expanding the Capabilities of Ansible
7. Chapter 5: Creating and Consuming Modules 8. Chapter 6: Creating and Consuming Collections 9. Chapter 7: Creating and Consuming Plugins 10. Chapter 8: Coding Best Practices 11. Chapter 9: Advanced Ansible Topics 12. Part 3:Using Ansible in an Enterprise
13. Chapter 10: Network Automation with Ansible 14. Chapter 11: Container and Cloud Management 15. Chapter 12: Troubleshooting and Testing Strategies 16. Chapter 13: Getting Started with Ansible Automation Controller 17. Chapter 14: Execution Environments 18. Assessments 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Setting task execution delegation

In every play we have run so far, we have assumed that all the tasks are executed on each host in the inventory in turn. However, what if you need to run one or two tasks on a different host? For example, we have talked about the concept of automating upgrades on clusters. Logically, however, we would want to automate the entire process, including the removal of each host in turn from the load balancer and their return after the task is completed.

Although we still want to run our play across our entire inventory, we certainly don’t want to run the load balancer commands from those hosts. Let’s once again explain this in more detail with a practical example. We’ll reuse the two simple host inventories that we used earlier in this chapter:

[frontends]
frt01.example.com
frt02.example.com

Now, to work on this, let’s create two simple shell scripts in the same directory as our playbook. These are only examples, as setting...

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