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Learning Ansible 2.7

You're reading from   Learning Ansible 2.7 Automate your organization's infrastructure using Ansible 2.7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789954333
Length 266 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Fabio Alessandro Locati Fabio Alessandro Locati
Author Profile Icon Fabio Alessandro Locati
Fabio Alessandro Locati
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Creating a Web Server Using Ansible
2. Getting Started with Ansible FREE CHAPTER 3. Automating Simple Tasks 4. Section 2: Deploying Playbooks in a Production Environment
5. Scaling to Multiple Hosts 6. Handling Complex Deployment 7. Going Cloud 8. Getting Notification from Ansible 9. Section 3: Deploying an Application with Ansible
10. Creating a Custom Module 11. Debugging and Error Handling 12. Complex Environments 13. Section 4: Deploying an Application with Ansible
14. Introducing Ansible for Enterprises 15. Getting Started with AWX 16. Working with AWX Users, Permissions, and Organizations 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Syntax checking

Whenever you run a playbook, Ansible first checks the syntax of the playbook file. If an error is encountered, Ansible will error out saying there was a syntax error and will not proceed unless you fix that error. This syntax checking is performed only when you run the ansible-playbook command. When writing a big playbook, or if you have included task files, it might be difficult to fix all of the errors; this might end up wasting more time. In order to deal with such situations, Ansible provides a way to check your YAML syntax as you keep progressing with your playbook. For this example, we will need to create the playbooks/setup_apache.yaml file with the following content:

---
- hosts: all
tasks:
- name: Install Apache
yum:
name: httpd
state: present
become: True
- name: Enable Apache
service:
name: httpd
...
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