REPL console for executing Ansible tasks.
a REPL that allows for running ad-hoc tasks against a chosen inventory (based on dominis’ ansible-shell).
--ask-su-pass
¶ask for su password (deprecated, use become)
--ask-sudo-pass
¶ask for sudo password (deprecated, use become)
--ask-vault-pass
¶ask for vault password
--become-method
<BECOME_METHOD>
¶privilege escalation method to use (default=sudo), valid choices: [ sudo | su | pbrun | pfexec | doas | dzdo | ksu | runas | pmrun | enable ]
--become-user
<BECOME_USER>
¶run operations as this user (default=root)
--list-hosts
¶outputs a list of matching hosts; does not execute anything else
--playbook-dir
<BASEDIR>
¶Since this tool does not use playbooks, use this as a subsitute playbook directory.This sets the relative path for many features including roles/ group_vars/ etc.
--private-key
,
--key-file
¶use this file to authenticate the connection
--scp-extra-args
<SCP_EXTRA_ARGS>
¶specify extra arguments to pass to scp only (e.g. -l)
--sftp-extra-args
<SFTP_EXTRA_ARGS>
¶specify extra arguments to pass to sftp only (e.g. -f, -l)
--ssh-common-args
<SSH_COMMON_ARGS>
¶specify common arguments to pass to sftp/scp/ssh (e.g. ProxyCommand)
--ssh-extra-args
<SSH_EXTRA_ARGS>
¶specify extra arguments to pass to ssh only (e.g. -R)
--step
¶one-step-at-a-time: confirm each task before running
--syntax-check
¶perform a syntax check on the playbook, but do not execute it
--vault-id
¶the vault identity to use
--vault-password-file
¶vault password file
--version
¶show program’s version number and exit
-C
,
--check
¶don’t make any changes; instead, try to predict some of the changes that may occur
-D
,
--diff
¶when changing (small) files and templates, show the differences in those files; works great with –check
-K
,
--ask-become-pass
¶ask for privilege escalation password
-M
,
--module-path
¶prepend colon-separated path(s) to module library (default=[u’/Users/alicia/.ansible/plugins/modules’, u’/usr/share/ansible/plugins/modules’])
-R
<SU_USER>
,
--su-user
<SU_USER>
¶run operations with su as this user (default=None) (deprecated, use become)
-S
,
--su
¶run operations with su (deprecated, use become)
-T
<TIMEOUT>
,
--timeout
<TIMEOUT>
¶override the connection timeout in seconds (default=10)
-U
<SUDO_USER>
,
--sudo-user
<SUDO_USER>
¶desired sudo user (default=root) (deprecated, use become)
-b
,
--become
¶run operations with become (does not imply password prompting)
-c
<CONNECTION>
,
--connection
<CONNECTION>
¶connection type to use (default=smart)
-f
<FORKS>
,
--forks
<FORKS>
¶specify number of parallel processes to use (default=5)
-h
,
--help
¶show this help message and exit
-i
,
--inventory
,
--inventory-file
¶specify inventory host path or comma separated host list. –inventory-file is deprecated
-k
,
--ask-pass
¶ask for connection password
-l
<SUBSET>
,
--limit
<SUBSET>
¶further limit selected hosts to an additional pattern
-s
,
--sudo
¶run operations with sudo (nopasswd) (deprecated, use become)
-u
<REMOTE_USER>
,
--user
<REMOTE_USER>
¶connect as this user (default=None)
-v
,
--verbose
¶verbose mode (-vvv for more, -vvvv to enable connection debugging)
The following environment variables may be specified.
ANSIBLE_CONFIG
– Override the default ansible config file
Many more are available for most options in ansible.cfg
/etc/ansible/ansible.cfg
– Config file, used if present
~/.ansible.cfg
– User config file, overrides the default config if present
Ansible was originally written by Michael DeHaan.
See the AUTHORS file for a complete list of contributors.