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ansible.cfg
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ansible.cfg
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# config file for ansible -- http://ansible.github.com
# nearly all parameters can be overridden in ansible-playbook or with command line flags
# ansible will read ~/.ansible.cfg or /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg, whichever it finds first
[defaults]
# location of inventory file, eliminates need to specify -i
hostfile = /etc/ansible/hosts
# location of ansible library, eliminates need to specify --module-path
library = /usr/share/ansible
# default module name used in /usr/bin/ansible when -m is not specified
module_name = command
# location for ansible log file. If set, will store output from ansible
# and ansible-playbook. If enabling, you may wish to configure
# logrotate.
#log_path = /var/log/ansible.log
# home directory where temp files are stored on remote systems. Should
# almost always contain $HOME or be a directory writeable by all users
remote_tmp = $HOME/.ansible/tmp
# the default pattern for ansible-playbooks ("hosts:")
pattern = *
# the default number of forks (parallelism) to be used. Usually you
# can crank this up.
forks=5
# the timeout used by various connection types. Usually this corresponds
# to an SSH timeout
timeout=10
# when using --poll or "poll:" in an ansible playbook, and not specifying
# an explicit poll interval, use this interval
poll_interval=15
# when specifying --sudo to /usr/bin/ansible or "sudo:" in a playbook,
# and not specifying "--sudo-user" or "sudo_user" respectively, sudo
# to this user account
sudo_user=root
# the following forces ansible to always ask for the sudo password (instead of having
# to add -K to the commandline). Or you can use the environment variable (ANSIBLE_ASK_SUDO_PASS)
#ask_sudo_pass=True
# the following forces ansible to always ask for the ssh-password (-k)
# can also be set by the environment variable ANSIBLE_ASK_PASS
#ask_pass=True
# connection to use when -c <connection_type> is not specified
transport=paramiko
# remote SSH port to be used when --port or "port:" or an equivalent inventory
# variable is not specified.
remote_port=22
# if set, always run /usr/bin/ansible commands as this user, and assume this value
# if "user:" is not set in a playbook. If not set, use the current Unix user
# as the default
#remote_user=root
# the default sudo executable. If a sudo alternative with a sudo-compatible interface
# is used, specify its executable name as the default
sudo_exe=sudo
# the default flags passed to sudo
# sudo_flags=-H
# all commands executed under sudo are passed as arguments to a shell command
# This shell command defaults to /bin/sh
# Changing this helps the situation where a user is only allowed to run
# e.g. /bin/bash with sudo privileges
# executable = /bin/sh
# how to handle hash defined in several places
# hash can be merged, or replaced
# if you use replace, and have multiple hashes named 'x', the last defined
# will override the previously defined one
# if you use merge here, hash will cumulate their keys, but keys will still
# override each other
# replace is the default value, and is how ansible always handled hash variables
#
# hash_behaviour=replace
# How to handle variable replacement - as of 1.2, Jinja2 variable syntax is
# preferred, but we still support the old $variable replacement too.
# If you change legacy_playbook_variables to no then Ansible will no longer
# try to do replacement on $variable style variables.
#
# legacy_playbook_variables=yes
# if you need to use jinja2 extensions, you can list them here
# use a coma to separate extensions, e.g. :
# jinja2_extensions=jinja2.ext.do,jinja2.ext.i18n
# no extensions are loaded by default
#jinja2_extensions=
# if set, always use this private key file for authentication, same as if passing
# --private-key to ansible or ansible-playbook
#private_key_file=/path/to/file
# format of string $ansible_managed available within Jinja2 templates, replacing
# {file}, {host} and {uid} with template filename, host and owner respectively.
# The resulting string is passed through strftime(3) so it may contain any
# time-formatting specifiers.
#
# Example: ansible_managed = DONT TOUCH {file}: call {uid} at {host} for changes
ansible_managed = Ansible managed: {file} modified on %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S by {uid} on {host}
# additional plugin paths for non-core plugins
action_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/action_plugins
callback_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/callback_plugins
connection_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/connection_plugins
lookup_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/lookup_plugins
vars_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/vars_plugins
filter_plugins = /usr/share/ansible_plugins/filter_plugins
# set to 1 if you don't want cowsay support. Alternatively, set ANSIBLE_NOCOWS=1
# in your environment
# nocows = 1
[paramiko_connection]
# nothing to configure yet
[ssh_connection]
# if uncommented, sets the ansible ssh arguments to the following. Leaving off ControlPersist
# will result in poor performance, so use transport=paramiko on older platforms rather than
# removing it
ssh_args=-o ControlMaster=auto -o ControlPersist=60s -o ControlPath=/tmp/ansible-ssh-%h-%p-%r
# the following makes ansible use scp if the connection type is ssh (default is sftp)
#scp_if_ssh=True