Files
JFrog-Cloud-Installers/Ansible/README.md
2020-06-16 15:12:58 -07:00

3.7 KiB

JFrog Ansible Collection

This Ansible directory consists of the following directories that support the JFrog Ansible collection.

  • collection directory - This directory contains the Ansible collection package that has the Ansible roles for Artifactory and Xray. See the collection README for details on the available roles and variables.
  • examples directory - This directory contains example playbooks for various architectures from single Artifactory (RT) deployments to high-availability setups.
  • infra directory - This directory contains example infrastructure templates that can be used for testing and as example deployments.
  • test directory - This directory contains Gradle tests that can be used to verify a deployment. It also has Ansible playbooks for creating infrastructure, provisioning software and testing with Gradle.

Getting Started

  1. Download and nstall this collection or the roles in your Ansible path using your ansible.cfg file. The following is an example:
# Installs collections into [current dir]/ansible_collections/namespace/collection_name
collections_paths = ~/.ansible/collections:/usr/share/ansible/collections:collection

# Installs roles into [current dir]/roles/namespace.rolename
roles_path = Ansible/collection/jfrog/ansible/roles

Or install this collection from Ansible Galaxy.

ansible-galaxy collection install jfrog.ansible
  1. Ansible uses SSH to connect to hosts. Ensure that your SSH private key is on your client and the public keys are installed on your Ansible hosts.

  2. Create your inventory file. Use one of the examples from the examples directory to construct an inventory file (hosts.yml) with the host addresses and variables.

  3. Create your playbook. Use one of the examples from the examples directory to construct a playbook using the JFrog Ansible roles. These roles will be applied to your inventory and provision software.

  4. Then execute with the following command to provision the JFrog software with Ansible. Variables can also be passed in at the command-line.

ansible-playbook -i hosts.yml playbook.yml --extra-vars "master_key=$(openssl rand -hex 16) join_key=$(openssl rand -hex 16)"

Autogenerating Master and Join Keys

You may want to auto-generate your master amd join keys and apply it to all the nodes.

ansible-playbook -i hosts.yml playbook.yml --extra-vars "master_key=$(openssl rand -hex 16) join_key=$(openssl rand -hex 16)"

Using Ansible Vault to Encrypt Vars

Some vars you may want to keep secret. You may put these vars into a separate file and encrypt them using Ansible Vault.

ansible-vault encrypt secret-vars.yml --vault-password-file ~/.vault_pass.txt

then in your playbook include the secret vars file.

- hosts: primary

  vars_files:
    - ./vars/secret-vars.yml
    - ./vars/vars.yml

  roles:
    - artifactory

Bastion Hosts

In many cases, you may want to run this Ansible collection through a Bastion host to provision JFrog servers. You can include the following Var for a host or group of hosts:

ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o ProxyCommand="ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -A user@host -W %h:%p"'

eg.
ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o ProxyCommand="ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -A ubuntu@{{ azureDeployment.deployment.outputs.lbIp.value }} -W %h:%p"'

Building the Collection Archive

  1. Go to the collection/jfrog/ansible directory.
  2. Update the galaxy.yml meta file as needed. Update the version.
  3. Build the archive.
ansible-galaxy collection build