Repository name in Docker Hub: williamyeh/ansible
This repository contains Dockerized Ansible, published to the public Docker Hub via automated build mechanism.
These are Docker images for Ansible software, installed in a selected Linux distributions.
Debian (stretch, jessie), Ubuntu (bionic, xenial, trusty), CentOS (7), Alpine (3).
Supports for Wheezy, Precise, and CentOS6 have been ended since Sep 2017.
Four versions are provided:
- provides the most recent stable version of Ansible; suitable for most people.
- same as stable version, but is designed for building (near-)minimal images out of playbooks; i.e., the Ansible body will be removed when mission completed. Refer to “Build Docker images with Ansible: A half-blood approach” for working examples and slides.
- provides the old 1.9 version of Ansible (but will be retired someday).
- provides the experimental version of Ansible; i.e., the master branch of official Ansible's git repo.
Each version is further divided into two variants:
- Normal variant: intended to be used as Ansible control machines, or in cases that is inadequate in the onbuild variants.
- Onbuild variant: intended to be used to build Docker images.
-
Normal variants:
williamyeh/ansible:debian9
williamyeh/ansible:debian8
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu18.04
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu14.04
williamyeh/ansible:centos7
williamyeh/ansible:alpine3
-
Onbuild variants (recommended for common cases):
williamyeh/ansible:debian9-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:debian8-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu18.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu14.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:centos7-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:alpine3-onbuild
Refer to “Build Docker images with Ansible: A half-blood approach” for working examples and slides.
-
Onbuild variants:
williamyeh/ansible:mini-alpine3
williamyeh/ansible:mini-debian9
williamyeh/ansible:mini-debian8
Note: Ansible 1.9 was not supported in CentOS EPEL since January 2017, according to this announcement.
-
Normal variants:
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-debian8
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-ubuntu14.04
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-alpine3
-
Onbuild variants (recommended for common cases):
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-debian8-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-ubuntu14.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:1.9-alpine3-onbuild
-
Normal variants:
williamyeh/ansible:master-debian9
williamyeh/ansible:master-debian8
williamyeh/ansible:master-ubuntu18.04
williamyeh/ansible:master-ubuntu16.04
williamyeh/ansible:master-centos7
-
Onbuild variants (recommended for common cases):
williamyeh/ansible:master-debian9-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:master-debian8-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:master-ubuntu18.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:master-ubuntu16.04-onbuild
williamyeh/ansible:master-centos7-onbuild
Here comes a simplest working example for the impatient.
First, choose a base image you'd like to begin with. For example, williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04-onbuild
.
Second, put the following Dockerfile
along with your playbook directory:
FROM williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04-onbuild
# ==> Specify requirements filename; default = "requirements.yml"
#ENV REQUIREMENTS requirements.yml
# ==> Specify playbook filename; default = "playbook.yml"
#ENV PLAYBOOK playbook.yml
# ==> Specify inventory filename; default = "/etc/ansible/hosts"
#ENV INVENTORY inventory.ini
# ==> Executing Ansible (with a simple wrapper)...
RUN ansible-playbook-wrapper
Third, docker build .
Done!
For more advanced usage, the role in Ansible Galaxy williamyeh/nginx
demonstrates how to perform a simple smoke test (configuration needs test, too!) on a variety of (containerized) Linux distributions on CircleCI's Ubuntu 12.04 and Travis CI’s Ubuntu 14.04 worker instances.
There has been quite a few Ansible images for Docker (e.g., search in the Docker Hub), so why reinvent the wheel?
In the beginning I used the ansible/ansible-docker-base
created by Ansible Inc. It worked well, but left some room for improvement:
-
Base OS image - It provides only
centos:centos7
andubuntu:14.04
. Insufficent for me. -
Unnecessary dependencies - It installed, at the very beginning of its Dockerfile, the
software-properties-common
package, which in turns installed some Python packages. I prefered to incorporate these stuff only when absolutely needed.
Therefore, I built these Docker images on my own.
NOTE: ansible/ansible-docker-base
announced in September 2015: “Ansible no longer maintains images in Dockerhub directly.”
REPOSITORY TAG VIRTUAL SIZE
--------------------------- ------------------- ------------
ansible/centos7-ansible stable 367.5 MB
ansible/ubuntu14.04-ansible stable 286.6 MB
williamyeh/ansible alpine3-onbuild 66.4 MB
williamyeh/ansible centos6-onbuild 264.2 MB
williamyeh/ansible centos7-onbuild 275.3 MB
williamyeh/ansible debian7-onbuild 134.4 MB
williamyeh/ansible debian8-onbuild 178.3 MB
williamyeh/ansible ubuntu12.04-onbuild 181.9 MB
williamyeh/ansible ubuntu14.04-onbuild 238.3 MB
Used mostly as a base image for configuring other software stack on some specified Linux distribution(s).
Take Debian/Ubuntu/CentOS for example. To test an Ansible playbook.yml
against a variety of Linux distributions, we may use Vagrant as follows:
# Vagrantfile
Vagrant.configure(2) do |config|
# ==> Choose a Vagrant box to emulate Linux distribution...
config.vm.box = "ubuntu/xenial64"
#config.vm.box = "ubuntu/trusty64"
#config.vm.box = "debian/stretch64"
#config.vm.box = "debian/jessie64"
#config.vm.box = "bento/centos-7.2"
#config.vm.box = "maier/alpine-3.3.1-x86_64"
# ==> Executing Ansible...
config.vm.provision "ansible" do |ansible|
ansible.playbook = "playbook.yml"
end
end
Virtual machines can emulate a variety of Linux distributions with good quality, at the cost of runtime overhead.
Docker to be a rescue. Now, with these williamyeh/ansible series, we may test an Ansible playbook.yml
against a variety of Linux distributions as follows:
# Dockerfile
# ==> Choose a base image to emulate Linux distribution...
FROM williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu14.04
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:debian9
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:debian8
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:centos7
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:alpine3
# ==> Copying Ansible playbook...
WORKDIR /tmp
COPY . /tmp
# ==> Creating inventory file...
RUN echo localhost > inventory
# ==> Executing Ansible...
RUN ansible-playbook -i inventory playbook.yml \
--connection=local --sudo
You may also work with onbuild
variants, which take care of many routine steps for you:
# Dockerfile
# ==> Choose a base image to emulate Linux distribution...
FROM williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu16.04-onbuild
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:ubuntu14.04-onbuild
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:debian9-onbuild
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:debian8-onbuild
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:centos7-onbuild
#FROM williamyeh/ansible:alpine3-onbuild
# ==> Specify requirements filename; default = "requirements.yml"
#ENV REQUIREMENTS requirements.yml
# ==> Specify playbook filename; default = "playbook.yml"
#ENV PLAYBOOK playbook.yml
# ==> Specify inventory filename; default = "/etc/ansible/hosts"
#ENV INVENTORY inventory.ini
# ==> Executing Ansible (with a simple wrapper)...
RUN ansible-playbook-wrapper
With Docker, we can test any Ansible playbook against any version of any Linux distribution without the help of Vagrant. More lightweight, and more portable across IaaS, PaaS, and even CaaS (Container as a Service) providers!
If better OS emulation (virtualization) isn't required, the Docker approach (containerization) should give you a more efficient Ansible experience.
Author: William Yeh [email protected]
Licensed under the Apache License V2.0. See the LICENSE file for details.