fortinet.fortimanager.fmgr_gtp_tunnellimit – GTP tunnel limiter.
Note
This plugin is part of the fortinet.fortimanager collection (version 2.1.3).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package. It is not included in ansible-core
. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install fortinet.fortimanager
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: fortinet.fortimanager.fmgr_gtp_tunnellimit
.
New in version 2.10: of fortinet.fortimanager
Synopsis
- This module is able to configure a FortiManager device.
- Examples include all parameters and values which need to be adjusted to data sources before usage.
Parameters
Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|
adom string / required | the parameter (adom) in requested url | ||
bypass_validation boolean |
| only set to True when module schema diffs with FortiManager API structure, module continues to execute without validating parameters | |
enable_log boolean |
| Enable/Disable logging for task | |
gtp_tunnellimit dictionary | the top level parameters set | ||
name string | Tunnel limiter name. | ||
tunnel-limit integer | Tunnel limit [1, 16000000]. | ||
proposed_method string |
| The overridden method for the underlying Json RPC request | |
rc_failed list / elements=string | the rc codes list with which the conditions to fail will be overriden | ||
rc_succeeded list / elements=string | the rc codes list with which the conditions to succeed will be overriden | ||
state string / required |
| the directive to create, update or delete an object | |
workspace_locking_adom string | the adom to lock for FortiManager running in workspace mode, the value can be global and others including root | ||
workspace_locking_timeout integer | Default: 300 | the maximum time in seconds to wait for other user to release the workspace lock |
Notes
Note
- Running in workspace locking mode is supported in this FortiManager module, the top level parameters workspace_locking_adom and workspace_locking_timeout help do the work.
- To create or update an object, use state present directive.
- To delete an object, use state absent directive.
- Normally, running one module can fail when a non-zero rc is returned. you can also override the conditions to fail or succeed with parameters rc_failed and rc_succeeded
Examples
- hosts: fortimanager-inventory collections: - fortinet.fortimanager connection: httpapi vars: ansible_httpapi_use_ssl: True ansible_httpapi_validate_certs: False ansible_httpapi_port: 443 tasks: - name: GTP tunnel limiter. fmgr_gtp_tunnellimit: bypass_validation: False workspace_locking_adom: <value in [global, custom adom including root]> workspace_locking_timeout: 300 rc_succeeded: [0, -2, -3, ...] rc_failed: [-2, -3, ...] adom: <your own value> state: <value in [present, absent]> gtp_tunnellimit: name: <value of string> tunnel-limit: <value of integer>
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key | Returned | Description |
---|---|---|
request_url string | always | The full url requested Sample: /sys/login/user |
response_code integer | always | The status of api request |
response_message string | always | The descriptive message of the api response Sample: OK. |
Authors
- Link Zheng (@chillancezen)
- Jie Xue (@JieX19)
- Frank Shen (@fshen01)
- Hongbin Lu (@fgtdev-hblu)
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2021 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/fortinet/fortimanager/fmgr_gtp_tunnellimit_module.html