ansible.windows.win_template – Template a file out to a remote server
Note
This plugin is part of the ansible.windows collection (version 1.3.0).
To install it use: ansible-galaxy collection install ansible.windows.
To use it in a playbook, specify: ansible.windows.win_template.
Synopsis
- Templates are processed by the Jinja2 templating language.
- Documentation on the template formatting can be found in the Template Designer Documentation.
- Additional variables listed below can be used in templates.
-
ansible_managed(configurable via thedefaultssection ofansible.cfg) contains a string which can be used to describe the template name, host, modification time of the template file and the owner uid. -
template_hostcontains the node name of the template’s machine. -
template_uidis the numeric user id of the owner. -
template_pathis the path of the template. -
template_fullpathis the absolute path of the template. -
template_destpathis the path of the template on the remote system (added in 2.8). -
template_run_dateis the date that the template was rendered.
Note
This module has a corresponding action plugin.
Parameters
| Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| backup boolean |
| Determine whether a backup should be created. When set to yes, create a backup file including the timestamp information so you can get the original file back if you somehow clobbered it incorrectly. |
| block_end_string string | Default: "%}" | The string marking the end of a block. |
| block_start_string string | Default: "{%" | The string marking the beginning of a block. |
| dest path / required | Location to render the template to on the remote machine. | |
| force boolean |
| Determine when the file is being transferred if the destination already exists. When set to yes, replace the remote file when contents are different than the source.When set to no, the file will only be transferred if the destination does not exist. |
| lstrip_blocks boolean |
| Determine when leading spaces and tabs should be stripped. When set to yes leading spaces and tabs are stripped from the start of a line to a block.This functionality requires Jinja 2.7 or newer. |
| newline_sequence string |
| Specify the newline sequence to use for templating files. |
| output_encoding string | Default: "utf-8" | Overrides the encoding used to write the template file defined by dest.It defaults to utf-8, but any encoding supported by python can be used.The source template file must always be encoded using utf-8, for homogeneity. |
| src path / required | Path of a Jinja2 formatted template on the Ansible controller. This can be a relative or an absolute path. The file must be encoded with utf-8 but output_encoding can be used to control the encoding of the output template. | |
| trim_blocks boolean |
| Determine when newlines should be removed from blocks. When set to yes the first newline after a block is removed (block, not variable tag!). |
| variable_end_string string | Default: "}}" | The string marking the end of a print statement. |
| variable_start_string string | Default: "{{" | The string marking the beginning of a print statement. |
Notes
Note
- Including a string that uses a date in the template will result in the template being marked ‘changed’ each time.
- Also, you can override jinja2 settings by adding a special header to template file. i.e.
#jinja2:variable_start_string:'[%', variable_end_string:'%]', trim_blocks: Falsewhich changes the variable interpolation markers to[% var %]instead of{{ var }}. This is the best way to prevent evaluation of things that look like, but should not be Jinja2. - Using raw/endraw in Jinja2 will not work as you expect because templates in Ansible are recursively evaluated.
- To find Byte Order Marks in files, use
Format-Hex <file> -Count 16on Windows, and useod -a -t x1 -N 16 <file>on Linux. - Beware fetching files from windows machines when creating templates because certain tools, such as Powershell ISE, and regedit’s export facility add a Byte Order Mark as the first character of the file, which can cause tracebacks.
- You can use the ansible.windows.win_copy module with the
content:option if you prefer the template inline, as part of the playbook. - For Linux you can use ansible.builtin.template which uses ‘\n’ as
newline_sequenceby default.
See Also
See also
- ansible.windows.win_copy
-
The official documentation on the ansible.windows.win_copy module.
- ansible.builtin.copy
-
The official documentation on the ansible.builtin.copy module.
- ansible.builtin.template
-
The official documentation on the ansible.builtin.template module.
Examples
- name: Create a file from a Jinja2 template
ansible.windows.win_template:
src: /mytemplates/file.conf.j2
dest: C:\Temp\file.conf
- name: Create a Unix-style file from a Jinja2 template
ansible.windows.win_template:
src: unix/config.conf.j2
dest: C:\share\unix\config.conf
newline_sequence: '\n'
backup: yes
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
| Key | Returned | Description |
|---|---|---|
| backup_file string | if backup=yes | Name of the backup file that was created. Sample: C:\Path\To\File.txt.11540.20150212-220915.bak |
Authors
- Jon Hawkesworth (@jhawkesworth)
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.10/collections/ansible/windows/win_template_module.html