Documenting Your Module
- Copyright
- ANSIBLE_METADATA Block
- DOCUMENTATION Block
- EXAMPLES block
- RETURN Block
- Python Imports
- Formatting options
- Documentation fragments
- Testing documentation
The online module documentation is generated from the modules themselves. As the module documentation is generated from documentation strings contained in the modules, all modules included with Ansible must have a DOCUMENTATION
string. This string must be a valid YAML document which conforms to the schema defined below. You may find it easier to start writing your DOCUMENTATION
string in an editor with YAML syntax highlighting before you include it in your Python file.
All modules must have the following sections defined in this order:
- Copyright
- ANSIBLE_METADATA
- DOCUMENTATION
- EXAMPLES
- RETURN
- Python imports
Note
Why don’t the imports go first?
Keen Python programmers may notice that contrary to PEP 8’s advice we don’t put imports
at the top of the file. This is because the ANSIBLE_METADATA
through RETURN
sections are not used by the module code itself; they are essentially extra docstrings for the file. The imports are placed after these special variables for the same reason as PEP 8 puts the imports after the introductory comments and docstrings. This keeps the active parts of the code together and the pieces which are purely informational apart. The decision to exclude E402 is based on readability (which is what PEP 8 is about). Documentation strings in a module are much more similar to module level docstrings, than code, and are never utilized by the module itself. Placing the imports below this documentation and closer to the code, consolidates and groups all related code in a congruent manner to improve readability, debugging and understanding.
Warning
Why do some modules have imports at the bottom of the file?
If you look at some existing older modules, you may find imports at the bottom of the file. Do not copy that idiom into new modules as it is a historical oddity due to how modules used to be combined with libraries. Over time we’re moving the imports to be in their proper place.
Copyright
The beginning of every module should look about the same. After the shebang, there should be at least two lines covering copyright and licensing of the code.
#!/usr/bin/python # Copyright (c) 2017 Ansible Project # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
Every file should have a copyright line with the original copyright holder. Major additions to the module (for instance, rewrites) may add additional copyright lines. Code from the Ansible community should typically be assigned as “Copyright (c) 2017 Ansible Project” which covers all contributors. Any legal questions need to review the source control history, so an exhaustive copyright header is not necessary.
The license declaration should be ONLY one line, not the full GPL prefix. If you notice a module with the full prefix, feel free to switch it to the one-line declaration instead.
When adding a copyright line after completing a significant feature or rewrite, add the newer line above the older one, like so:
#!/usr/bin/python # Copyright (c) 2017 [New Contributor(s)] # Copyright (c) 2015 [Original Contributor(s)] # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt)
ANSIBLE_METADATA Block
ANSIBLE_METADATA
contains information about the module for use by other tools. At the moment, it informs other tools which type of maintainer the module has and to what degree users can rely on a module’s behaviour remaining the same over time.
For new modules, the following block can be simply added into your module
ANSIBLE_METADATA = {'metadata_version': '1.1', 'status': ['preview'], 'supported_by': 'community'}
Warning
-
metadata_version
is the version of theANSIBLE_METADATA
schema, not the version of the module. - Promoting a module’s
status
orsupported_by
status should only be done by members of the Ansible Core Team.
Note
Pre-released metdata version
During development of Ansible-2.3, modules had an initial version of the metadata. This version was modified slightly after release to fix some points of confusion. You may occassionally see PRs for modules where the ANSIBLE_METADATA doesn’t look quite right because of this. Module metadata should be fixed before checking it into the repository.
Version 1.1 of the metadata
Structure
ANSIBLE_METADATA = { 'metadata_version': '1.1', 'supported_by': 'community', 'status': ['preview', 'deprecated'] }
Fields
metadata_version: | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
An “X.Y” formatted string. X and Y are integers which define the metadata format version. Modules shipped with Ansible are tied to an Ansible release, so we will only ship with a single version of the metadata. We’ll increment Y if we add fields or legal values to an existing field. We’ll increment X if we remove fields or values or change the type or meaning of a field. Current metadata_version is “1.1” | |||||||||||
supported_by: |
This field records who supports the module. Default value is
For information on what the support level values entail, please see Modules Support. | ||||||||||
status: |
This field records information about the module that is important to the end user. It’s a list of strings. The default value is a single element list [“preview”]. The following strings are valid statuses and have the following meanings:
|
Changes from Version 1.0
metadata_version: | |
---|---|
Version updated from 1.0 to 1.1 | |
supported_by: |
All substantive changes were to potential values of the supported_by field
|
DOCUMENTATION Block
See an example documentation string in the checkout under examples/DOCUMENTATION.yml.
Include it in your module file like this:
#!/usr/bin/python # Copyright (c) 2017 [REPLACE THIS] # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt) DOCUMENTATION = ''' --- module: modulename short_description: This is a sentence describing the module # ... snip ... '''
The following fields can be used and are all required unless specified otherwise:
module: |
The name of the module. This must be the same as the filename, without the | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
short_description: | |||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||
description: |
| ||||||||||||||||||
version_added: |
The version of Ansible when the module was added. This is a | ||||||||||||||||||
author: |
Name of the module author in the form | ||||||||||||||||||
deprecated: |
If this module is deprecated, detail when that happened, and what to use instead, e.g. | ||||||||||||||||||
options: |
One per module argument:
| ||||||||||||||||||
requirements: |
List of requirements, and minimum versions (if applicable) | ||||||||||||||||||
notes: |
Details of any important information that doesn’t fit in one of the above sections; for example if |
Note
- The above fields are are all in lowercase.
- If the module doesn’t doesn’t have any options (for example, it’s a
_facts
module), you can useoptions: {}
.
EXAMPLES block
The EXAMPLES section is required for all new modules.
Examples should demonstrate real world usage, and be written in multi-line plain-text YAML format.
Ensure that examples are kept in sync with the options during the PR review and any following code refactor.
As per playbook best practice, a name:
should be specified.
EXAMPLES
string within the module like this:
EXAMPLES = ''' - name: Ensure foo is installed modulename: name: foo state: present '''
If the module returns facts that are often needed, an example of how to use them can be helpful.
RETURN Block
The RETURN section documents what the module returns, and is required for all new modules.
For each value returned, provide a description
, in what circumstances the value is returned
, the type
of the value and a sample
. For example, from the copy
module:
The following fields can be used and are all required unless specified otherwise.
return name: |
Name of the returned field.
|
---|
For complex nested returns type can be specified as type: complex
.
Example:
RETURN = ''' dest: description: destination file/path returned: success type: string sample: /path/to/file.txt src: description: source file used for the copy on the target machine returned: changed type: string sample: /home/httpd/.ansible/tmp/ansible-tmp-1423796390.97-147729857856000/source md5sum: description: md5 checksum of the file after running copy returned: when supported type: string sample: 2a5aeecc61dc98c4d780b14b330e3282 ...
Note
If your module doesn’t return anything (apart from the standard returns), you can use RETURN = ''' # '''
.
Python Imports
Starting with Ansible version 2.2, all new modules are required to use imports in the form:
from module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule
Warning
The use of “wildcard” imports such as from module_utils.basic import *
is no longer allowed.
Formatting options
These formatting functions are U()
for URLs, I()
for option names, C()
for files and option values and M()
for module names. Module names should be specified as M(module)
to create a link to the online documentation for that module.
Example usage:
Or if not set the environment variable C(ACME_PASSWORD) will be used. ... Required if I(state=present) ... Mutually exclusive with I(project_src) and I(files). ... See also M(win_copy) or M(win_template). ... See U(https://www.ansible.com/tower) for an overview.
Note
If you wish to refer a collection of modules, use C(..)
, e.g. Refer to the C(win_*) modules.
Documentation fragments
Some categories of modules share common documentation, such as details on how to authenticate options, or file mode settings. Rather than duplicate that information it can be shared using docs_fragments
.
These shared fragments are similar to the standard documentation block used in a module, they are just contained in a ModuleDocFragment
class.
All the existing docs_fragments
can be found in lib/ansible/utils/module_docs_fragments/
.
To include, simply add in extends_documentation_fragment: FRAGMENT_NAME
into your module.
Examples can be found by searching for extends_documentation_fragment
under the Ansible source tree.
Testing documentation
Put your completed module file into the lib/ansible/modules/$CATEGORY/
directory and then run the command: make webdocs
. The new ‘modules.html’ file will be built in the docs/docsite/_build/html/$MODULENAME_module.html
directory.
In order to speed up the build process, you can limit the documentation build to only include modules you specify, or no modules at all. To do this, run the command: MODULES=$MODULENAME make webdocs
. The MODULES
environment variable accepts a comma-separated list of module names. To skip building documentation for all modules, specify a non-existent module name, for example: MODULES=none make webdocs
.
You may also build a single page of the entire docsite. From ansible/docs/docsite
run make htmlsingle rst=[relative path to the .rst file]
, for example: make htmlsingle rst=dev_guide/developing_modules_documenting.rst
To test your documentation against your argument_spec
you can use validate-modules
. Note that this option isn’t currently enabled in Shippable due to the time it takes to run.
# If you don't already, ensure you are using your local checkout source hacking/env-setup ./test/sanity/validate-modules/validate-modules --arg-spec --warnings lib/ansible/modules/your/modules/
Tip
If you’re having a problem with the syntax of your YAML you can validate it on the YAML Lint website.
For more information in testing, including how to add unit and integration tests, see Testing Ansible.
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.4/dev_guide/developing_modules_documenting.html