Google Cloud Platform Guide
Introduction
Note
This section of the documentation is under construction. We are in the process of adding more examples about all of the GCE modules and how they work together. Upgrades via github pull requests are welcomed!
Ansible contains modules for managing Google Compute Engine resources, including creating instances, controlling network access, working with persistent disks, and managing load balancers. Additionally, there is an inventory plugin that can automatically suck down all of your GCE instances into Ansible dynamic inventory, and create groups by tag and other properties.
The GCE modules all require the apache-libcloud module which you can install from pip:
$ pip install apache-libcloud
Note
If you’re using Ansible on Mac OS X, libcloud also needs to access a CA cert chain. You’ll need to download one (you can get one for here.)
Credentials
To work with the GCE modules, you’ll first need to get some credentials in the JSON format:
There are three different ways to provide credentials to Ansible so that it can talk with Google Cloud for provisioning and configuration actions:
Note
If you would like to use JSON credentials you must have libcloud >= 0.17.0
- by providing to the modules directly
- by populating a
secrets.py
file - by setting environment variables
Calling Modules By Passing Credentials
For the GCE modules you can specify the credentials as arguments:
-
service_account_email
: email associated with the project -
credentials_file
: path to the JSON credentials file -
project_id
: id of the project
For example, to create a new instance using the cloud module, you can use the following configuration:
- name: Create instance(s) hosts: localhost connection: local gather_facts: no vars: service_account_email: [email protected] credentials_file: /path/to/project.json project_id: project-id machine_type: n1-standard-1 image: debian-7 tasks: - name: Launch instances gce: instance_names: dev machine_type: "{{ machine_type }}" image: "{{ image }}" service_account_email: "{{ service_account_email }}" credentials_file: "{{ credentials_file }}" project_id: "{{ project_id }}"
When running Ansible inside a GCE VM you can use the service account credentials from the local metadata server by setting both service_account_email
and credentials_file
to a blank string.
Configuring Modules with secrets.py
Create a file secrets.py
looking like following, and put it in some folder which is in your $PYTHONPATH
:
GCE_PARAMS = ('[email protected]', '/path/to/project.json') GCE_KEYWORD_PARAMS = {'project': 'project_id'}
Ensure to enter the email address from the created services account and not the one from your main account.
Now the modules can be used as above, but the account information can be omitted.
If you are running Ansible from inside a GCE VM with an authorized service account you can set the email address and credentials path as follows so that get automatically picked up:
GCE_PARAMS = ('', '') GCE_KEYWORD_PARAMS = {'project': 'project_id', 'datacenter': ''}
Configuring Modules with Environment Variables
Set the following environment variables before running Ansible in order to configure your credentials:
GCE_EMAIL GCE_PROJECT GCE_CREDENTIALS_FILE_PATH
GCE Dynamic Inventory
The best way to interact with your hosts is to use the gce inventory plugin, which dynamically queries GCE and tells Ansible what nodes can be managed.
Note that when using the inventory script gce.py
, you also need to populate the gce.ini
file that you can find in the contrib/inventory directory of the ansible checkout.
To use the GCE dynamic inventory script, copy gce.py
from contrib/inventory
into your inventory directory and make it executable. You can specify credentials for gce.py
using the GCE_INI_PATH
environment variable – the default is to look for gce.ini in the same directory as the inventory script.
Let’s see if inventory is working:
$ ./gce.py --list
You should see output describing the hosts you have, if any, running in Google Compute Engine.
Now let’s see if we can use the inventory script to talk to Google.
$ GCE_INI_PATH=~/.gce.ini ansible all -i gce.py -m setup hostname | success >> { "ansible_facts": { "ansible_all_ipv4_addresses": [ "x.x.x.x" ],
As with all dynamic inventory scripts in Ansible, you can configure the inventory path in ansible.cfg. The recommended way to use the inventory is to create an inventory
directory, and place both the gce.py
script and a file containing localhost
in it. This can allow for cloud inventory to be used alongside local inventory (such as a physical datacenter) or machines running in different providers.
Executing ansible
or ansible-playbook
and specifying the inventory
directory instead of an individual file will cause ansible to evaluate each file in that directory for inventory.
Let’s once again use our inventory script to see if it can talk to Google Cloud:
$ ansible all -i inventory/ -m setup hostname | success >> { "ansible_facts": { "ansible_all_ipv4_addresses": [ "x.x.x.x" ],
The output should be similar to the previous command. If you’re wanting less output and just want to check for SSH connectivity, use “-m” ping instead.
Use Cases
For the following use case, let’s use this small shell script as a wrapper.
#!/usr/bin/env bash PLAYBOOK="$1" if [[ -z $PLAYBOOK ]]; then echo "You need to pass a playbook as argument to this script." exit 1 fi export SSL_CERT_FILE=$(pwd)/cacert.pem export ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING=False if [[ ! -f "$SSL_CERT_FILE" ]]; then curl -O http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem fi ansible-playbook -v -i inventory/ "$PLAYBOOK"
Create an instance
The GCE module provides the ability to provision instances within Google Compute Engine. The provisioning task is typically performed from your Ansible control server against Google Cloud’s API.
A playbook would looks like this:
- name: Create instance(s) hosts: localhost gather_facts: no connection: local vars: machine_type: n1-standard-1 # default image: debian-7 service_account_email: [email protected] credentials_file: /path/to/project.json project_id: project-id tasks: - name: Launch instances gce: instance_names: dev machine_type: "{{ machine_type }}" image: "{{ image }}" service_account_email: "{{ service_account_email }}" credentials_file: "{{ credentials_file }}" project_id: "{{ project_id }}" tags: webserver register: gce - name: Wait for SSH to come up wait_for: host={{ item.public_ip }} port=22 delay=10 timeout=60 with_items: "{{ gce.instance_data }}" - name: Add host to groupname add_host: hostname={{ item.public_ip }} groupname=new_instances with_items: "{{ gce.instance_data }}" - name: Manage new instances hosts: new_instances connection: ssh sudo: True roles: - base_configuration - production_server
Note that use of the “add_host” module above creates a temporary, in-memory group. This means that a play in the same playbook can then manage machines in the ‘new_instances’ group, if so desired. Any sort of arbitrary configuration is possible at this point.
Configuring instances in a group
All of the created instances in GCE are grouped by tag. Since this is a cloud, it’s probably best to ignore hostnames and just focus on group management.
Normally we’d also use roles here, but the following example is a simple one. Here we will also use the “gce_net” module to open up access to port 80 on these nodes.
The variables in the ‘vars’ section could also be kept in a ‘vars_files’ file or something encrypted with Ansible-vault, if you so choose. This is just a basic example of what is possible:
- name: Setup web servers hosts: tag_webserver gather_facts: no vars: machine_type: n1-standard-1 # default image: debian-7 service_account_email: [email protected] credentials_file: /path/to/project.json project_id: project-id roles: - name: Install lighttpd apt: pkg=lighttpd state=installed sudo: True - name: Allow HTTP local_action: gce_net args: fwname: "all-http" name: "default" allowed: "tcp:80" state: "present" service_account_email: "{{ service_account_email }}" credentials_file: "{{ credentials_file }}" project_id: "{{ project_id }}"
By pointing your browser to the IP of the server, you should see a page welcoming you.
Upgrades to this documentation are welcome, hit the github link at the top right of this page if you would like to make additions!
© 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/guide_gce.html