# SCM Inventory Users can create inventory sources that use content in the source tree of a project as an Ansible inventory file. ## Usage Details Fields that should be specified on creation of SCM inventory source: - `source_project` - project to use - `source_path` - relative path inside of the project indicating a directory or a file, if left blank, "" is still a relative path indicating the root directory of the project - the `source` field should be set to "scm" Additionally: - `source_vars` - if these are set on a "file" type inventory source then they will be passed to the environment vars when running - `update_on_project_update` - if set, a project update of the source project will automatically update this inventory source as a side effect If `update_on_project_update` is not set, then they can manually update just the inventory source with a POST to its update endpoint, `/inventory_sources/N/update/`. If `update_on_project_update` is set, the POST to the inventory source's update endpoint will trigger an update of the source project, which may, in turn, trigger an update of the inventory source. Also, with this flag set, an update _of the project_ is scheduled immediately after creation of the inventory source. Also, if this flag is set, no inventory updates will be triggered _unless the scm revision of the project changes_. ### RBAC User needs `admin` role to the project in order to use it as a source project for inventory (this entails permission to run arbitrary scripts). To update the project, they need `update` permission to the project, even if the update is done indirectly. ### Inventory File Suggestions The project should show a listing of suggested inventory locations, at the endpoint `/projects/N/inventories/`, but this is not a comprehensive list of all paths that could be used as an Ansible inventory because of the wide range of inclusion criteria. The list will also max out at 50 entries. The user should be allowed to specify a location manually in the UI. This listing should be refreshed to latest SCM info on a project update. If no inventory sources use a project as an SCM inventory source, then the inventory listing may not be refreshed on update. ### Still-to-come 3.2 Changes As a part of a different feature, it is planned to have all inventory sources inside of an inventory all update with a single button click. When this happens for an inventory containing an SCM inventory source, it should update the project. ## Supported File Syntax > Any Inventory Ansible supports should be supported by this feature This is accomplished by making use of the `ansible-inventory` command. the inventory import tower-manage command will check for the existence of `ansible-inventory` and if it is not present, it will call a backported version of it. The backport is maintained as its own GPL3 licensed repository. https://github.com/ansible/ansible-inventory-backport Because the internal mechanism is different, we need some coverage testing with Ansible versions pre-2.4 and after. # Acceptance Criteria Use Cases Some test scenarios to look at: - Test projects that use scripts - Test projects that have multiple inventory files in a directory, group_vars, host_vars, etc. - Test scripts in the project repo - Test scripts that use environment variables provided by a credential in Tower - Test multiple inventories that use the same project, pointing to different files / directories inside of the project - Feature works correctly even if project doesn't have any playbook files - File related errors should surface as inventory import failures + missing file + invalid syntax in file - If the project SCM update encounters errors, it should not run the inventory updates # Notes for Official Documentation The API guide should summarize what is in the use details. Once the UI implementation is done, the product docs should cover its standard use. ## Update-on-launch If the SCM inventory source is configured to follow the project updates, the `update_on_launch` field can not to be set to True. This is because of concerns related to the task manager job dependency tree. We should document the alternatives for a user to accomplish the same thing through in a different way. ### Alternative 1: Use same project for playbook You can make a job template that uses a project as well as an inventory that updates from that same project. In this case, you can set the project to `update_on_launch`, in which case it will trigger an inventory update if needed. ### Alternative 2: Use the project in a workflow If you must use a different project for the playbook than for the inventory source, then you can still place the project in a workflow and then have a job template run on success of the project update. This is guaranteed to have the inventory update "on time" (by this we mean that the inventory changes are complete before the job template is launched), because the project does not transition to the completed state until the inventory update is finished. Note that a failed inventory update does not mark the project as failed.