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awx/docs/overview.md

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awx

awx provides a web interface and distributed task engine for scheduling and running Ansible playbooks. As such, it relies heavily on the interfaces provided by Ansible. This document provides a birds-eye view of the notable touchpoints between awx and Ansible.

Terminology

awx has a variety of concepts which map to components of Ansible, or which further abstract them to provide functionality on top of Ansible. A few of the most notable ones are:

Projects

Projects represent a collection of Ansible playbooks. Most awx users create Projects that import periodically from source control systems (such as git, mercurial, or subversion repositories). This import is accomplished via an ansible playbook included with awx (which makes use of the various source control management modules in Ansible).

Inventories

awx manages Inventories, Groups, and Hosts, and provides a RESTful interface that maps to static and dynamic Ansible inventories. Inventory data can be entered into awx manually, but many users perform Inventory Syncs to import inventory data from a variety of external sources.

Job Templates

A Job Template is a definition and set of parameters for running ansible-playbook. If defines metadata about a given playbook run, such as:

  • a named identifier
  • an associated inventory to run against
  • the project and .yml playbook to run
  • a variety of other options which map directly to ansible-playbook arguments (extra_vars, verbosity, forks, limit, etc...)

Credentials

awx stores sensitive credential data which can be attached to ansible-playbook processes that it runs. This data can be oriented towards SSH connection authentication (usernames, passwords, SSH keys and passphrases), ansible-specific prompts (such as Vault passwords), or environmental authentication values which various Ansible modules depend on (such as setting AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID in an environment variable, or specifying ansible_ssh_user as an extra variable).

Canonical Example

Bringing all of this terminology together, a "Getting Started using AWX" might involve:

  • Creating a new Project that imports playbooks from e.g., a remote git repository
  • Manually creating or importing an Inventory which defines where the playbook(s) will run
  • Optionally, saving a Credential which contains SSH authentication details for the host(s) where the playbook will run
  • Creating a Job Template that specifies which Project and playbook to run and where to run it (Inventory), and any necessary Credentials for e.g., SSH authentication
  • Launching the Job Template and viewing the results

awx's Interaction with Ansible

The touchpoints between awx and Ansible are mostly encompassed by everything that happens after a job is started in awx. Specifically, this includes:

  • Any time a Job Template is launched
  • Any time a Project Update is performed
  • Any time an Inventory Sync is performed
  • Any time an Adhoc Command is run

Spawning Ansible Processes

awx relies on a handful of stable interfaces in its interaction with Ansible. The first of these are the actual CLI for ansible-playbook and ansible-inventory.

When a Job Template or Project Update is run in awx, an actual ansible-playbook command is composed and spawned in a pseudoterminal on one of the servers/containers that make up the awx installation. This process runs until completion (or until a configurable timeout), and the return code, stdout, and stderr of the process are recorded in the awx database. Adhoc commands work the same way, though they spawn ansible processes instead of ansible-playbook.

Similarly, when an Inventory Sync runs, an actual ansible-inventory process runs, and its output is parsed and persisted into the awx database as Hosts and Groups.

awx relies on stability in CLI behavior to function properly across Ansible releases; this includes the actual CLI arguments and the behavior of task execution and prompts (such as password, become, and Vault prompts).

Capturing Event Data

awx applies an Ansible callback plugin to all ansible-playbook and ansible processes it spawns. This allows Ansible events to be captured and persisted into the awx database; this process is what drives the "streaming" web UI you'll see if you launch a job from the awx web interface and watch its results appears on the screen. awx relies on stability in this plugin interface, the heirarchy of emitted events based on strategy, and especially the structure of event data to work across Ansible releases:

Event Data Diagram

Fact Caching

awx provides a custom fact caching implementation that allows users to store facts for playbook runs across subsequent Job Template runs. Specifically, awx makes use of the jsonfile fact cache plugin; after ansible-playbook runs have exited, awx consumes the entire jsonfile cache and persists it in the awx database. On subsequent Job Template runs, prior jsonfile caches are restored to the local file system so the new ansible-playbook process makes use of them.

Environment-Based Configuration

awx injects credentials and module configuration for a number of Ansible modules via environment variables. Examples include:

  • ANSIBLE_NET_* and other well-known environment variables for network device authentication
  • API keys and other credential values which are utilized (AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, GCE_EMAIL, etc...)
  • SSH-oriented configuration flags, such as ANSIBLE_SSH_CONTROL_PATH

awx relies on stability in these configuration options to reliably support credential injection for supported Ansible modules.