diff options
author | TsaLaGi <aasmith@redhat.com> | 2018-02-27 09:17:38 -0500 |
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committer | TsaLaGi <aasmith@redhat.com> | 2018-02-27 10:35:11 -0500 |
commit | 7f4ef61d68c3ed96759f3553b2793e0ce6a7e4a5 (patch) | |
tree | 0f70462600336e92217628496da2ac8d09a3134c /docker/ansible/ansible.cfg | |
parent | 7effd9e1e84dd7fa2a189a0815b5be1c0fcb165a (diff) |
Merge conflict
Revert "Merge "ansible: add ansible scripts to configure .conf file on collectd nodes""
This reverts commit 7effd9e1e84dd7fa2a189a0815b5be1c0fcb165a, reversing
changes made to b26034d05aa81f624e9bcee2c8e82a1cacfe44c4.
Change-Id: I6f77b4432bbe0de29db3e099263e461e3043b22e
Signed-off-by: TsaLaGi <aasmith@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docker/ansible/ansible.cfg')
-rw-r--r-- | docker/ansible/ansible.cfg | 470 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 470 deletions
diff --git a/docker/ansible/ansible.cfg b/docker/ansible/ansible.cfg deleted file mode 100644 index d8de5288..00000000 --- a/docker/ansible/ansible.cfg +++ /dev/null @@ -1,470 +0,0 @@ -# config file for ansible -- https://ansible.com/ -# =============================================== - -# nearly all parameters can be overridden in ansible-playbook -# or with command line flags. ansible will read ANSIBLE_CONFIG, -# ansible.cfg in the current working directory, .ansible.cfg in -# the home directory or /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg, whichever it -# finds first - -[defaults] - -# some basic default values... - -#inventory = /etc/ansible/hosts -#library = /usr/share/my_modules/ -#module_utils = /usr/share/my_module_utils/ -#remote_tmp = ~/.ansible/tmp -#local_tmp = ~/.ansible/tmp -forks = 5 -#poll_interval = 15 -#sudo_user = root -#ask_sudo_pass = True -#ask_pass = True -#transport = smart -#remote_port = 22 -#module_lang = C -#module_set_locale = False - -# plays will gather facts by default, which contain information about -# the remote system. -# -# smart - gather by default, but don't regather if already gathered -# implicit - gather by default, turn off with gather_facts: False -# explicit - do not gather by default, must say gather_facts: True -gathering = explicit - -# This only affects the gathering done by a play's gather_facts directive, -# by default gathering retrieves all facts subsets -# all - gather all subsets -# network - gather min and network facts -# hardware - gather hardware facts (longest facts to retrieve) -# virtual - gather min and virtual facts -# facter - import facts from facter -# ohai - import facts from ohai -# You can combine them using comma (ex: network,virtual) -# You can negate them using ! (ex: !hardware,!facter,!ohai) -# A minimal set of facts is always gathered. -#gather_subset = all - -# some hardware related facts are collected -# with a maximum timeout of 10 seconds. This -# option lets you increase or decrease that -# timeout to something more suitable for the -# environment. -# gather_timeout = 10 - -# additional paths to search for roles in, colon separated -#roles_path = /etc/ansible/roles - -# uncomment this to disable SSH key host checking -#host_key_checking = False - -# change the default callback, you can only have one 'stdout' type enabled at a time. -#stdout_callback = skippy - - -## Ansible ships with some plugins that require whitelisting, -## this is done to avoid running all of a type by default. -## These setting lists those that you want enabled for your system. -## Custom plugins should not need this unless plugin author specifies it. - -# enable callback plugins, they can output to stdout but cannot be 'stdout' type. -#callback_whitelist = timer, mail - -# Determine whether includes in tasks and handlers are "static" by -# default. As of 2.0, includes are dynamic by default. Setting these -# values to True will make includes behave more like they did in the -# 1.x versions. -#task_includes_static = True -#handler_includes_static = True - -# Controls if a missing handler for a notification event is an error or a warning -#error_on_missing_handler = True - -# change this for alternative sudo implementations -#sudo_exe = sudo - -# What flags to pass to sudo -# WARNING: leaving out the defaults might create unexpected behaviours -#sudo_flags = -H -S -n - -# SSH timeout -#timeout = 10 - -# default user to use for playbooks if user is not specified -# (/usr/bin/ansible will use current user as default) -#remote_user = root - -# logging is off by default unless this path is defined -# if so defined, consider logrotate -#log_path = /var/log/ansible.log - -# default module name for /usr/bin/ansible -#module_name = command - -# use this shell for commands executed under sudo -# you may need to change this to bin/bash in rare instances -# if sudo is constrained -#executable = /bin/sh - -# if inventory variables overlap, does the higher precedence one win -# or are hash values merged together? The default is 'replace' but -# this can also be set to 'merge'. -#hash_behaviour = replace - -# by default, variables from roles will be visible in the global variable -# scope. To prevent this, the following option can be enabled, and only -# tasks and handlers within the role will see the variables there -#private_role_vars = yes - -# list any Jinja2 extensions to enable here: -#jinja2_extensions = jinja2.ext.do,jinja2.ext.i18n - -# if set, always use this private key file for authentication, same as -# if passing --private-key to ansible or ansible-playbook -#private_key_file = /path/to/file - -# If set, configures the path to the Vault password file as an alternative to -# specifying --vault-password-file on the command line. -#vault_password_file = /path/to/vault_password_file - -# format of string {{ ansible_managed }} available within Jinja2 -# templates indicates to users editing templates files will be replaced. -# replacing {file}, {host} and {uid} and strftime codes with proper values. -#ansible_managed = Ansible managed: {file} modified on %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S by {uid} on {host} -# {file}, {host}, {uid}, and the timestamp can all interfere with idempotence -# in some situations so the default is a static string: -#ansible_managed = Ansible managed - -# by default, ansible-playbook will display "Skipping [host]" if it determines a task -# should not be run on a host. Set this to "False" if you don't want to see these "Skipping" -# messages. NOTE: the task header will still be shown regardless of whether or not the -# task is skipped. -#display_skipped_hosts = True - -# by default, if a task in a playbook does not include a name: field then -# ansible-playbook will construct a header that includes the task's action but -# not the task's args. This is a security feature because ansible cannot know -# if the *module* considers an argument to be no_log at the time that the -# header is printed. If your environment doesn't have a problem securing -# stdout from ansible-playbook (or you have manually specified no_log in your -# playbook on all of the tasks where you have secret information) then you can -# safely set this to True to get more informative messages. -#display_args_to_stdout = False - -# by default (as of 1.3), Ansible will raise errors when attempting to dereference -# Jinja2 variables that are not set in templates or action lines. Uncomment this line -# to revert the behavior to pre-1.3. -#error_on_undefined_vars = False - -# by default (as of 1.6), Ansible may display warnings based on the configuration of the -# system running ansible itself. This may include warnings about 3rd party packages or -# other conditions that should be resolved if possible. -# to disable these warnings, set the following value to False: -#system_warnings = True - -# by default (as of 1.4), Ansible may display deprecation warnings for language -# features that should no longer be used and will be removed in future versions. -# to disable these warnings, set the following value to False: -deprecation_warnings = false - -# (as of 1.8), Ansible can optionally warn when usage of the shell and -# command module appear to be simplified by using a default Ansible module -# instead. These warnings can be silenced by adjusting the following -# setting or adding warn=yes or warn=no to the end of the command line -# parameter string. This will for example suggest using the git module -# instead of shelling out to the git command. -# command_warnings = False - - -# set plugin path directories here, separate with colons -#action_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/action -#cache_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/cache -#callback_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/callback -#connection_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/connection -#lookup_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/lookup -#inventory_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/inventory -#vars_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/vars -#filter_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/filter -#test_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/test -#terminal_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/terminal -#strategy_plugins = /usr/share/ansible/plugins/strategy - - -# by default, ansible will use the 'linear' strategy but you may want to try -# another one -#strategy = free - -# by default callbacks are not loaded for /bin/ansible, enable this if you -# want, for example, a notification or logging callback to also apply to -# /bin/ansible runs -#bin_ansible_callbacks = False - - -# don't like cows? that's unfortunate. -# set to 1 if you don't want cowsay support or export ANSIBLE_NOCOWS=1 -#nocows = 1 - -# set which cowsay stencil you'd like to use by default. When set to 'random', -# a random stencil will be selected for each task. The selection will be filtered -# against the `cow_whitelist` option below. -#cow_selection = default -#cow_selection = random - -# when using the 'random' option for cowsay, stencils will be restricted to this list. -# it should be formatted as a comma-separated list with no spaces between names. -# NOTE: line continuations here are for formatting purposes only, as the INI parser -# in python does not support them. -#cow_whitelist=bud-frogs,bunny,cheese,daemon,default,dragon,elephant-in-snake,elephant,eyes,\ -# hellokitty,kitty,luke-koala,meow,milk,moofasa,moose,ren,sheep,small,stegosaurus,\ -# stimpy,supermilker,three-eyes,turkey,turtle,tux,udder,vader-koala,vader,www - -# don't like colors either? -# set to 1 if you don't want colors, or export ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR=1 -#nocolor = 1 - -# if set to a persistent type (not 'memory', for example 'redis') fact values -# from previous runs in Ansible will be stored. This may be useful when -# wanting to use, for example, IP information from one group of servers -# without having to talk to them in the same playbook run to get their -# current IP information. -#fact_caching = memory - - -# retry files -# When a playbook fails by default a .retry file will be created in ~/ -# You can disable this feature by setting retry_files_enabled to False -# and you can change the location of the files by setting retry_files_save_path - -#retry_files_enabled = False -#retry_files_save_path = ~/.ansible-retry - -# squash actions -# Ansible can optimise actions that call modules with list parameters -# when looping. Instead of calling the module once per with_ item, the -# module is called once with all items at once. Currently this only works -# under limited circumstances, and only with parameters named 'name'. -#squash_actions = apk,apt,dnf,homebrew,pacman,pkgng,yum,zypper - -# prevents logging of task data, off by default -#no_log = False - -# prevents logging of tasks, but only on the targets, data is still logged on the master/controller -#no_target_syslog = False - -# controls whether Ansible will raise an error or warning if a task has no -# choice but to create world readable temporary files to execute a module on -# the remote machine. This option is False by default for security. Users may -# turn this on to have behaviour more like Ansible prior to 2.1.x. See -# https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/become.html#becoming-an-unprivileged-user -# for more secure ways to fix this than enabling this option. -#allow_world_readable_tmpfiles = False - -# controls the compression level of variables sent to -# worker processes. At the default of 0, no compression -# is used. This value must be an integer from 0 to 9. -#var_compression_level = 9 - -# controls what compression method is used for new-style ansible modules when -# they are sent to the remote system. The compression types depend on having -# support compiled into both the controller's python and the client's python. -# The names should match with the python Zipfile compression types: -# * ZIP_STORED (no compression. available everywhere) -# * ZIP_DEFLATED (uses zlib, the default) -# These values may be set per host via the ansible_module_compression inventory -# variable -#module_compression = 'ZIP_DEFLATED' - -# This controls the cutoff point (in bytes) on --diff for files -# set to 0 for unlimited (RAM may suffer!). -#max_diff_size = 1048576 - -# This controls how ansible handles multiple --tags and --skip-tags arguments -# on the CLI. If this is True then multiple arguments are merged together. If -# it is False, then the last specified argument is used and the others are ignored. -# This option will be removed in 2.8. -#merge_multiple_cli_flags = True - -# Controls showing custom stats at the end, off by default -#show_custom_stats = True - -# Controls which files to ignore when using a directory as inventory with -# possibly multiple sources (both static and dynamic) -#inventory_ignore_extensions = ~, .orig, .bak, .ini, .cfg, .retry, .pyc, .pyo - -# This family of modules use an alternative execution path optimized for network appliances -# only update this setting if you know how this works, otherwise it can break module execution -#network_group_modules=['eos', 'nxos', 'ios', 'iosxr', 'junos', 'vyos'] - -# When enabled, this option allows lookups (via variables like {{lookup('foo')}} or when used as -# a loop with `with_foo`) to return data that is not marked "unsafe". This means the data may contain -# jinja2 templating language which will be run through the templating engine. -# ENABLING THIS COULD BE A SECURITY RISK -#allow_unsafe_lookups = False - -# set default errors for all plays -#any_errors_fatal = False - -[inventory] -# enable inventory plugins, default: 'host_list', 'script', 'yaml', 'ini' -#enable_plugins = host_list, virtualbox, yaml, constructed - -# ignore these extensions when parsing a directory as inventory source -#ignore_extensions = .pyc, .pyo, .swp, .bak, ~, .rpm, .md, .txt, ~, .orig, .ini, .cfg, .retry - -# ignore files matching these patterns when parsing a directory as inventory source -#ignore_patterns= - -# If 'true' unparsed inventory sources become fatal errors, they are warnings otherwise. -#unparsed_is_failed=False - -[privilege_escalation] -#become=True -#become_method=sudo -#become_user=root -#become_ask_pass=False - -[paramiko_connection] - -# uncomment this line to cause the paramiko connection plugin to not record new host -# keys encountered. Increases performance on new host additions. Setting works independently of the -# host key checking setting above. -#record_host_keys=False - -# by default, Ansible requests a pseudo-terminal for commands executed under sudo. Uncomment this -# line to disable this behaviour. -#pty=False - -# paramiko will default to looking for SSH keys initially when trying to -# authenticate to remote devices. This is a problem for some network devices -# that close the connection after a key failure. Uncomment this line to -# disable the Paramiko look for keys function -#look_for_keys = False - -# When using persistent connections with Paramiko, the connection runs in a -# background process. If the host doesn't already have a valid SSH key, by -# default Ansible will prompt to add the host key. This will cause connections -# running in background processes to fail. Uncomment this line to have -# Paramiko automatically add host keys. -#host_key_auto_add = True - -[ssh_connection] - -# ssh arguments to use -# Leaving off ControlPersist will result in poor performance, so use -# paramiko on older platforms rather than removing it, -C controls compression use -#ssh_args = -C -o ControlMaster=auto -o ControlPersist=60s - -# The base directory for the ControlPath sockets. -# This is the "%(directory)s" in the control_path option -# -# Example: -# control_path_dir = /tmp/.ansible/cp -#control_path_dir = ~/.ansible/cp - -# The path to use for the ControlPath sockets. This defaults to a hashed string of the hostname, -# port and username (empty string in the config). The hash mitigates a common problem users -# found with long hostames and the conventional %(directory)s/ansible-ssh-%%h-%%p-%%r format. -# In those cases, a "too long for Unix domain socket" ssh error would occur. -# -# Example: -# control_path = %(directory)s/%%h-%%r -#control_path = - -# Enabling pipelining reduces the number of SSH operations required to -# execute a module on the remote server. This can result in a significant -# performance improvement when enabled, however when using "sudo:" you must -# first disable 'requiretty' in /etc/sudoers -# -# By default, this option is disabled to preserve compatibility with -# sudoers configurations that have requiretty (the default on many distros). -# -#pipelining = False - -# Control the mechanism for transferring files (old) -# * smart = try sftp and then try scp [default] -# * True = use scp only -# * False = use sftp only -#scp_if_ssh = smart - -# Control the mechanism for transferring files (new) -# If set, this will override the scp_if_ssh option -# * sftp = use sftp to transfer files -# * scp = use scp to transfer files -# * piped = use 'dd' over SSH to transfer files -# * smart = try sftp, scp, and piped, in that order [default] -#transfer_method = smart - -# if False, sftp will not use batch mode to transfer files. This may cause some -# types of file transfer failures impossible to catch however, and should -# only be disabled if your sftp version has problems with batch mode -#sftp_batch_mode = False - -[persistent_connection] - -# Configures the persistent connection timeout value in seconds. This value is -# how long the persistent connection will remain idle before it is destroyed. -# If the connection doesn't receive a request before the timeout value -# expires, the connection is shutdown. The default value is 30 seconds. -#connect_timeout = 30 - -# Configures the persistent connection retry timeout. This value configures the -# the retry timeout that ansible-connection will wait to connect -# to the local domain socket. This value must be larger than the -# ssh timeout (timeout) and less than persistent connection idle timeout (connect_timeout). -# The default value is 15 seconds. -#connect_retry_timeout = 15 - -# The command timeout value defines the amount of time to wait for a command -# or RPC call before timing out. The value for the command timeout must -# be less than the value of the persistent connection idle timeout (connect_timeout) -# The default value is 10 second. -#command_timeout = 10 - -[accelerate] -#accelerate_port = 5099 -#accelerate_timeout = 30 -#accelerate_connect_timeout = 5.0 - -# The daemon timeout is measured in minutes. This time is measured -# from the last activity to the accelerate daemon. -#accelerate_daemon_timeout = 30 - -# If set to yes, accelerate_multi_key will allow multiple -# private keys to be uploaded to it, though each user must -# have access to the system via SSH to add a new key. The default -# is "no". -#accelerate_multi_key = yes - -[selinux] -# file systems that require special treatment when dealing with security context -# the default behaviour that copies the existing context or uses the user default -# needs to be changed to use the file system dependent context. -#special_context_filesystems=nfs,vboxsf,fuse,ramfs,9p - -# Set this to yes to allow libvirt_lxc connections to work without SELinux. -#libvirt_lxc_noseclabel = yes - -[colors] -#highlight = white -#verbose = blue -#warn = bright purple -#error = red -#debug = dark gray -#deprecate = purple -#skip = cyan -#unreachable = red -#ok = green -#changed = yellow -#diff_add = green -#diff_remove = red -#diff_lines = cyan - - -[diff] -# Always print diff when running ( same as always running with -D/--diff ) -# always = no - -# Set how many context lines to show in diff -# context = 3 |