294

How do I specify a sudo password for Ansible in non-interactive way?

I'm running Ansible playbook like this:

$ ansible-playbook playbook.yml -i inventory.ini \
    --user=username --ask-sudo-pass

But I want to run it like this:

$ ansible-playbook playbook.yml -i inventory.ini \
    --user=username` **--sudo-pass=12345**

Is there a way? I want to automate my project deployment as much as possible.

3
  • 4
    See also: serverfault.com/questions/560106/…
    – utapyngo
    May 18, 2014 at 9:49
  • 8
    In the intervening years, the --ask-sudo-pass has changed to the more generic --ask-become-pass command line option.
    – dan_linder
    Dec 27, 2020 at 2:57
  • Ended up here when looking for a solution to put sudo passwords in an extra file and encrypt it. Found the solution here. Just added ansible_become_password.
    – Wolfson
    Nov 9, 2022 at 17:12

27 Answers 27

301

The docs strongly recommend against setting the sudo password in plaintext:

As a reminder passwords should never be stored in plain text. For information on encrypting your passwords and other secrets with Ansible Vault, see Encrypting content with Ansible Vault.

Instead you should be using --ask-become-pass on the command line when running ansible-playbook.

Previous versions of Ansible have used --ask-sudo-pass and sudo instead of become.

6
  • 28
    Yes, I can see why this is recommended. However, when we use Ansible as a part of deployment process, what is the better way to automate this? It's not very convenient to stop in the middle of deployment process and ask user to input the sudo password. Nov 28, 2014 at 19:53
  • 15
    Note --ask-sudo-pass can be abbrieviated to -K, however, as far as I can see, there's no way of handling a playbook running on multiple servers with different passwords (it only asks you once), so I think passwordless sudo is the way to go. Dec 26, 2014 at 11:04
  • 1
    Does not seem to work. but next suggestion ("some-host ansible_sudo_pass='foobar'") does
    – nadavkav
    Jul 31, 2016 at 19:16
  • --ask-sudo-pass was deprecated earlier, in 1.9 Nov 1, 2016 at 16:19
  • I'd love to update the answer with a source link if you have one.
    – deefour
    Nov 1, 2016 at 21:14
224

You can pass variable on the command line via --extra-vars "name=value". Sudo password variable is ansible_sudo_pass. So your command would look like:

ansible-playbook playbook.yml -i inventory.ini --user=username \
                              --extra-vars "ansible_sudo_pass=yourPassword"

Update 2017: Ansible 2.2.1.0 now uses var ansible_become_pass. Either seems to work.

Update 2021: ansible_become_pass is still working, but for now, we should use -e instead of --extra-vars

9
  • 9
    From the security perspective the best answer, if you add the following: history -c after execution of the yml.
    – kiltek
    Feb 29, 2016 at 16:45
  • 13
    @kiltek: or add an extra space at the beginning of the line (in bash) which will *not* write the line to .bash_history.
    – ccpizza
    Jan 14, 2017 at 20:31
  • 59
    Not a good practice to pass in passwords on command line. Anybody will be able to see the password in the process list, while command is executing... Mar 26, 2017 at 2:09
  • 27
    still, just don't do it. --ask-sudo-pass
    – JasonG
    Sep 5, 2017 at 21:45
  • 4
    @scrutari It is perfectly valid in some situations: Eg: Change from a default, world-known, initial password, to inject user's public ssh key... Think initial configuration of a freshly re-imaged system.
    – Ceredig
    Jun 13, 2019 at 10:13
134

Probably the best way to do this - assuming that you can't use the NOPASSWD solution provided by scottod - is to use Mircea Vutcovici's solution in combination with Ansible vault Archived.

For example, you might have a playbook something like this:

- hosts: all

  vars_files:
    - secret

  tasks:
    - name: Do something as sudo
      service: name=nginx state=restarted
      sudo: yes

Here we are including a file called secret which will contain our sudo password.

We will use ansible-vault to create an encrypted version of this file:

ansible-vault create secret

This will ask you for a password, then open your default editor to edit the file. You can put your ansible_sudo_pass in here.

e.g.: secret:

ansible_sudo_pass: mysudopassword

Save and exit, now you have an encrypted secret file which Ansible is able to decrypt when you run your playbook. Note: you can edit the file with ansible-vault edit secret (and enter the password that you used when creating the file)

The final piece of the puzzle is to provide Ansible with a --vault-password-file which it will use to decrypt your secret file.

Create a file called vault.txt and in that put the password that you used when creating your secret file. The password should be a string stored as a single line in the file.

From the Ansible Docs:

.. ensure permissions on the file are such that no one else can access your key and do not add your key to source control

Finally: you can now run your playbook with something like

ansible-playbook playbook.yml -u someuser -i hosts --sudo --vault-password-file=vault.txt 

The above is assuming the following directory layout:

.
|_ playbook.yml
|_ secret
|_ hosts
|_ vault.txt

You can read more about Ansible Vault here: https://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_vault.html Archived


https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html

9
  • 5
    Note: as of ansible 1.9, it appears that you can no longer use the ansible_sudo_pass (or ansible_become_pass) variable: "fatal: [...] => Missing become password" May 21, 2015 at 10:04
  • 6
    I'm using this solution in production, jenkins stores the vault password as an obfuscated environment variable, writes it at runtime in a temporary file and proceeds to call ansible. Apr 21, 2016 at 14:56
  • 8
    or more simply: ansible-vault create group_vars/all/ansible.yml and add ansible_sudo_pass: yourpassword there. No need to change playbooks or inventory May 3, 2016 at 11:14
  • 1
    Tried this but I got this error: fatal: [localhost]: FAILED! => {"changed": false, "failed": true, "module_stderr": "sudo: a password is required\n", "module_stdout": "", "msg": "MODULE FAILURE", "parsed": false}
    – JohnnyQ
    May 26, 2016 at 11:09
  • 12
    What good is a vault if you store the password to the vault in plain text right next to it? Mar 20, 2018 at 3:18
50

Looking at the code (runner/__init__.py), I think you can probably set it in your inventory file :

[whatever]
some-host ansible_sudo_pass='foobar'

There seem to be some provision in ansible.cfg config file too, but not implemented right now (constants.py).

1
  • 9
    A great way to configure this securely would be to store this in the host_vars or group_vars directory and then encrypt the file using ansible-vault
    – Kyle
    Jan 23, 2015 at 16:24
41

I don't think ansible will let you specify a password in the flags as you wish to do. There may be somewhere in the configs this can be set but this would make using ansible less secure overall and would not be recommended.

One thing you can do is to create a user on the target machine and grant them passwordless sudo privileges to either all commands or a restricted list of commands.

If you run sudo visudo and enter a line like the below, then the user 'privilegedUser' should not have to enter a password when they run something like sudo service xxxx start:

%privilegedUser ALL= NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/service
5
  • 7
    @bschlueter so you are endorsing bad practice?
    – tread
    Mar 2, 2016 at 8:31
  • 1
    I do not think this is a good idea. Using --ask-sudo-pass makes sense to me. Sep 27, 2016 at 7:57
  • @simone cittadini I totally agree as in fact that is the answer I was going to give. This one is a security risk.
    – eco
    Feb 15, 2017 at 18:07
  • It is less of a security risk if you are using passwordless sudo to deploy to staging/prod, but want to use these answers to skip having to type your local laptop login password when deploying to your localhost every 15 minutes all day every day. Mar 27, 2017 at 15:02
  • How do you add this line using Ansible?
    – Matthias
    Jul 22, 2017 at 18:44
24

The sudo password is stored as a variable called ansible_sudo_pass. You can set this variable in a few ways:

Per host, in your inventory hosts file (inventory/<inventoryname>/hosts)

[server]
10.0.0.0 ansible_sudo_pass=foobar

Per group, in your inventory groups file (inventory/<inventoryname>/groups)

[server:vars]
ansible_sudo_pass=foobar

Per group, in group vars (group_vars/<groupname>/ansible.yml)

ansible_sudo_pass: "foobar"

Per group, encrypted (ansible-vault create group_vars/<groupname>/ansible.yml)

ansible_sudo_pass: "foobar"
1
  • Sholud be like the following: note the doublequotes: ` [server] 10.0.0.0 ansible_sudo_pass="foobar" `
    – valk
    Aug 13, 2022 at 15:55
19

You can set the password for a group or for all servers at once:

[all:vars]
ansible_sudo_pass=default_sudo_password_for_all_hosts

[group1:vars]
ansible_sudo_pass=default_sudo_password_for_group1
0
15

I was tearing my hair out over this one, now I found a solution which does what i want:

1 encrypted file per host containing the sudo password

/etc/ansible/hosts:

[all:vars]
ansible_ssh_connection=ssh ansible_ssh_user=myuser ansible_ssh_private_key_file=~/.ssh/id_rsa

[some_service_group]
node-0
node-1

then you create for each host an encrypted var-file like so:

ansible-vault create /etc/ansible/host_vars/node-0

with content

ansible_sudo_pass: "my_sudo_pass_for_host_node-0"

how you organize the vault password (enter via --ask-vault-pass) or by cfg is up to you

based on this i suspect you can just encrypt the whole hosts file...

1
  • Encrypting using vault makes the most sense to me, though I struggled to use them with ansible-playback. I had to use -e @vault/filename.ext to use the vault with my ansible-playbook call.
    – Alex
    Jan 24, 2019 at 8:55
9

A more savvy way to do this is to store your sudo password in a secure vault such as LastPass or KeePass and then pass it to ansible-playbook using the -e@ but instead of hardcoding the contents in an actual file, you can use the construct -e@<(...) to run a command in a sub-shell, and redirect its output (STDOUT) to a anonymous file descriptor, effectively feeding the password to the -e@<(..).

Example

$ ansible-playbook -i /tmp/hosts pb.yml \
   -e@<(echo "ansible_sudo_pass: $(lpass show folder1/item1 --password)")

The above is doing several things, let's break it down.

  • ansible-playbook -i /tmp/hosts pb.yml - obviously running a playbook via ansible-playbook
  • $(lpass show folder1/item1 --password)" - runs the LastPass CLI lpass and retrieves the password to use
  • echo "ansible_sudo_pass: ...password..." - takes the string 'ansible_sudo_pass: ' and combines it with the password supplied by lpass
  • -e@<(..) - puts the above together, and connects the subshell of <(...) as a file descriptor for ansible-playbook to consume.

Further improvements

If you'd rather not type that every time you can simply things like so. First create an alias in your .bashrc like so:

$ cat ~/.bashrc
alias asp='echo "ansible_sudo_pass: $(lpass show folder1/item1 --password)"'

Now you can run your playbook like this:

$ ansible-playbook -i /tmp/hosts pb.yml -e@<(asp)

References

3
  • 1
    Using a subshell is a very smart idea! For those wondering, here’s what it looks like with 1Password’s CLI: --extra-vars @<(echo ansible_become_pass: $(op get item <item name> | jq --raw-output '.details.sections[0].fields[] | select(.t=="password").v'))
    – Diti
    Jan 21, 2019 at 15:02
  • 1
    I like this because when I checked bach history, the password wasn't exposed in cleartext. Likely also true of this is that if system auditing is enabled, the command is logged as reading a file, e.g. /dev/fd/63 and so by the password being in a temp file descriptor, it's not disclosed.
    – JPvRiel
    Aug 22, 2019 at 19:23
  • I used the following for 1 password: echo ansible_become_pass: $(op item get 1pass_item_name | grep "password:" | awk '{print $2}')
    – mrmuggles
    Jun 9, 2023 at 20:28
5

If you are comfortable with keeping passwords in plain text files, another option is to use a JSON file with the --extra-vars parameter (be sure to exclude the file from source control):

ansible-playbook --extra-vars "@private_vars.json" playbook.yml 

Ansible has supported this option since 1.3.

5

you can write sudo password for your playbook in the hosts file like this:

[host-group-name]
host-name:port ansible_sudo_pass='*your-sudo-password*'
5

Ansible vault has been suggested a couple of times here, but I prefer git-crypt for encrypting sensitive files in my playbooks. If you're using git to keep your ansible playbooks, it's a snap. The problem I've found with ansible vault is that I inevitably end up coming across encrypted copies of the file that I want to work with and have to go decrypt it before I can work. git-crypt offers a nicer workflow IMO.

Using this, you can put your passwords in a var in your playbook, and mark your playbook as an encrypted file in .gitattributes like this:

 my_playbook.yml filter=git-crypt diff=git-crypt

Your playbook will be transparently encrypted on Github. Then you just need to either install your encryption key on the host you use to run ansible, or follow the instruction on the documentation to set it up with gpg.

There's a good Q&A on forwarding gpg keys like your ssh-agent forwards SSH keys here: https://superuser.com/questions/161973/how-can-i-forward-a-gpg-key-via-ssh-agent.

0
5

My hack to automate this was to use an environment variable and access it via --extra-vars="ansible_become_pass='{{ lookup('env', 'ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASS') }}'".

Export an env var, but avoid bash/shell history (prepend with a space, or other methods). E.g.:

     export ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASS='<your password>'

Lookup the env var while passing the extra ansible_become_pass variable into the ansible-playbook, E.g.:

ansible-playbook playbook.yml -i inventories/dev/hosts.yml -u user --extra-vars="ansible_become_pass='{{ lookup('env', 'ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASS') }}'"

Good alternate answers:

1
  • 1
    this is the best solution I think. It does not reveal password when use bash with set -x .
    – KwonNam
    Sep 19, 2020 at 7:03
4

You can use ansible vault which will code your password into encrypted vault. After that you can use variable from vault in playbooks.

Some documentation on ansible vault:
http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_vault.html

We are using it as vault per environment. To edit vault we have command as:
ansible-vault edit inventories/production/group_vars/all/vault

If you want to call vault variable you have to use ansible-playbook with parameters like:
ansible-playbook -s --vault-password-file=~/.ansible_vault.password

Yes we are storing vault password in local directory in plain text but it's not more dangerous like store root password for every system. Root password is inside vault file or you can have it like sudoers file for your user/group.

I'm recommending to use sudoers file on the server. Here is example for group admin:
%admin ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL

4

Using ansible 2.4.1.0 and the following shall work:

[all]
17.26.131.10
17.26.131.11
17.26.131.12
17.26.131.13
17.26.131.14

[all:vars]
ansible_connection=ssh
ansible_user=per
ansible_ssh_pass=per
ansible_sudo_pass=per

And just run the playbook with this inventory as:

ansible-playbook -i inventory copyTest.yml
4

After five years, I can see this is still a very relevant subject. Somewhat mirroring leucos's answer which I find the best in my case, using ansible tools only (without any centralised authentication, tokens or whatever). This assumes you have the same username and the same public key on all servers. If you don't, of course you'd need to be more specific and add the corresponding variables next to the hosts:

[all:vars]
ansible_ssh_user=ansible
ansible_ssh_private_key_file=home/user/.ssh/mykey
[group]
192.168.0.50 ansible_sudo_pass='{{ myserver_sudo }}'

ansible-vault create mypasswd.yml
ansible-vault edit mypasswd.yml

Add:

myserver_sudo: mysecretpassword

Then:

ansible-playbook -i inv.ini my_role.yml --ask-vault --extra-vars '@passwd.yml'

At least this way you don't have to write more the variables which point to the passwords.

2
  • Thank you for this! Made sense and is working for me with one slight modification. In the mypasswd.yml it had to be myserver_sudo: "mysecretpassword" for it to work for me. Not sure how to escape that if you have double quotes in your password....
    – furicle
    Jul 4, 2022 at 18:28
  • @furicle If I remember correctly, I intentionally didn't add the quotes, because I had weird characters in my password and this was the only way it worked. But the password didn't contain simple and double quotes, so much is true. I guess the issue is the yaml standard in this case. But sure, quoting the value is often standard.
    – Lethargos
    Jul 5, 2022 at 19:30
3

You can use sshpass utility as below,

$ sshpass -p "your pass" ansible pattern -m module -a args \
   -i inventory --ask-sudo-pass
2

Just call your playbook with --extra-vars "become_pass=Password"

become_pass=('ansible_become_password', 'ansible_become_pass')

1

Just an addendum, so nobody else goes through the annoyance I recently did:

AFAIK, the best solution is one along the general lines of toast38coza's above. If it makes sense to tie your password files and your playbook together statically, then follow his template with vars_files (or include_vars). If you want to keep them separate, you can supply the vault contents on the command line like so:

ansible-playbook --ask-vault-pass -e@<PATH_TO_VAULT_FILE> <PLAYBOOK_FILE>

That's obvious in retrospect, but here are the gotchas:

  1. That bloody @ sign. If you leave it out, parsing will fail silently, and ansible-playbook will proceed as though you'd never specified the file in the first place.

  2. You must explicitly import the contents of the vault, either with a command-line --extra-vars/-e or within your YAML code. The --ask-vault-pass flag doesn't do anything by itself (besides prompt you for a value which may or may not be used later).

May you include your "@"s and save an hour.

1

Above solution by @toast38coza worked for me; just that sudo: yes is deprecated in Ansible now. Use become and become_user instead.

tasks:
 - name: Restart apache service
   service: name=apache2 state=restarted
   become: yes
   become_user: root
1

If you are using the pass password manager, you can use the module passwordstore, which makes this very easy.

Let's say you saved your user's sudo password in pass as

Server1/User

Then you can use the decrypted value like so

{{ lookup('community.general.passwordstore', 'Server1/User')}}"

I use it in my inventory:

---
   servers:
     hosts:
       server1:
         ansible_become_pass: "{{ lookup('community.general.passwordstore', 'Server1/User')}}"

Note that you should be running gpg-agent so that you won't see a pinentry prompt every time a 'become' task is run.

1

For new updates

just run your playbook with the flag -K and he will ask you for your sudo password

g.e ansible-playbook yourPlaybookFile.yaml -K

from the doc

To specify a password for sudo, run ansible-playbook with --ask-become-pass (-K for short)

1

Just hint to other solution. You can to setup your ansible user to run sudo without password (it's default on GCP VMs)

sudo visudo

add line (tom is a user):

tom ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
0

we Can also Use EXPECT BLOCK in ansible to spawn bash and customize it as per your needs

- name: Run expect to INSTALL TA
  shell: |
    set timeout 100
    spawn /bin/sh -i

    expect -re "$ "
    send "sudo yum remove -y xyz\n"

    expect "$ "
    send "sudo yum localinstall -y {{ rpm_remotehost_path_for_xyz }}\n"

    expect "~]$ "
    send "\n"

    exit 0
  args:
  executable: /usr/bin/expect
0

You can pass it during playbook execution. the syntax is -

ansible-playbook -i inventory my.yml \
--extra-vars 'ansible_become_pass=YOUR-PASSWORD-HERE'

But that is not a good idea for security reasons. Better to use ansible vault

First update your inventory file as follows:

[cluster:vars]
k_ver="linux-image-4.13.0-26-generic"
ansible_user=vivek  # ssh login user
ansible_become=yes  # use sudo 
ansible_become_method=sudo 
ansible_become_pass='{{ my_cluser_sudo_pass }}'
 
[cluster]
www1
www2
www3
db1
db2
cache1
cache2

Next create a new encrypted data file named password.yml, run the following command:

$ ansible-vault create passwd.yml

Set the password for vault. After providing a password, the tool will start whatever editor you have defined with $EDITOR. Append the following my_cluser_sudo_pass: your_sudo_password_for_remote_servers Save and close the file in vi/vim. Finally run playbook as follows:

$ ansible-playbook -i inventory --ask-vault-pass --extra-vars '@passwd.yml' my.yml

How to edit my encrypted file again

ansible-vault edit passwd.yml

How to change password for my encrypted file

ansible-vault rekey passwd.yml
-1

Very simple, and only add in the variable file:

Example:

$ vim group_vars/all

And add these:

Ansible_connection: ssh
Ansible_ssh_user: rafael
Ansible_ssh_pass: password123
Ansible_become_pass: password123
1
  • Thanks, but I think you mean ansible_become_pass instead of Ansible_become_pass.
    – Krishnom
    Oct 4, 2019 at 5:45
-4

This worked for me... Created file /etc/sudoers.d/90-init-users file with NOPASSWD

echo "user ALL=(ALL)       NOPASSWD:ALL" > 90-init-users

where "user" is your userid.

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