There is a feature request to support this natively in the copy module. But until that is implemented, here is the workaround (similar to @dave1010's answer, but repeating common parts for completeness):
Create a secrets.yml
file encrypted with ansible vault which contains your secrets, for example:
---
private_ssl_key: |
-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
abcabcabcabcabcabcabcabcabc
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----
private_crt: |
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
abcabcabcabcabcabcabcabcabc
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
In your playbook, include it:
vars_files:
- secrets.yml
Then you can use the variables in tasks:
- name: Copy private kay
copy: content="{{ private_ssl_key }}" dest=/some/path/ssl.key
However, this doesn't work if the file that you are trying to copy is a binary file. In that case, you need to first encode the content with base64:
cat your_secret_file | /usr/bin/base64
Then put the base64 encoded value in your secrets.yml
file, e.g.:
crt_b64: |
ndQbmFQSmxrK2IwOFZnZHNJa0sKICAxdDhFRUdmVzhMM...
Then you can create the remote file in two steps:
- name: Copy certificate (base64 encoded)
copy: content="{{ crt_b64 }}" dest=/some/path/cert.b64
- name: Decode certificate
shell: "base64 -d /some/path/cert.b64 > /some/path/cert.txt"
args:
creates: /some/path/cert.txt
Note that you could delete the temporary cert.b64
file on the remote host. But then re-running the playbook will re-create it instead of skipping this task. So, I prefer to leave it there.
UPDATE:
This feature has been implemented in Ansible 2.1.
copy module can now transparently use a vaulted file as source, if
vault passwords were provided it will decrypt and copy on the fly.