22

We have one Ansible role that needs to run three tasks in the handlers/main.yml task file, but it only runs the first task. How do I force it to run the other two tasks? I do have the ignore flag on for if the first task fails.

The tasks/main.yml file looks like:

- name: openfire | Copy plugins into openfire/plugins
  copy: src={{ srcdir }}/xmpp/{{ item }} dest=${bindir}/openfire/plugins/{{ item }}
  with_items:
   - x.jar
   - y.jar
  sudo: yes
  sudo_user: ${tomcat_user}
  notify: restart openfire

- name: openfire | Copy jars into openfire/lib
  copy: src={{ srcdir }}/xmpp/{{ item }} dest=${bindir}/openfire/lib/{{ item }}
  with_items:
   - a.jar
   - b.jar
  sudo: yes
  sudo_user: ${tomcat_user}
  notify: restart openfire

The handlers/main.yml file looks like:

- name: restart openfire
  service: name=openfire state=stopped
  ignore_errors: true
  sudo: yes

- name: restart openfire
  file: path=/var/run/openfire.pid state=absent
  sudo: yes

- name: restart openfire
  service: name=openfire state=restarted enabled=yes
  sudo: yes

Only the first handler task (shut down openfire) runs.

6
  • I imagine it runs whatever matches 1st and then bails out from that playbook. Have you tried combining both of your service and file modules into a single block? That makes it harder to troubleshoot if things fail and is very ugly, but it should still work.
    – Mxx
    Jan 28, 2014 at 4:54
  • It used to work. I'm wondering if our lead installed some ansible libraries... the executables we are using have not changed. I think I will eliminate using handlers completely for this openfire installation and just force a service start at the end of the normal playbook.
    – Nova
    Jan 28, 2014 at 20:17
  • wait a second. I just looked at your playbook and it looks really strange..Why are you stopping a service, then deleting its pid file and then restarting it? Why don't you just do a single state=restarted statement? That will actually _restart_(stop and start) your service.
    – Mxx
    Jan 28, 2014 at 23:48
  • I don't know. I need to find out from the original developer why he did it that way. The handler is called in the playbook when new jars are placed into openfire and everything after that is just minor tweaks that do not affect tomcat. I think it would be safe to just stick a regular old state=restarted in the playbook itself and not have this be a handler.
    – Nova
    Jan 29, 2014 at 23:44
  • handlers are meant to be run when something changes, it looks like it might be better if you move your handlers into your tasks
    – dalore
    Feb 10, 2014 at 13:32

4 Answers 4

28

Its possible for handler to call another notify. Multiple notify calls are also allowed:

---
- name: restart something
  command: shutdown.sh 
  notify:
    - wait for stop
    - start something
    - wait for start

- name: wait for stop
  wait_for: port={{port}} state=stopped

- name: start something
  command: startup.sh

- name: wait for start
  wait_for: port={{port}} state=started
1
  • 1
    This is exactly what I needed. Thanks.
    – Jonathan
    Apr 11, 2016 at 15:19
23

As of Ansible 2.2, you can now notify multiple handlers at the same time using the listen directive:

- name: stop openfire
  listen: restart openfire
  service: name=openfire state=stopped
  ignore_errors: true
  sudo: yes

- name: remove openfire pid file
  listen: restart openfire
  file: path=/var/run/openfire.pid state=absent
  sudo: yes

- name: restart openfire
  listen: restart openfire
  service: name=openfire state=restarted enabled=yes
  sudo: yes
1
  • Using 'topic' with the listen directive is an officially documented way to run severl tasks in a handler. I feel this is the best answer.
    – luqo33
    Mar 26, 2017 at 18:04
9

Maybe it is too late, since your post is from January, but... why are you naming identically all the different handlers? It is supposed for the handlers to be called in the tasks by their name, so maybe you need to name them differently. Try to change the handlers file to something like this:

- name: stop openfire
  service: name=openfire state=stopped
  ignore_errors: true
  sudo: yes

- name: remove openfire pid
  file: path=/var/run/openfire.pid state=absent
  sudo: yes

- name: restart openfire
  service: name=openfire state=restarted enabled=yes
  sudo: yes

Anyway, I agree with Mxx in the point that this handlers file is quite strange. It should be enough with a state=restarted.

0
8

The way the example code above is using notify in Ansible isn't officially supported, so I'm not surprised it's not working (and would be surprised if it ever were really working). In your particular case, using one task in your playbook, or a handler that simply uses state=restarted to restart the service, would be a better option:

- service: name=openfire state=restarted enabled=yes

However, if you do need to have multiple handlers run as a result of one operation, the best way to do it would be to notify each separate command in a chain. Note that this is almost always indicative of a deeper problem... but every once in a while, I've had to notify another handler after a certain handler completed, like so:

# Inside handlers/main.yml:
- name: import database
  mysql_db: name=database state=import target=/path/to/dump.sql
  notify: run shell script

- name: run shell script
  shell: /path/to/some/shell/script.sh

This should be pretty rare, but I wouldn't think it's too bad an option for certain scenarios (in my case, I had to import a database dump, then run a shell script after that was complete, and the best way to make that operation idempotent was to notify the import database handler instead of try doing the import directly in my playbook).

7
  • 1
    I need to disagree. The notify directive up there is correctly used, according with the latest documentation and with several of my own playbooks. You can define tasks in handlers/main.yml file which you can call via notify in your tasks/* files without any problem and, in fact, it is the correct way to do it. Check out this repo for a simple example if you want :) Mar 26, 2014 at 8:15
  • 4
    I wasn't implying you can't call handlers from tasks/playbooks, only that you can't define multiple handlers with the exact same name, and expect all of them to be called. This answer simply shows how you can call multiple handlers in succession, if need be. Mar 26, 2014 at 12:28
  • I'm amazed to discover this, as it makes handlers massively less useful for re-usable roles. You have to have exactly one listener for a notification? really? Apr 26, 2015 at 13:03
  • One other way to achieve it is to create some additional tasks with debug module and attach different notify with each one.
    – pawel7318
    Jun 16, 2015 at 7:54
  • Issue 4943 states > If you want to trigger multiple handlers, handlers are unique by name. It's certainly not yet clearly spelled out in the docs @CraigRinger. Jul 15, 2015 at 9:38

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