146

How can I copy more than a single file into remote nodes by Ansible in a task?

I've tried to duplicate the copy module line in my task to define files but it only copies the first file.

15 Answers 15

174

You can use the with_fileglob loop for this:

- copy:
    src: "{{ item }}"
    dest: /etc/fooapp/
    owner: root
    mode: 600
  with_fileglob:
    - "/playbooks/files/fooapp/*"
4
  • 5
    This approach could help me if I've had all of my files in the same root for copying into remote machine, what about having some files in various directories. For example, I wanna copy 3 files from 3 different directory
    – Mark K.
    Apr 19, 2016 at 7:37
  • Hey, I'm trying to move all the files from my /roles/db/files but I can't get it working with this method. I've tried with_fileglob: - /roles/db/file/* but it won't fine the path
    – Batman
    Dec 18, 2017 at 20:12
  • 1
    The big disadvantage with this method is that it flattens the directory structure. Sep 10, 2018 at 2:32
  • Note that loop is recommended over with_*, see Ansible Playbooks - Loops documentation.
    – Flow
    Mar 22, 2023 at 15:53
165
- name: copy multiple items
    copy: 
      src: "{{ item.src }}" 
      dest: "{{ item.dest }}"
    loop:
      - src: containerizers
        dest: /etc/mesos/containerizers
      - src: another_file
        dest: /etc/somewhere
      - src: dynamic
        dest: "{{ var_path }}"
2
  • Is it possible to have this solution with the dest set as a variable? { src: 'containerizers', dest: {{ containerizers }} }.
    – Gesias
    Jan 19, 2017 at 17:03
  • 2
    @Gesias, yes. Actually, both sides can be variables: { src: '{{ source.var }}', dest: '{{ dest.var }}' }
    – ntwrkguru
    Apr 20, 2017 at 1:36
55

Since Ansible 2.5 the with_* constructs are not recommended, and loop syntax should be used. A simple practical example:

- name: Copy CA files
  copy:
    src: '{{item}}'
    dest: '/etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors'
    owner: root
    group: root
    mode: 0644
  loop:
    - symantec-private.crt
    - verisignclass3g2.crt

Please note that in many cases a specific list of files would be preferred over globbing (using wildcards). If specific files are not known, with_fileglob would still be suggested over a loop with lookup.

4
  • 3
    On the page you linked it explicitly says that with_* is not deprecated: “We have not deprecated the use of with_<lookup> - that syntax will still be valid for the foreseeable future.” (As of 11/2021) They only recommend it.
    – jotaen
    Nov 11, 2021 at 15:55
  • 2
    Thank you for spotting that - the notice was not there before, it was added at some point in late 2019. Will amend the answer accordingly.
    – Richlv
    Nov 11, 2021 at 19:28
  • 1
    The page linked in this answer gives with_fileglob as an example of a with_* construct that would be preferred over a loop, near the bottom of the page. Mar 5, 2023 at 7:57
  • Thanks, slightly amended the answer to include globbing.
    – Richlv
    Mar 6, 2023 at 11:18
19

You can use with_together for this purpose:

- name: Copy multiple files to multiple directories
  copy: src={{ item.0 }} dest={{ item.1 }}
  with_together:
    - [ 'file1', 'file2', 'file3' ]
    - [ '/dir1/', '/dir2/', '/dir3/' ]
1
  • 1
    Although it works, this is not semantically clean - there are cleaner options.
    – plesiv
    Jul 26, 2017 at 12:38
15

If you need more than one location, you need more than one task. One copy task can copy only from one location (including multiple files) to another one on the node.

- copy: src=/file1 dest=/destination/file1
- copy: src=/file2 dest=/destination/file2

# copy each file over that matches the given pattern
- copy: src={{ item }} dest=/destination/
  with_fileglob:
    - /files/*
2
  • - name: copy file1 copy: src=/file1 dest=/destination/file1 - name: copy file2 copy: src=/file2 dest=/destination/file2
    – Mark K.
    Apr 21, 2016 at 12:30
  • Depends. Simpler and likely cleaner, but can be done using more complex data structures, such as a list of anonymous dictionaries with source and target data, looped with_items. It's the same in any language - you have to make a judgment call. There are cases where a delegation function is more efficient and maintainable than a long series of copy/pasted if statements. I'm that freak that would rather maintain the concise bit of well structured code than a long and tedious list of nearly-identical directives, but I don't assume everyone agrees. Do what's maintainable for you. Jul 25, 2018 at 13:51
10

You can use a find, and then copy those files.

---
- hosts: lnx
  tasks:
    - find: 
        paths: /appl/scripts/inq
        recurse: true
        patterns: "inq.Linux*"
      register: file_to_copy

     - copy: 
         src: "{{ item.path }}" 
         dest: /usr/local/sbin/
         owner: root
         mode: 0775
       loop: "{{ files_to_copy.files }}"
3
  • just a side note that find module only work for ansible 2.x but not for ansible 1.x Aug 9, 2016 at 7:02
  • I have fixed your answer becuase you have mentioned the stdout_lines in the return value but is not applicable for find module. It only have files, examined and matched as return values. Hope that help others Aug 9, 2016 at 7:09
  • 2
    Has anybody been able to get this working to copy files to remote nodes? find only seems to look at the remote system, not allowing to grab anything from the managing node. These answers, using with_fileglob, seems to be more fitting: stackoverflow.com/a/42290160/272387 , stackoverflow.com/a/36720342/272387 .
    – Richlv
    Oct 30, 2017 at 15:16
7
- name: find inq.Linux*
  find:  paths="/appl/scripts/inq" recurse=yes patterns="inq.Linux*"
  register: find_files


- name: set fact
  set_fact:
    all_files:
      - "{{ find_files.files | map(attribute='path') | list }}"
  when: find_files > 0


- name: copy files
  copy:
    src: "{{ item }}"
    dest: /destination/
  with_items: "{{ all_files }}"
  when: find_files > 0
3
  • 8
    A good answer contains not only code, but also some explanations or documentation references. Aug 10, 2018 at 7:48
  • The find, set_fact and copy modules are all explained in the ansible documentation. Read about filters, also explained in the ansible documentation if you whant to know more about this section (- "{{ find_files.files | map(attribute'path') | list }}") Aug 10, 2018 at 8:54
  • 1
    Copy assumes a local source, so to make this example self-consistent, either the find option needs to be run once on localhost, or else the final copy operation needs to specify a remote src. The nice thing about this approach is that it makes the file list available for other purposes (e.g. deleting later if the copy is only temporary).
    – ncoghlan
    Apr 19, 2021 at 7:47
5

Or you can use with_items:

- copy:
    src: "{{ item }}"
    dest: /etc/fooapp/
    owner: root
    mode: 600
  with_items:
    - dest_dir
3

copy module is a wrong tool for copying many files and/or directory structure, use synchronize module instead which uses rsync as backend. Mind you, it requires rsync installed on both controller and target host. It's really powerful, check ansible documentation.

Example - copy files from build directory (with subdirectories) of controller to /var/www/html directory on target host:

synchronize:
  src: ./my-static-web-page/build/
  dest: /var/www/html
  rsync_opts:
    - "--chmod=D2755,F644" # copy from windows - force permissions
2

You can loop through variable with list of directories:

- name: Copy files from several directories
  copy:
    src: "{{ item }}"
    dest: "/etc/fooapp/"
    owner: root
    mode: "0600"
  loop: "{{ files }}"
  vars:
    files:
      - "dir1/"
      - "dir2/"
2

Use the following source code for copy multiple files on your client machine.


 - name: Copy data to the client machine
   hosts: hostname
   become_method: sudo
   become_user: root
   become: true
   tasks: 
     # Copy twice as sometimes files get skipped (mostly only one file skipped from a folder if the folder does not exist)
     - name: Copy UFO-Server 
       copy:
         src: "source files path"
         dest: "destination file path"
         owner: root
         group: root
         mode: 0644
         backup: yes
       ignore_errors: true

Note:

If you are passing multiple paths by using variable then

src: "/root/{{ item }}"

If you are passing path by using a variable for different items then

src: "/root/{{ item.source_path }}"

2

Copy files from multiple directories to multiple directories with Ansible

I found the guenhter answer helpful but needed to change also the remote files' mode. I don't have enough reputation to put this as a comment, which would be a more appropriate place for this. In the example, I copy two files from two directories into /tmp and /tmp/bin, which I create first and modify remote files mode.

- name: cpldupd
  hosts: test
  remote_user: root
  become: true
  vars:
    - rpth: /tmp
  tasks:
    - name: Create '{{rpth}}/bin'
      file:
        path: '{{rpth}}/bin'
        state: directory

    - name: Transfer
      copy: src={{ item.src }} dest={{ item.dest }} mode=0775
      with_items:
      - { src: '../utils/cpldupd', dest: '{{rpth}}/cpldupd' }
      - { src: '../utils/bin/cpldupd', dest: '{{rpth}}/bin/cpldupd' }
3
  • If you have a new question, please ask it by clicking the Ask Question button. Include a link to this question if it helps provide context. - From Review Feb 8, 2022 at 13:32
  • It's not a question but another more complete example of copying files from multiple directories to multiple directories with Ansible. It adds remote file mode. It could be more appropriate to add it as a comment but I do not have enough reputation yet. I see that you have also used this technique in the past stackoverflow.com/questions/28347717/… Feb 10, 2022 at 18:42
  • I was a bit harsh there, sorry: When I was reviewing the question it felt like you were wanting to highlight how to deal with file permissions but that wasn't in the original question (thus a new question could be a good option to highlight this); you're right that a comment feels more appropriate to put against the answer you've mentioned; also I saw that using mode was already in several of the other answers so no particular need to say it again. Feb 11, 2022 at 15:27
1

Here is a generic solution for copying files:

   ...
    - name: Find files you want to move
      ansible.builtin.find:
        paths: /path/to/files/
        file_type: file
        excludes: "*.txt" # Whatever pattern you want to exclude
      register: files_output

    - name: Copy the files
      ansible.builtin.copy:
        src: "{{ item.path }}"
        dest: /destination/directory/
      loop: "{{ files_output.files }}"
   ...

This is more powerful than using with_fileglob as you can match using regexes. Here is this play in action:

$ ls /path/to/files
demo.yaml  test.sh  ignore.txt

$ ls /destination/directory
file.h

$ ansible-playbook playbook.yaml
...[some output]...

$ ls /destination/directory
file.h demo.yaml test.sh

As you can see from the above example, ignore.txt was not copied over to the destination directory because of the excludes regex in the playbook. Ignoring files like this is not possible as simply using with_fileglob.

Additionally, you can move files from multiple directories with relative ease:

   ...
    - name: Find files you want to move
      ansible.builtin.find:
        paths: /path/to/files/
        # ... the rest of the task
      register: list1

    - name: Find more files you want to move
      ansible.builtin.find:
        paths: /different/path/
        # ... the rest of the task
      register: list2

    - name: Copy the files
      ansible.builtin.copy:
        src: "{{ item.path }}"
        dest: /destination/directory/
      loop: "{{ list1.files + list2.files }}"
   ...
2
  • Please add more details, and add some example. Oct 6, 2021 at 21:15
  • 1
    @sorosh_sabz as requested 😊 Oct 8, 2021 at 13:29
1

Here is a sample Ansible Script to copy multiple Files on remote Hosts

- name: Copy Multiple Files on remote Hosts
  ansible.windows.win_copy:
    src: "{{ srcPath }}/{{ item }}" # Remeber to us {{item}}
                                    # as a postfix to source path

    dest: "{{ destPath }}"
    remote_src: yes # if source path is available on remote Host
  with_items:
    - abc.txt
    - abc.properties
0

  • hosts: test gather_facts: false become: true vars: path: '/home/ansibm/playbooks' remote_path: '/home/{{ansible_ssh_user}}' dir: 'yml_files' tasks:
    • name: "creating directory for backup file" file: path: '{{ remote_path }}/{{ dir }}' state: directory owner: '{{ansible_ssh_user}}' group: '{{ansible_ssh_user}}' mode: 0700
    • name: "copying yml files" copy: src: '{{item}}' dest: '{{ remote_path }}/{{ dir }}' owner: '{{ansible_ssh_user}}' group: '{{ansible_ssh_user}}' mode: 0644 loop: - '{{ path }}/ab.html' - '{{ path }}/cp.yml'
1
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    – Community Bot
    Feb 2, 2022 at 8:27

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