36

I am a newbie to ansible and I am using a very simple playbook to issue sudo apt-get update and sudo apt-get upgrade on a couple of servers.

This is the playbook I am using:

---

- name: Update Servers
  hosts: my-servers
  become: yes
  become_user: root
  tasks:
    - name: update packages
      apt: update_cache=yes

    - name: upgrade packages
      apt: upgrade=dist

and this is an extract from my ~/.ansible/inventory/hosts file:

[my-servers]
san-francisco ansible_host=san-francisco ansible_ssh_user=user ansible_become_pass=<my_sudo_password_for_user_on_san-francisco>
san-diego     ansible_host=san-diego     ansible_ssh_user=user ansible_become_pass=<my_sudo_password_for_user_on_san-diego>

This is what I get if I launch the playbook:

$ ansible-playbook update-servers-playbook.yml                                                                                                                                     

PLAY [Update Servers] **********************************************************

TASK [setup] *******************************************************************
ok: [san-francisco]
ok: [san-diego]

TASK [update packages] *********************************************************
ok: [san-francisco]
ok: [san-diego]

TASK [upgrade packages] ********************************************************
ok: [san-francisco]
ok: [san-diego]

PLAY RECAP *********************************************************************
san-francisco              : ok=3    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0   
san-diego                  : ok=3    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0

What is bothering me is the fact that I have the password for my user user stored in plaintext in my ~/.ansible/inventory/hosts file.

I have read about vaults, I have also read about the best practices for variables and vaults but I do not understand how to apply this to my very minimal use case.

I also tried to use lookups. While in general they also work in the inventory file, and I am able to do something like this:

[my-servers]
san-francisco ansible_host=san-francisco ansible_ssh_user=user ansible_become_pass="{{ lookup('env', 'ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASSWORD_SAN_FRANCISCO') }}"

where this case the password would be stored in an environment variable called ANSIBLE_BECOME_PASSWORD_SAN_FRANCISCO; there is no way to look up variables in vaults as far as I know.

So, how could I organize my file such that I would be able to lookup up my passwords from somewhere and have them safely stored?

3 Answers 3

44

You need to create some vaulted variable files and then either include them in your playbooks or on the command line.

If you change your inventory file to use a variable for the become pass this variable can be vaulted:

[my-servers]
san-francisco ansible_host=san-francisco ansible_ssh_user=user ansible_become_pass='{{ sanfrancisco_become_pass }}'
san-diego     ansible_host=san-diego     ansible_ssh_user=user ansible_become_pass='{{ sandiego_become_pass }}'

Then use ansible-vault create vaulted_vars.yml to create a vaulted file with the following contents:

sanfrancisco_become_pass: <my_sudo_password_for_user_on_san-francisco>
sandiego_become_pass    : <my_sudo_password_for_user_on_san-diego>

Then either include the vaulted file as extra vars like this:

ansible-playbook -i ~/.ansible/inventory/hosts playbook.yml --ask-vault-pass -e@~/.ansible/inventory/vault_vars

Or include the vars file in your playbook with an include_vars task:

- name        : include vaulted variables
  include_vars: ~/.ansible/inventory/vault_vars
4
  • 1
    Thanks! I have tested the first solution (specifying the vault file from the command line as an option) and it works! I have to point out for others to pay attention to the @ sign, in fact the documentation of ansible-playbook says for the -e option: «To load variables from a file, specify the file preceded by @ (e.g. @vars.yml).» May 18, 2016 at 15:02
  • This really helped me in finding a workaround for this. Thanks :) However, I am pretty sure that this approach will store your password in your inventory file. I tried this and this appeared to be the case. However, instead it is possibe to simply pass the 'ansible_become_pass' var in your playbook and then use the --vault-ask-pass when running that playbook. Apr 20, 2018 at 6:16
  • 1
    You create encrypted file vaulted_vars.yml and you reference it as ~/.ansible/inventory/vault_vars. Is that right? Anyway, I found that I could cleanly reference the encrypted file at the beginning of my playbook using vars_files: [vaulted_vars.yml]. Feb 6, 2020 at 2:28
  • @andy_roddam Could you elaborate on this: However, I am pretty sure that this approach will store your password in your inventory file. From what I can see above, only the names of the password variables are exposed in the inventory file?
    – Zero3
    Jan 8, 2022 at 16:16
15

The best way to solve this problem is to use host_vars. The easiest setup is to just put the ansible_become_pass in Vault encrypted files in the corresponding host_vars directories like this:

myplaybook.yml
host_vars/onehost.com/crypted
host_vars/otherhost.com/crypted

In the crypted files you place the assignment of the ansible_become_pass variable:

ansible_become_pass: SuperSecre3t

Create the file with ansible-vault create, edit it with ansible-vault edit.

Following the advice in the Ansible docs you need to create an additional file per host that assigns the ansible_become_passwd from the crypted variable that has a different name. That way it is possible to search for the ansible_become_passwd in the project files.

myplaybook.yml
host_vars/onehost.com/plain
host_vars/onehost.com/crypted
host_vars/otherhost.com/plain
host_vars/otherhost.com/crypted

where a plain file contains something like this:

ansible_become_pass: "{{ vaulted_become_pass }}"

and the crypted file sets the vaulted_become_pass like shown above.

All crypted files must be encrypted with the same key and ansible-playbook must be called with --ask-vault-pass.

2
  • 1
    Thank you, your approach with the host_vars works great as explained at: host_vars files It has only 2 issues: 1) the content of crypted must be: vaulted_become_pass: SuperSecre3t 2) each file must contain the starting dashes to be parsed as yaml --- . Fixing those issues it works fine for Multi Host Infrastructure Sep 7, 2020 at 11:40
  • 1
    the missing dashes --- result in the Connection Error: fatal: [otherhost.com]: FAILED! => { "msg": "Timeout (32s) waiting for privilege escalation prompt: " } because the files are not interpreted as .yaml files Sep 7, 2020 at 11:44
7

After setting up an inventory with your own relevant settings. These settings assume that you have already set up a rsa-key pair to access your server.

You should be able to ssh into your server with:

ssh [email protected]

[local]
localhost    ansible_connection=local
  
[remote]
155.42.88.199   ansible_connection=ssh    ansible_user=remoteuser ansible_become_user=root ansible_become=yes  ansible_ssh_private_key_file=<private_key_file_path>

You need to store your root password in a file (I called mine 'my_vault.yml'). You can do this with the following command:

~/.ansible$ ansible-vault create my_vault.yml

Simple store your remote server password as follows (do not include the '<>' tags)

su_password: <myreallyspecialpassword> 

The password will now be encrypted by vault and the only way to view this is to enter the following command.

~/.ansible$ ansible-vault edit my_vault.yml

We now need to include our 'my_vault.yml' file in our playbook. We can do this by using vars-files to get the value of su-password. We can now create a var titled ansible_become_pass which will be passed the value from our my_vault.yml file which will allow our remoteuser to su once on the server.

---
- name: My Awesome Playbook
  hosts: remote
  become: yes

  vars_files:
    - ~/.ansible/my_vault.yml 

  vars:
    ansible_become_pass: '{{ su_password }}'

  roles:
      - some_awesome_role

As we are using vault each time we want to run this playbook we need to use the following command.

ansible-playbook myawesome_playbook.yml --ask-vault-pass

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