3

Im running an Ansible task and want to see if a substring exists in list that is returned by the task that is run, specifically stdout_lines.

The task uses the win_shell module and executes the following command: netstat -aon | sls 8080".

In the case that process is running, the result will look like this:

stdout_lines: [
    "",
    "",
    " TCP     127.0.0.1:8080     0.0.0.0:0      LISTENING 9196",
    ""
]

In Python I would do something like this to check if a substring existed in an element in a list.

matching = [s for s in some_list if "8080" in s]

Is there a way to achieve that in Ansible?

2 Answers 2

4

Two options I see.

First, you could do something like this:

- name: Capture output for analysis
  shell: "netstat -aon | sls 8080"
  register: netstat_output

- name: Check if the substring is in the output
  command: <do something else>
  when: "'some word' in {{netstat_output.stdout}}"

Another option is to breakout to a Python script and leverage that if the above still doesn't quite give you what you want.

- name: Run verification in Python
  script: some-script.py

Hope this helps!

2
  • 1
    Hey. I tried something similar: failed_when: ' "8080" not in {{ output.stdout_lines}} ' but got an error that invalid conditional was detected. It looks like there is an 'in' but no, 'not in'. docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.5/user_guide/… I'd rather not go with the script solution.
    – Wings
    Nov 1, 2018 at 15:27
  • Negatives should work in Ansible too—not defined, not in, etc. ... it might be is not in?
    – alexdlaird
    Nov 1, 2018 at 16:01
0

I tried something similar: failed_when: ' "8080" not in {{ output.stdout_lines }} ' but got an error that invalid conditional was detected.

Whereby the already given answer will result into an error message

The error was: template error while templating string

since When should I use {{ }}? Also, how to interpolate variables or dynamic variable names, even without {{ }} a test like

    when: "'8080' in result.stdout_lines"

would never become true.

According Testing strings, a minimal example playbook

---
- hosts: localhost
  become: false
  gather_facts: false

  vars:

    result:
      stdout_lines:
        - ""
        - ""
        - " TCP     127.0.0.1:8080     0.0.0.0:0      LISTENING 9196"
        - ""

  tasks:

  - name: Check if a substring existed in an element in a list
    debug:
      msg: "No, does not contain 1234."
    when: result.stdout_lines is not search('1234')

  - name: Check if a substring existed in an element in a list
    debug:
      msg: "Yes, does contain 8080."
    when: result.stdout_lines is search('8080')

will result into the required output of

TASK [Check if a substring existed in an element in a list] ******
ok: [localhost] =>
  msg: No, does not contain 1234.

TASK [Check if a substring existed in an element in a list] ******
ok: [localhost] =>
  msg: Yes, does contain 8080.

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