1

I've seen a playbook which looks something like this:

- hosts:
  - foo
  - bar
  roles:
    - role: whatever

It works, but from the documentation I would have expected that:

a. Hosts would be given as a single space separated line e.g.:

- hosts: foo bar

rather than a list.

b. The value for the "roles" key in the play would be a list, e.g.:

  roles:
    - whatever

rather than a key:value pair.

Can someone explain what I'm missing either in yaml which makes these alternatives equivalent once parsed, or where in the ansible docs it explains these alternative definitions?

1 Answer 1

0

TL;DR
For hosts use the syntax that you and the other people working with this are most comfortable with.
For roles, you need the role: <name> syntax only in cases where you want to also set other attributes for the role.

Longer answer I have wondering about this occasionally as well.
In the docs section Intro to Playbooks, Basics, it says:

The hosts line is a list of one or more groups or host patterns, separated by colons, as described in the Working with Patterns documentation.

It does, however, not mention explicitly that this list, could also be a space separated string.

As far as the roles attribute of a play is concerned, I think the alternate syntax variant is straight forward. If you just pass a name (a single string), then this is obviously the name of the role.

If you want to pass additional arguments, like variables, then you need to create a dictionary. See an example of the two syntaxes used together here in the docs (search for "Roles can accept other keywords").

The definite answer to both questions is in the source code:

Here is the part that parses the hosts list in a play: https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/lib/ansible/playbook/play.py#L104-L116

Here is the part that does it for a role in roles: https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/lib/ansible/playbook/role/definition.py#L68-L135

There is another hint in the playbook/base.py#preprocess_data:

infrequently used method to do some pre-processing of legacy terms

The Play class for example inherits / overrides this method, directly below the snippet I linked to above.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.