If you want a single set of tasks that flexible enough for for multiple Linux
package managers and macOS brew, the choice is either more logic or more
duplication.
These three patterns should help. They still have repetition and
boilerplate code, but that's the territory we're in with Ansible plays
for cross-platform.
- Declare
become: yes
(root) globally for Linux only
- Address packages that need platform-specific treatment as-needed with
when
- This might be
--head
for brew
, or setting up a PPA for apt
, etc
- Map package name discrepancies with variables
- For example:
brew install ncurses
, apt install libncurses5-dev
, and dnf install ncurses-devel
are all the same library.
1) Declare become: yes
(root) globally for Linux only
For Linux hosts, switching to root for installation is the intended behavior.
For macOS a la Homebrew, installing as root is not good. So, we need become: no
(false
) when using brew
, and become: yes
(true
) otherwise (for
Linux).
In your example the become
directive is nested inside each task ("step"). To
prevent duplication, invoke become
at a higher lexical scope, before the tasks
start. The subsequent tasks will then inherit the state of become
, which is
set based on a conditional expression.
Unfortunately a variable for become
at the root playbook scope will be
undefined and throw an error before the first task is run:
# playbook.yml
- name: Demo
hosts: localhost
connection: local
# This works
become: True
# This doesn't - the variable is undefined
become: "{{ False if ansible_pkg_mgr == 'brew' else True }}"
# Nor does this - also undefined
become: "{{ False if ansible_os_family == 'Darwin' else True }}"
tasks:
# ...
To fix this, we can store the tasks in another file and import them, or
wrap the tasks in a block. Either of these patterns will provide
a chance to declare become
with our custom variable value in time for the
tasks to pick it up:
# playbook.yml
---
- name: Demo
hosts: localhost
connection: local
vars:
# This variable gives us a boolean for deciding whether or not to become
# root. It cascades down to any subsequent tasks unless overwritten.
should_be_root: "{{ true if ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew' else false }}"
# It could also be based on the OS type, but since brew is the main cause
# it's probably better this way.
# should_be_root: "{{ False if ansible_os_family == 'Darwin' else True }}"
tasks:
# Import the tasks from another file, which gives us a chance to pass along
# a `become` context with our variable:
- import_tasks: test_tasks.yml
become: "{{ should_be_root }}"
# Wrapping the tasks in a block will also work:
- block:
- name: ncurses is present
package:
name: [libncurses5-dev, libncursesw5-dev]
state: present
- name: cmatrix is present
package:
name: cmatrix
state: present
become: "{{ should_be_root }}"
Now there is a single logic check for brew
and a single before
directive
(depending on which task pattern above is used). All tasks will be executed as
the root user, unless the package manager in use is brew
.
2) Address packages that need platform-specific treatment as-needed with when
The Package Module is a great convenience but it's quite limited. By
itself it only works for ideal scenarios; meaning, a package that doesn't
require any special treatment or flags from the underlying package manager. All
it can do is pass the literal string of the package to install, the state
, and
an optional parameter to force use of a specific package manager executable.
Here's an example that installs wget
with a nice short task and only becomes
verbose to handle ffmpeg
's special case when installed with brew
:
# playbook.yml
# ...
tasks:
# wget is the same among package managers, nothing to see here
- name: wget is present
when: ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew'
package:
name: wget
state: present
# This will only run on hosts that do not use `brew`, like linux
- name: ffmpeg is present
when: ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew'
package:
name: ffmpeg
state: present
# This will only run on hosts that use `brew`, i.e. macOS
- name: ffmpeg is present (brew)
when: ansible_pkg_mgr == 'brew'
homebrew:
name: ffmpeg
# head flag
state: head
# --with-chromaprint --with-fdk-aac --with-etc-etc
install_options: with-chromaprint, with-fdk-aac, with-etc-etc
The play above would produce this output for ffmpeg
against a Linux box:
TASK [youtube-dl : ffmpeg is present] ******************************************
ok: [localhost]
TASK [youtube-dl : ffmpeg is present (brew)] ***********************************
skipping: [localhost]
3) Map package name discrepancies with variables
This isn't specifically part of your question but it's likely to come up next.
The Package Module docs also mention:
Package names also vary with package manager; this module will not "translate"
them per distro. For example libyaml-dev, libyaml-devel.
So, we're on our own to handle cases where the same software uses different
names between package manager platforms. This is quite common.
There are multiple patterns for this, such as:
None of them are very pleasant. Here is an approach using a role. Roles do
involve more boilerplate and directory juggling, but in exchange they provide
modularity and a local variable environment. When a set of tasks in a role
requires more finagling to get right, it doesn't end up polluting other task
sets.
# playbook.yml
---
- name: Demo
hosts: localhost
connection: local
roles:
- cmatrix
# roles/cmatrix/defaults/main.yml
---
ncurses:
default:
- ncurses
# Important: these keys need to exactly match the name of package managers for
# our logic to hold up
apt:
- libncurses5-dev
- libncursesw5-dev
brew:
- pkg-config
- ncurses
# roles/cmatrix/tasks/main.yml
---
- name: cmatix and its dependencies are present
become: "{{ should_be_root }}"
block:
- name: ncurses is present
package:
name: '{{ item }}'
state: latest
loop: "{{ ncurses[ansible_pkg_mgr] | default(ncurses['default']) }}"
- name: cmatrix is present
when: ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew'
package:
name: cmatrix
state: present
The task for ncurses
looks for an array of items to loop through keyed by the
corresponding package manager. If the package manager being used is not defined
in the variable object, a Jinja default filter is employed to reference the
default
value we set.
With this pattern, adding support for another package manager or additional
dependencies simply involves updating the variable object:
# roles/cmatrix/defaults/main.yml
---
ncurses:
default:
- ncurses
apt:
- libncurses5-dev
- libncursesw5-dev
# add a new dependency for Debian
- imaginarycurses-dep
brew:
- pkg-config
- ncurses
# add support for Fedora
dnf:
- ncurses-devel
Combining everything into a real play
Here's a full example covering all three aspects. The playbook has two roles
that each use the correct become
value based on a single variable. It also
incorporates an special cases for cmatrix
and ffmpeg
when installed with
brew
, and handles alternate names for ncurses between package managers.
# playbook.yml
---
- name: Demo
hosts: localhost
connection: local
vars:
should_be_root: "{{ true if ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew' else false }}"
roles:
- cmatrix
- youtube-dl
# roles/cmatrix/defaults/main.yml
ncurses:
default:
- ncurses
apt:
- libncurses5-dev
- libncursesw5-dev
brew:
- pkg-config
- ncurses
dnf:
- ncurses-devel
# roles/cmatrix/tasks/main.yml
---
- name: cmatrix and dependencies are present
# A var from above, in the playbook
become: "{{ should_be_root }}"
block:
- name: ncurses is present
package:
name: '{{ item }}'
state: latest
# Get an array of the correct package names to install from the map in our
# default variables file
loop: "{{ ncurses[ansible_pkg_mgr] | default(ncurses['default']) }}"
# Install as usual if this is not a brew system
- name: cmatrix is present
when: ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew'
package:
name: cmatrix
state: present
# If it is a brew system, use this instead
- name: cmatrix is present (brew)
when: ansible_pkg_mgr == 'brew'
homebrew:
name: cmatrix
state: head
install_options: with-some-option
# roles/youtube-dl/tasks/main.yml
---
- name: youtube-dl and dependencies are present
become: "{{ should_be_root }}"
block:
- name: ffmpeg is present
when: ansible_pkg_mgr != 'brew'
package:
name: ffmpeg
state: latest
- name: ffmpeg is present (brew)
when: ansible_pkg_mgr == 'brew'
homebrew:
name: ffmpeg
state: head
install_options: with-chromaprint, with-fdk-aac, with-etc-etc
- name: atomicparsley is present
package:
name: atomicparsley
state: latest
- name: youtube-dl is present
package:
name: youtube-dl
state: latest
The result for Ubuntu:
$ ansible-playbook demo.yml
[WARNING]: provided hosts list is empty, only localhost is available. Note that
the implicit localhost does not match 'all'
PLAY [Demo] ********************************************************************
TASK [Gathering Facts] *********************************************************
ok: [localhost]
TASK [cmatrix : ncurses is present] ********************************************
ok: [localhost] => (item=libncurses5-dev)
ok: [localhost] => (item=libncursesw5-dev)
TASK [cmatrix : cmatrix is present] ********************************************
ok: [localhost]
TASK [cmatrix : cmatrix is present (brew)] *************************************
skipping: [localhost]
TASK [youtube-dl : ffmpeg is present] ******************************************
ok: [localhost]
TASK [youtube-dl : ffmpeg is present (brew)] ***********************************
skipping: [localhost]
TASK [youtube-dl : atomicparsley is present] ***********************************
ok: [localhost]
TASK [youtube-dl : youtube-dl is present] **************************************
ok: [localhost]
PLAY RECAP *********************************************************************
localhost : ok=6 changed=0 unreachable=0 failed=0 skipped=2 rescued=0 ignored=0
sudo chown -R `whoami` /usr/local
+brew doctor
also as side note: developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/Security/…become: "{{ ansible_os_family != 'Darwin' }}"
(or even perhapsbecome_user: "{{ the_actual_user if ansible_os_family == 'Darwin' else 'root' }}"
)?