Documentation

copy - Copies files to remote locations.

Synopsis

The copy module copies a file on the local box to remote locations. Use the fetch module to copy files from remote locations to the local box. If you need variable interpolation in copied files, use the template module.

Options

parameter required default choices comments
backup
no no
  • yes
  • no
Create a backup file including the timestamp information so you can get the original file back if you somehow clobbered it incorrectly.
content
no
    When used instead of 'src', sets the contents of a file directly to the specified value. This is for simple values, for anything complex or with formatting please switch to the template module.
    dest
    yes
      Remote absolute path where the file should be copied to. If src is a directory, this must be a directory too.
      directory_mode
      (added in 1.5)
      no
        When doing a recursive copy set the mode for the directories. If this is not set we will use the system defaults. The mode is only set on directories which are newly created, and will not affect those that already existed.
        follow
        (added in 1.8)
        no no
        • yes
        • no
        This flag indicates that filesystem links, if they exist, should be followed.
        force
        no yes
        • yes
        • no
        the default is yes, which will replace the remote file when contents are different than the source. If no, the file will only be transferred if the destination does not exist.

        aliases: thirsty
        group
        no
          name of the group that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown
          mode
          no
            mode the file or directory should be. For those used to /usr/bin/chmod remember that modes are actually octal numbers (like 0644). Leaving off the leading zero will likely have unexpected results. As of version 1.8, the mode may be specified as a symbolic mode (for example, u+rwx or u=rw,g=r,o=r).
            owner
            no
              name of the user that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown
              remote_src
              (added in 2.0)
              no no
              • True
              • False
              If False, it will search for src at originating/master machine, if True it will go to the remote/target machine for the src. Default is False.
              Currently remote_src does not support recursive copying.
              selevel
              no s0
                level part of the SELinux file context. This is the MLS/MCS attribute, sometimes known as the range. _default feature works as for seuser.
                serole
                no
                  role part of SELinux file context, _default feature works as for seuser.
                  setype
                  no
                    type part of SELinux file context, _default feature works as for seuser.
                    seuser
                    no
                      user part of SELinux file context. Will default to system policy, if applicable. If set to _default, it will use the user portion of the policy if available
                      src
                      no
                        Local path to a file to copy to the remote server; can be absolute or relative. If path is a directory, it is copied recursively. In this case, if path ends with "/", only inside contents of that directory are copied to destination. Otherwise, if it does not end with "/", the directory itself with all contents is copied. This behavior is similar to Rsync.
                        validate
                        no None
                          The validation command to run before copying into place. The path to the file to validate is passed in via '%s' which must be present as in the example below. The command is passed securely so shell features like expansion and pipes won't work.

                          Examples

                          # Example from Ansible Playbooks
                          - copy: src=/srv/myfiles/foo.conf dest=/etc/foo.conf owner=foo group=foo mode=0644
                          
                          # The same example as above, but using a symbolic mode equivalent to 0644
                          - copy: src=/srv/myfiles/foo.conf dest=/etc/foo.conf owner=foo group=foo mode="u=rw,g=r,o=r"
                          
                          # Another symbolic mode example, adding some permissions and removing others
                          - copy: src=/srv/myfiles/foo.conf dest=/etc/foo.conf owner=foo group=foo mode="u+rw,g-wx,o-rwx"
                          
                          # Copy a new "ntp.conf file into place, backing up the original if it differs from the copied version
                          - copy: src=/mine/ntp.conf dest=/etc/ntp.conf owner=root group=root mode=644 backup=yes
                          
                          # Copy a new "sudoers" file into place, after passing validation with visudo
                          - copy: src=/mine/sudoers dest=/etc/sudoers validate='visudo -cf %s'
                          

                          Return Values

                          Common return values are documented here Common Return Values, the following are the fields unique to this module:

                          name description returned type sample
                          src source file used for the copy on the target machine changed string /home/httpd/.ansible/tmp/ansible-tmp-1423796390.97-147729857856000/source
                          backup_file name of backup file created changed and if backup=yes string /path/to/file.txt.2015-02-12@22:09~
                          uid owner id of the file, after execution success int 100
                          dest destination file/path success string /path/to/file.txt
                          checksum checksum of the file after running copy success string 6e642bb8dd5c2e027bf21dd923337cbb4214f827
                          md5sum md5 checksum of the file after running copy when supported string 2a5aeecc61dc98c4d780b14b330e3282
                          state state of the target, after execution success string file
                          gid group id of the file, after execution success int 100
                          mode permissions of the target, after execution success string 0644
                          owner owner of the file, after execution success string httpd
                          group group of the file, after execution success string httpd
                          size size of the target, after execution success int 1220


                          Notes

                          Note

                          The “copy” module recursively copy facility does not scale to lots (>hundreds) of files. For alternative, see synchronize module, which is a wrapper around rsync.

                          This is a Core Module

                          For more information on what this means please read Core Modules

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