Read in an Ansible inventory file or script
Flat inventory files should be in the regular ansible inventory format.
[servers]
salt.gtmanfred.com ansible_ssh_user=gtmanfred ansible_ssh_host=127.0.0.1 ansible_ssh_port=22 ansible_ssh_pass='password'
[desktop]
home ansible_ssh_user=gtmanfred ansible_ssh_host=12.34.56.78 ansible_ssh_port=23 ansible_ssh_pass='password'
[computers:children]
desktop
servers
[names:vars]
http_port=80
then salt-ssh can be used to hit any of them
[~]# salt-ssh -N all test.ping
salt.gtmanfred.com:
True
home:
True
[~]# salt-ssh -N desktop test.ping
home:
True
[~]# salt-ssh -N computers test.ping
salt.gtmanfred.com:
True
home:
True
[~]# salt-ssh salt.gtmanfred.com test.ping
salt.gtmanfred.com:
True
There is also the option of specifying a dynamic inventory, and generating it on the fly
#!/bin/bash
echo '{
"servers": [
"salt.gtmanfred.com"
],
"desktop": [
"home"
],
"computers": {
"hosts": [],
"children": [
"desktop",
"servers"
]
},
"_meta": {
"hostvars": {
"salt.gtmanfred.com": {
"ansible_ssh_user": "gtmanfred",
"ansible_ssh_host": "127.0.0.1",
"ansible_sudo_pass": "password",
"ansible_ssh_port": 22
},
"home": {
"ansible_ssh_user": "gtmanfred",
"ansible_ssh_host": "12.34.56.78",
"ansible_sudo_pass": "password",
"ansible_ssh_port": 23
}
}
}
}'
This is the format that an inventory script needs to output to work with ansible, and thus here.
[~]# salt-ssh --roster-file /etc/salt/hosts salt.gtmanfred.com test.ping
salt.gtmanfred.com:
True
Any of the [groups] or direct hostnames will return. The 'all' is special, and returns everything.
salt.roster.ansible.
targets
(tgt, tgt_type='glob', **kwargs)¶Return the targets from the ansible inventory_file Default: /etc/salt/roster