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Install Ansible

Ansible by default manages machines over the SSH protocol. Once installed, Ansible does not add a database, and there will be no daemons to start or keep running. You only need to install it on one machine (which could easily be a laptop) and it can manage an entire fleet of remote machines from that central point. When Ansible manages remote machines, it does not leave software installed or running on them.


Prerequisites

You install Ansible on a control node, which then uses SSH (by default) to communicate with your managed nodes.


Control node requirements

Currently Ansible can be run from any machine with Python 2 (version 2.7) or Python 3 (versions 3.5 and higher) installed. This includes Red Hat, Debian, CentOS, macOS, any of the BSDs, and so on. Windows is not supported for the control node

When choosing a control node, bear in mind that any management system benefits from being run near the machines being managed. If you are running Ansible in a cloud, consider running it from a machine inside that cloud. In most cases this will work better than on the open Internet.

macOS by default is configured for a small number of file handles, so if you want to use 15 or more forks you'll need to raise the ulimit with sudo launchctl limit maxfiles unlimited. This command can also fix any 'Too many open files' error.

Some modules and plugins have additional requirements. For modules these need to be satisfied on the 'target' machine (the managed node) and should be listed in the module specific docs.


Managed node requirements

Managed nodes communicate normally using SSH, using SFTP. You can switch to SCP in ansible.cfg. Managed nodes also need Python 2 (version 2.6 or later) or Python 3 (version 3.5 or later).


Select an Ansible version to install

You should only run ansible-base from devel if you are modifying ansible-base, or trying out features under development. This is a rapidly changing source of code and can become unstable at any point.

Ansible creates new releases two to three times a year. Due to this short release cycle, minor bugs will generally be fixed in the next release rather than maintaining backports on the stable branch. Major bugs will still have maintenance releases when needed, though these are infrequent.


Install Ansible on RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora

On Fedora:

On RHEL and CentOS:

RPMs for RHEL 7 and RHEL 8 are available from the Ansible Engine repository.

To enable the Ansible Engine repository for RHEL 8:

To enable the Ansible Engine repository for RHEL 7:

RPMs for currently supported versions of RHEL and CentOS are also available from EPEL.

Since Ansible 2.10 for RHEL is not available at this time, continue to use Ansible 2.9.

Ansible can manage older operating systems that contain Python 2.6 or higher.


Install Ansible on Ubuntu

Ubuntu builds are available in a PPA here.

To configure the PPA on your machine and install Ansible run these commands:

On older Ubuntu distributions, 'software-properties-common' is called 'python-software-properties'. You may want to use apt-get instead of apt in older versions. Also, be aware that only newer distributions (in other words, 18.04, 18.10, and so on) have a -u or --update flag, so adjust your script accordingly.

Debian/Ubuntu packages can also be built from the source checkout, run:

You may also wish to run from source to get the development branch, which is covered below.


Install Ansible on Debian

Debian users may leverage the same source as the Ubuntu PPA.

Add the following line to /etc/apt/sources.list:

Then run these commands:

This method has been verified with the Trusty sources in Debian Jessie and Stretch but may not be supported in earlier versions. You may want to use apt-get instead of apt in older versions.


Install Ansible on Gentoo with portage

To install the newest version, you may need to unmask the Ansible package prior to emerging:


Install Ansible on FreeBSD

Though Ansible works with both Python 2 and 3 versions, FreeBSD has different packages for each Python version. So to install you can use:

or:

You may also wish to install from ports, run:

You can also choose a specific version, for example ansible25.

Older versions of FreeBSD worked with something like this (substitute for your choice of package manager):


Install Ansible on macOS

The preferred way to install Ansible on a Mac is with pip.

The instructions can be found in Install Ansible with pip. If you are running macOS version 10.12 or older, then you should upgrade to the latest pip to connect to the Python Package Index securely. It should be noted that pip must be run as a module on macOS, and the linked pip instructions will show you how to do that.

If you have Ansible 2.9 or older installed, you need to use pip uninstall ansible first to remove older versions of Ansible before re-installing it.

If you are installing on macOS Mavericks (10.9), you may encounter some noise from your compiler. A workaround is to do the following:


Install Ansible on Solaris

Ansible is available for Solaris as SysV package from OpenCSW.


Install Ansible on Arch Linux

Ansible is available in the Community repository:

The AUR has a PKGBUILD for pulling directly from GitHub called ansible-git.

Also see the Ansible page on the ArchWiki.


Install Ansible on Slackware Linux

Ansible build script is available in the SlackBuilds.org repository. Can be built and installed using sbopkg.

Create queue with Ansible and all dependencies:

Build and install packages from a created queuefile (answer Q for question if sbopkg should use queue or package):


Install Ansible on Clear Linux

Ansible and its dependencies are available as part of the sysadmin host management bundle:

Update of the software will be managed by the swupd tool:


Install Ansible with pip

Ansible can be installed with pip, the Python package manager. If pip isn't already available on your system of Pythons to install it:

If you have Ansible 2.9 or older installed, you need to use pip uninstall ansible first to remove older versions of Ansible before re-installing it.

Then install Ansible 1:

In order to use the paramiko connection plugin or modules that require paramiko, install the required module 2:

If you wish to install Ansible globallys:

Running pip with sudo will make global changes to the system. Since pip does not coordinate with system package managers, it could make changes to your system that leaves it in an inconsistent or non-functioning state. This is particularly true for macOS. Install with --user is recommended unless you understand fully the implications of modifying global files on the system.

Older versions of pip default to http://pypi.python.org/simple, which no longer works. Please make sure you have the latest version of pip before installing Ansible. If you have an older version of pip installed, you can upgrade by following pip's upgrade instructions .


Upgrade Ansible from version 2.9 and older to version 2.10 or later

Starting in version 2.10, Ansible is made of two packages. You need to first uninstall the old Ansible version (2.9 or earlier) before upgrading. If you do not uninstall the older version of Ansible, you will see the following message, and no change will be performed:

As explained by the message, to upgrade you must first remove the version of Ansible installed and then install it to the latest version.


Install the development version of ansible-base

In Ansible 2.10 and later, The ansible/ansible repository contains the code for basic features and functions, such as copying module code to managed nodes. This code is also known as ansible-base.

You should only run ansible-base from devel if you are modifying ansible-base or trying out features under development. This is a rapidly changing source of code and can become unstable at any point.

If you have Ansible 2.9 or older installed, you need to use pip uninstall ansible first to remove older versions of Ansible before re-installing it.

You can install the development version of ansible-base directly from GitHub with pip.

Replace devel in the URL mentioned above, with any other branch or tag on GitHub to install older versions of Ansible (prior to ansible-base 2.10.) This installs all of Ansible.

See Running ansible-base from source (devel) for instructions on how to run ansible-base directly from source, without the requirement of installation.


Virtual Environments

If you have Ansible 2.9 or older installed, you need to use pip uninstall ansible first to remove older versions of Ansible before re-installing it.

Ansible can also be installed inside a new or existing virtualenv:


Running ansible-base from source (devel)

In Ansible 2.10 and later, The ansible/ansible repository contains the code for basic features and functions, such as copying module code to managed nodes. This code is also known as ansible-base.

You should only run ansible-base from devel if you are modifying ansible-base or trying out features under development. This is a rapidly changing source of code and can become unstable at any point.

ansible-base is easy to run from source. You do not need root permissions to use it and there is no software to actually install. No daemons or database setup are required.

To use Ansible Tower as the control node, do not use a source installation of Ansible. Please use an OS package manager (like apt or yum) or pip to install a stable version.

To install from source, clone the ansible-base git repository:

Once git has cloned the ansible-base repository, setup the Ansible environment:

Using Bash:

Using Fish:

If you want to suppress spurious warnings/errors, use:

If you don't have pip installed in your version of Python, install it:

Ansible also uses the following Python modules that need to be installed 1:

To update ansible-base checkouts, use pull-with-rebase so any local changes are replayed.

Once running the env-setup script you'll be running from checkout and the default inventory file will be /etc/ansible/hosts. You can optionally specify an inventory file (see How to build your inventory) other than /etc/ansible/hosts:

You can read more about the inventory file at How to build your inventory.

Now let's test things with a ping command:

You can also use 'sudo make install'.


Finding tarballs of tagged releases

Packaging Ansible or wanting to build a local package yourself, but don't want to do a git checkout? Tarballs of releases are available from pypi as https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/a/ansible/ansible-{{VERSION}}.tar.gz. You can make VERSION a variable in your package managing system that you update in one place whenever you package a new version. Alternately, you can download https://pypi.python.org/project/ansible to get the latest stable release.

If you are creating your own Ansible package, you must also download or package ansible-base as part of your Ansible package. You can download it as https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/a/ansible-base/ansible-base-{{VERSION}}.tar.gz.

These releases are also tagged in the git repository with the release version.


Ansible command shell completion

As of Ansible 2.9, shell completion of the Ansible command line utilities is available and provided through an optional dependency called argcomplete. argcomplete supports bash, and has limited support for zsh and tcsh.

You can install python-argcomplete from EPEL on Red Hat Enterprise based distributions, and or from the standard OS repositories for many other distributions.

For more information about installing and configuration see the argcomplete documentation.


Install argcomplete on RHEL, CentOS, or Fedora

On Fedora:

On RHEL and CentOS:


Install argcomplete with apt


Install argcomplete with pip


Configure argcomplete

There are 2 ways to configure argcomplete to allow shell completion of the Ansible command line utilities: globally or per command.

Globally

Global completion requires bash 4.2.

This will write a bash completion file to a global location. Use --dest to change the location.

Per command

If you do not have bash 4.2, you must register each script independently.

You should place the above commands into your shells profile file such as ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile.


argcomplete with zsh or tcsh

See the argcomplete documentation.


ansible-base on GitHub

You may also wish to follow the GitHub project if you have a GitHub account. This is also where we keep the issue tracker for sharing bugs and feature ideas.


See also

Introduction to ad-hoc commands

Examples of basic commands

Working with playbooks

Learning ansible's configuration management language

How do I handle the package dependencies required by Ansible package dependencies during Ansible installation ?

Ansible Installation related to FAQs

Mailing List

Questions? Help? Ideas? Stop by the list on Google Groups

irc.freenode.net

#ansible IRC chat channel

1(1,2)

If you have issues with the 'pycrypto' package install on macOS, then you may need to try CC=clang sudo -E pip install pycrypto.

2

paramiko was included in Ansible's requirements.txt prior to 2.8.

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