If you have a large playbook, it may become useful to be able to run only a specific part of it rather than running everything in the playbook. Ansible supports a “tags:” attribute for this reason.
Tags can be applied to many structures in Ansible (see “tag inheritance”, below), but its simplest use is with individual tasks. Here is an example that tags two tasks with different tags:
tasks: - yum: name: - httpd - memcached state: present tags: - packages - template: src: templates/src.j2 dest: /etc/foo.conf tags: - configuration
When you execute a playbook, you can filter tasks based on tags in two ways:
--tags
or --skip-tags
optionsTAGS_RUN
and TAGS_SKIP
optionsFor example, if you wanted to just run the “configuration” and “packages” part of a very long playbook, you can use the --tags
option on the command line:
ansible-playbook example.yml --tags "configuration,packages"
On the other hand, if you want to run a playbook without certain tagged tasks, you can use the --skip-tags
command-line option:
ansible-playbook example.yml --skip-tags "packages"
You can see which tasks will be executed with --tags
or --skip-tags
by combining it with --list-tasks
:
ansible-playbook example.yml --tags "configuration,packages" --list-tasks
Warning
--tags
or the same tag in --skip-tags
.You can apply the same tag to more than one task. When a play is run using the --tags
command-line option, all tasks with that tag name will be run.
This example tags several tasks with one tag, “ntp”:
--- # file: roles/common/tasks/main.yml - name: be sure ntp is installed yum: name: ntp state: present tags: ntp - name: be sure ntp is configured template: src: ntp.conf.j2 dest: /etc/ntp.conf notify: - restart ntpd tags: ntp - name: be sure ntpd is running and enabled service: name: ntpd state: started enabled: yes tags: ntp
Adding tags:
to a play, or to statically imported tasks and roles, adds those tags to all of the contained tasks. This is referred to as tag inheritance. Tag inheritance is not applicable to dynamic inclusions such as include_role
and include_tasks
.
When you apply tags:
attributes to structures other than tasks, Ansible processes the tag attribute to apply ONLY to the tasks they contain. Applying tags anywhere other than tasks is just a convenience so you don’t have to tag tasks individually.
This example tags all tasks in the two plays. The first play has all its tasks tagged with ‘bar’, and the second has all its tasks tagged with ‘foo’:
- hosts: all tags: - bar tasks: ... - hosts: all tags: [ foo ] tasks: ...
You may also apply tags to the tasks imported by roles
:
roles: - role: webserver vars: port: 5000 tags: [ web, foo ]
And to import_role:
and import_tasks:
statements:
- import_role: name: myrole tags: [ web, foo ] - import_tasks: foo.yml tags: [ web, foo ]
All of these apply the specified tags to EACH task inside the play, imported file, or role, so that these tasks can be selectively run when the playbook is invoked with the corresponding tags.
Tags are applied down the dependency chain. In order for a tag to be inherited to a dependent role’s tasks, the tag should be applied to the role declaration or static import, not to all the tasks within the role.
There is no way to ‘import only these tags’; you probably want to split into smaller roles/includes if you find yourself looking for such a feature.
The above information does not apply to include_tasks
or other dynamic includes, as the attributes applied to an include, only affect the include itself.
You can see which tags are applied to tasks, roles, and static imports by running ansible-playbook
with the --list-tasks
option. You can display all tags available with the --list-tags
option.
Note
The above information does not apply to include_tasks
, include_roles
, or other dynamic includes. Tags applied to either of these only tag the include itself.
To use tags with tasks and roles intended for dynamic inclusions, all needed tasks should be explicitly tagged at the task level; or block:
may be used to tag more than one task at once. The include itself should also be tagged.
Here is an example of tagging role tasks with the tag mytag
, using a block
statement, to then be used with a dynamic include:
Playbook file:
- hosts: all tasks: - include_role: name: myrole tags: mytag
Role tasks file:
- block: - name: First task to run ... - name: Second task to run ... tags: - mytag
Example:
tasks: - debug: msg: "Always runs" tags: - always - debug: msg: "runs when you use tag1" tags: - tag1
New in version 2.5.
Another special tag is never
, which will prevent a task from running unless a tag is specifically requested.
Example:
tasks: - debug: msg="{{ showmevar }}" tags: [ never, debug ]
In this example, the task will only run when the debug
or never
tag is explicitly requested.
There are another 3 special keywords for tags: tagged
, untagged
and all
, which run only tagged, only untagged and all tasks respectively.
By default, Ansible runs as if --tags all
had been specified.
See also
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.9/user_guide/playbooks_tags.html