Ansible Module command: Difference between revisions

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=Internal=
=Internal=
 
* [[Ansible_Concepts#command|Ansible Concepts]]
* [[Ansible_Concepts#shell|Ansible Concepts]]
* [[Ansible Privilege Escalation]]
* [[Ansible Privilege Escalation]]


=Overview=
=Overview=


The command module takes the command name followed by a list of space-delimited arguments.
The command module takes the command name followed by a list of space-delimited arguments. A command will NOT be interpreted by a shell, so variables like $HOME and operations like "<", ">", "|", ";" and "&" will not work. Use the [[Ansible Module shell|shelll]] module for that.


A command will NOT be interpreted by a shell, so variables like $HOME and operations like "<", ">", "|", ";" and "&" will not work. Use the [[Ansible Module shell|shelll]] module for that.
For a discussion on the interaction between <code>command</code>, <code>cmd</code>, <code>argv</code>, etc. see [[#command.2C_argv_and_cmd|<tt>command</tt>, <tt>argv</tt> and <tt>cmd</tt>]] below.


<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: A command example
- name: A command example
   command: some-command arg1 arg2
   command: some-command arg1 arg2 # the command can be specified here, or with 'cmd', or with 'argv'
    argv: ... # Passes the command as a list rather than a string
    cmd: ... # The command to run
    chdir: ... # Change into this directory before running the command
    stdin: ...
    stdin_add_newline: ...
    warn: ...
    creates: ...
   become: true
   become: true
   become_user: root
   become_user: root
   args:
   args:
     chdir: /somedir/
     chdir: /somedir/ # alternative way of specifying "command" configuration
  register: variable_that_contains_results_of_execution
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<span id='Registering_Variables_as_Results_of_Command_Execution'></span>A [[Ansible_Concepts#Registered_Variables|variable]] that contains the result of the command execution can be set as usual for a task using the task's <code>[[Ansible_Concepts#register|register]]</code> configuration element. After an execution, the variable references a map similar to:
<syntaxhighlight lang="yaml">
cmd:
- "sh"
- "-l"
- "/tmp"
failed: false
stdout: "lrwxr-xr-x@ 1 root  admin  11 Sep 21  2020 /tmp -> private/tmp"
stdout_lines:
  - "lrwxr-xr-x@ 1 root  admin  11 Sep 21  2020 /tmp -> private/tmp"
stderr: ""
stderr_lines: []
start: "2021-07-03 23:39:57.499748"
end: "2021-07-03 23:39:57.506848"
changed: false
delta: "0:00:00.007100"
rc: 0
</syntaxhighlight>
The content of execution stdout and stderr can be accessed with <code>variable_name.stdout</code>, <code>variable_name.stderr</code>, the failure situation with <code>variable_name.failed</code>, etc.


"become" and "become_user" are optional. Also see: {{Internal|Ansible Privilege Escalation|Ansible Privilege Escalation}}
=Playground=
 
{{External|https://github.com/ovidiuf/playground/blob/master/ansible/modules/command/playbook.yaml}}
=Registering Variables as Results of Command Execution=
=Examples=
 
This sets a [[Ansible_Concepts#Registered_Variables|variable]]:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: Read requested Java version
- name: Read requested Java version
   command: "cat {{ansible_env.HOME}}/config.txt | grep \"^JAVA_VERSION\" | sed -e 's/.*=//'"
   command: "sh -c \"grep ^JAVA_VERSION {{ansible_env.HOME}}/config.txt | sed -e 's/.*=//'\""
   register: java_version
   register: java_version
  changed_when: false
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<span id='task_execution_result'></span>The task execution result can be referred to via a [[Ansible_Concepts#Registered_Variables|variable]] declared with the <code>register:</code> keyword:
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: Get Homebrew installation directory
  command: "sh -c \"brew --prefix\""
  register: brew_prefix_cmd
  changed_when: false
</syntaxhighlight>
<span id='Setting_Command_Output_as_a_Fact'></span>The output of the command execution can then be set as a [[Ansible_Concepts#Fact|fact]] with <code>[[Ansible_Module_set_fact#Overview|set_fact]]</code>:
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: Set a fact
  set_fact:
    pkg_manager_install_dir: "{{ brew_prefix_cmd.stdout }}"
</syntaxhighlight>
=<tt>command</tt>, <tt>argv</tt> and <tt>cmd</tt>=
The command followed by the space-separated list of arguments can be specified immediately after the <code>command:</code> keyword:
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: some name
  command: ls -l /tmp
</syntaxhighlight>
Alternatively, the command provided as a list with <code>argv</code>. Note that either <code>command</code> or <code>argv</code> can be used, but not both at the same time:
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: some name
  command:
    argv:
      - ls
      - -l
      - /tmp
</syntaxhighlight>
The full command can be specified as a string with <code>cmd</code>. Note that either <code>command</code> or <code>cmd</code> can be used, but not both at the same time:
<syntaxhighlight lang='yaml'>
- name: some name
  command:
    cmd: ls -l /tmp
</syntaxhighlight>
=Privilege Escalation=
See: {{Internal|Ansible Privilege Escalation|Ansible Privilege Escalation}}

Latest revision as of 05:26, 5 July 2021

External

Internal

Overview

The command module takes the command name followed by a list of space-delimited arguments. A command will NOT be interpreted by a shell, so variables like $HOME and operations like "<", ">", "|", ";" and "&" will not work. Use the shelll module for that.

For a discussion on the interaction between command, cmd, argv, etc. see command, argv and cmd below.

- name: A command example
  command: some-command arg1 arg2 # the command can be specified here, or with 'cmd', or with 'argv'
    argv: ... # Passes the command as a list rather than a string
    cmd: ... # The command to run
    chdir: ... # Change into this directory before running the command
    stdin: ... 
    stdin_add_newline: ...
    warn: ...
    creates: ...
  become: true
  become_user: root
  args:
    chdir: /somedir/ # alternative way of specifying "command" configuration
  register: variable_that_contains_results_of_execution

A variable that contains the result of the command execution can be set as usual for a task using the task's register configuration element. After an execution, the variable references a map similar to:

cmd:
 - "sh"
 - "-l"
 - "/tmp"
failed: false
stdout: "lrwxr-xr-x@ 1 root  admin  11 Sep 21  2020 /tmp -> private/tmp"
stdout_lines:
  - "lrwxr-xr-x@ 1 root  admin  11 Sep 21  2020 /tmp -> private/tmp"
stderr: ""
stderr_lines: []
start: "2021-07-03 23:39:57.499748"
end: "2021-07-03 23:39:57.506848"
changed: false
delta: "0:00:00.007100"
rc: 0

The content of execution stdout and stderr can be accessed with variable_name.stdout, variable_name.stderr, the failure situation with variable_name.failed, etc.

Playground

https://github.com/ovidiuf/playground/blob/master/ansible/modules/command/playbook.yaml

Examples

- name: Read requested Java version
  command: "sh -c \"grep ^JAVA_VERSION {{ansible_env.HOME}}/config.txt | sed -e 's/.*=//'\""
  register: java_version
  changed_when: false

The task execution result can be referred to via a variable declared with the register: keyword:

- name: Get Homebrew installation directory
  command: "sh -c \"brew --prefix\""
  register: brew_prefix_cmd
  changed_when: false

The output of the command execution can then be set as a fact with set_fact:

- name: Set a fact
  set_fact:
    pkg_manager_install_dir: "{{ brew_prefix_cmd.stdout }}"

command, argv and cmd

The command followed by the space-separated list of arguments can be specified immediately after the command: keyword:

- name: some name
  command: ls -l /tmp

Alternatively, the command provided as a list with argv. Note that either command or argv can be used, but not both at the same time:

- name: some name
  command:
    argv:
      - ls
      - -l
      - /tmp

The full command can be specified as a string with cmd. Note that either command or cmd can be used, but not both at the same time:

- name: some name
  command:
    cmd: ls -l /tmp

Privilege Escalation

See:

Ansible Privilege Escalation