mash-playbook/examples/hosts
Slavi Pantaleev d7d334240c become -> ansible_become
For some of these, the `ansible_` prefix does not seem to be needed,
but it's the canonical way to do things and it may become required in
newer Ansible versions.

Related to https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/3237
2024-03-25 07:12:38 +02:00

20 lines
1.4 KiB
INI

# To connect using a non-root user (and elevate to root with sudo later),
# replace `ansible_ssh_user=root` with something like this: `ansible_ssh_user=username ansible_become=true ansible_become_user=root`.
# If sudo requires a password, either add `ansible_become_password=PASSWORD_HERE` to the host line
# or tell Ansible to ask you for the password interactively by adding a `--ask-become-pass` (`-K`) flag to all `ansible-playbook` (or `just`) commands.
#
# For improved Ansible performance, SSH pipelining is enabled by default in `ansible.cfg`.
# If this causes SSH connection troubles, disable it by adding `ansible_ssh_pipelining=False`
# to the host line below or by adding `ansible_ssh_pipelining: False` to your variables file.
#
# If SSH is configured to listen to a non-standard port (i.e. something different than port 22), you need to add `ansible_port=<your configured SSH port>`.
#
# If you're running this Ansible playbook on the same server as the one you're installing to,
# consider adding an additional `ansible_connection=local` argument to the host line below.
#
# Ansible may fail to discover which Python interpreter to use on the host for some distros (like Ubuntu 20.04).
# You may sometimes need to explicitly add the argument `ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3`
# to the host line below.
[mash_servers]
<your-domain> ansible_host=<your-server's external IP address> ansible_ssh_user=root