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Ansible Collections Overview

Warning: Subject to frequent updates
This is a "living document", expect it to change as we progress with the Collections work over the next few months.

As with any project it's very important that we get feedback from users, contributors and maintainers. We recognize that the move to Collections is a big change in how Ansible is developed and delivered. Therefore you should expect that the devel branch may be broken on occasion.

See the Ansible Communication channels for a list of IRC channels and email lists you can use to join the discussion.

To understand where we are going, it's often useful to remind ourselves of where we came from.

Classic Ansible

  • Single repository ansible/ansible.
  • Single package called ansible
  • ansible had major releases twice a year
  • New features go into the next major release - ie worst case you need to wait 6 months
  • The ansible/ansible (ansible-base) repository only contains:
    • The core Ansible programs, ansible-{playbook,galaxy,doc,test,etc}
    • Some documentation
    • A tiny subset of modules and plugins to allow for a functioning controller
    • Together this will be known as ansible-base
  • The rest of the modules and plugins have been moved into various "collections"
    • Ansible Collections:
      • Can be released independently of ansible-base and Ansible, at whatever release cycle/cadence the collection maintainer prefers.
      • Will have their own repo (GitHub, GitLab, etc) with dedicated backlog, ie no more shared massive issue & PR backlog
      • Should still have CI testing and in many cases can be tested more thoroughly
  • The released package of Ansible 2.10 will pull in ansible-base and the various community collections that were previously a part of ansible/ansible

The ansible package (will contain a subset of collections) and depend on the new ansible-base package (the Ansible engine).

Classic Ansible (CA)
What we think of as Ansible prior to 2020. The open source project and the deliverable. What you currently get (as of Ansible 2.9 and earlier versions) when you type pip install ansible. Was developed almost entirely within the ansible/ansible repository on GitHub.
Collection
A packaging format for bundling and distributing Ansible content: plugins, roles, modules. Can be released independent of other collections or ansible-base so features can be made available sooner to users. Installed via ansible-galaxy collection install <namespace.collection>.
ansible (the package)
A replacement software package (Python, deb, rpm, etc) which contains a select group of Collections. It contains the collections to ensure that Ansible 2.9 playbooks don't require any extra collections to be be installed. This list of what's included can be found at ansible-build-data. Will depend on the ansible-base package. Was previously referred to as ACD (Ansible Community Distribution).
ansible-base
New for 2.10. The codebase that is now contained in github.com/ansible/ansible for the Ansible 2.10 release. It contains a minimal amount of modules and plugins and allows other collections to be installed. Similar to Ansible 2.9 though without any content that has since moved into a collection. The devel branch of ansible/ansible is now ansible-base.

There will be an ansible-base package (RPM/Python/Deb package)with only the minimal set of modules and plugins).

Ansible Galaxy
An online hub for finding and sharing Ansible community content. Also, the command-line utility that lets users install individual Ansible Collections, ansible-galaxy install community.crypto. galaxy.ansible.com.
Fully Qualified Collection Name (FQCN)
The full definition of a module, plugin, or role hosted within a collection, in the form namespace.collection.content_name. Allows a Playbook to refer to a specific module or plugin from a specific source in an unambiguous manner, for example, community.grafana.grafana_dashboard. The FQCN is required when you want to specify the exact source of a module and multiple modules with the same name are available. Can always be identified in a playbook; ideally not necessary in most playbooks, but in cases in which users have multiple collections installed with similar content, the FQCN will always be the explicit and authoritative indicator of which collection to use for content. Example: cisco.ios.ios_config would be the FQCN, and the playbook would generally call "ios_config" when this is required.
Namespace
The first part of a Fully Qualified Collection Name, the namespace usually reflects a functional content category. Example: in cisco.ios.ios_config, “Cisco” is the Namespace. Namespaces are reserved and distributed by Red Hat at Red Hat’s discretion. Many, but not all, namespaces will correspond with vendor names.
Collection name
In the second part of a Fully Qualified Collection Name, the collection name further divides the functional characteristics of the collection content and denotes ownership. For example, the cisco namespace might contain cisco.ios, cisco.ios_community, and cisco.ios_prc, containing content for managing ios network devices maintained by Cisco.
community.general (collection)
A special collection managed by the Ansible Community Team containing all the modules and plugins which shipped in Ansible 2.9 that don't have their own dedicated Collection. See community.general on Galaxy or it's GitHub repository .
community.network (collection)
Similar to community.general, though focusing on Network modules. See community.network on Galaxy or it's GitHub repository .
Repository
The location of the source code included in a collection. Contributors make suggestions, fix bugs, and add features through the repository. Collection owners can host repositories on GitHub, Gerrit, or any other source code repository platform they choose.

Although this document focuses on Community (upstream) content, there will be Product (downstream) equivalents of the above. Links to the Product documentation will be added once they are available.

Ansible 2.9 already contains basic support for Collections.

The majority of the ansible-base 2.10 release cycle is for:

  • Defining what the split of collections should be
  • Defining which modules and plugins go into these new collections
  • Defining ansible-base (ie which modules stay in ansible/ansible)
  • Updating test infrastructure
  • Testing the changes
  • Getting feedback from you
  • See status.rst for dates of beta, RC, Release dates for ansible 2.10
  • See ROADMAP_2.10 for dates of beta, RC, Release dates for ansible-base 2.10

Using Ansible Collections

For users of the community version of ansible pip/apt-get install ansible will continue to give you a working install of Ansible including the three thousand plus modules that previously shipped with Ansible 2.9.

We recognize that many users install Ansible directly from devel, and generally we do our best to keep the devel branch stable. These changes, however, will have a very large short-term impact, and we cannot guarantee that devel will be as stable as it has been in the past through this migration process.

These changes, however, will have both a temporary and permanent impact.

  • Temporarily
    • These changes are large and invasive so there may be bugs which break many things.
    • We cannot guarantee that devel will be as stable as it has been in the past during this transition period.
  • Permanent
    • Users of devel will need to get both ansible-base (the package with contains ansible-playbook) and the ansible collections that their playbooks rely on. The collections will reside in multiple other git repositories (or can be installed from galaxy).
    • If your workflow presently updates your checkout of the ansible devel branch, you'll need to change it to also retrieve the collections you need otherwise your playbooks will fail,

We don't have a firm date yet, but we plan to release Ansible 2.10 sometime in 2020, and we do expect to have several alpha/beta releases between now and then. Until that time, Ansible 2.9 will continue to be the available version.

You can pip install ansible-base by doing:

python -m pip install --user https://github.com/ansible/ansible/archive/devel.tar.gz

Individual collections can be installed by doing:

ansible-galaxy collection install NAMESPACE.COLLECTION

Ansible-base is the name of the code and package for what github.com/ansible/ansible has become now that most of the content has been removed.

  • ansible[|-playbook|-galaxy|-pull|-doc|-test] --help
  • Being able to install content from Galaxy or Automation Hub
    • ansible-galaxy collection ...
    • Setup Networking
    • Setup Proxy
  • Being able to install supported content via packages
    • ie RHEL users will not use ansible-galaxy collection install ..., they want RPMs
    • Ability to setup and use package repos
    • Ability to work online or offline
  • Include things that are "hardcoded" into Ansible
    • eg stat is used to handle any file information internally
    • include_tasks is hardcoded as the implementation is inside the engine, same with add_host, group_by, debug and others, async_wrapp, async-poll, assert/fail are 'parts of the language'
  • Development
    • Ability to run ansible-test sanity,units,integration against the Ansible code base
  • Parts of the Windows codebase that can't currently be removed from ansible-base.

Bugs in ansible-base should be reported via ansible/ansible issues.

Developing Collections

Ansible Collections Checklist

If you're a vendor/partner and you're writing Ansible content to interact with your software, we recommend writing your own collection. This will allow you to pursue certification against the Ansible Automation Platform. For more info on certification, read the Partners Page.

If you want to submit your module to an existing collection, you'll want to coordinate with the maintainers of those collections and follow their guidelines.

As of today ansible-core (github.com/ansible/ansible) will no longer accept new modules or plugins.

We will have a mapping of old modules to their new homes. Should you submit a PR to the wrong repository, we will close it and point you to the correct repository.

Pull requests not merged before the freeze, will need to be recreated in the corresponding new Collection Repo. We will have a tool to help move PRs from one repo to another.

Content that doesn't end up in its own Collection will end up being automatically migrated to community.general during the devel freeze window.

The benefits of claiming content are the following:

  • Source content is housed in a GitHub organization/repository of your choosing
  • Source content is subject to your own CI processes, decisions, and testing
  • Your own dedicated Issue and PR backlog
  • Ability to use more GitHub functionality, such as direct assignments, reviews, milestones and Project Boards
  • In ansible/ansible:
    • There is a single version number which is over everything shipped in Ansible
    • Doesn't use semver, uses X.Y (ie 2.9) as the major number
    • Deprecations are done over 4 versions (~ 2 years)
  • In Collections

Details around versioning and deprecation policy are still being worked on, we will have a proposal up shortly

See Migrating content to a different collection .

Please note that Ansible 2.9 no longer receives bugfixes. Only security issues can be fixed, and eventually it will be end of life with no more fixes accepted. See ansible-core release cycle for whether 2.9 is still accepting security fixes or not.

The process for fixing a security issue is as follows:

  1. PR for bug fix made against the Collection
  2. PR gets merged into Collection
  3. Raise PR directly against ansible/ansible:stable-2.9 (ie not a backport) including a changelogs/fragments/ file

The changes in the PR against ansible/ansible:stable-2.9 should be as close as possible to the changes in the collection original PR, and you should add a reference to the collection PR in the ansible/ansible PR.