When developers write code, they might use an integrated development environment (IDE) or a good text editor to catch syntax errors as they write. Similarly, many text editors have special modes and syntax highlighting for popular markup languages such as YAML, which can help you quickly find errors.
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Coders also have compilers or runtimes that can catch logical errors, which syntax highlights in a text editor can't predict. Markup languages don't generally have compilers, and while there are often processors that fail when attempting to parse your errant file, that's often not when you want to find out that you've made a mistake. A linter is designed to catch errors in data before a file is processed. This saves you (or your automated workflow) from errors during a critical stage of operation.
The ansible-lint
command is a linter designed specifically for Ansible playbooks.
Install
The easiest way to install ansible-lint
is with pip
:
$ python3 -m pip install --user ansible-lint
Confirm the installation:
$ ansible-lint --version
ansible-lint x.y.z using ansible X.Y.Z
[ Learn more: Ansible vs. Terraform, clarified ]
Ansible-lint
As its name implies, ansible-lint
is a YAML linter specific to Ansible playbooks. That means when you lint a playbook, it's not just looking at the markup syntax but also how you're using Ansible modules. For instance, take this simple playbook that creates a set of directories on a host:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: Create directories
ansible.builtin.file:
path: "{{ item }}" # this is wrong
state: directory # this is wrong
with_items:
- '~/Foo'
- '~/Bar
- '~/Baz
With this playbook saved as standard_dirs.yaml
in the directory structure ~/Ansible/playbooks
, run the ansible-lint
command:
$ cd ~/Ansible
$ ansible-lint
ERROR! conflicting action statements: ansible.builtin.file, path
The error appears to be in '/home/tux/Ansible/playbooks/standard_dirs.yaml': line 4, column 7, but may be elsewhere in the file depending on the exact syntax problem.
The offending line appears to be:
tasks:
- name: Create directories
^ here
Finished with 1 failure(s), 0 warning(s) on 2 files.
The linter identified an error beginning with the very first line of the first (and only) task. This tells you where to start looking. In this case, it's pretty obvious to start looking there because there's only one task, but this can be a valuable hint in a complex playbook. As I've already identified the error with comments, you can fix the indentation errors. If you don't know why those are errors, read my YAML for Ansible article.
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---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: Create directories
ansible.builtin.file:
path: "{{ item }}"
state: directory
with_items:
- '~/Foo'
- '~/Bar
- '~/Baz
Now rerun the command:
$ cd ~/Ansible
$ ansible-lint
WARNING Listing 2 violation(s) that are fatal
risky-file-permissions: File permissions unset or incorrect
playbooks/standard_dirs.yaml:4 Task/Handler: Create directories
yaml: no new line character at the end of file (new-line-at-end-of-file)
playbooks/standard_dirs.yaml:12
This time, there's no error but a fatal warning from two separate rules. The risky-file-permissions
module warns that I haven't specified file permissions in a task that creates folders. The yaml
rule, enabled because I also have yamllint
installed on my system, warns that there's no newline character at the end of the file.
Fix the first error by specifying file permissions and the second error by adding a new line at the end of the YAML:
---
- hosts: localhost
tasks:
- name: Create directories
ansible.builtin.file:
path: "{{ item }}"
state: directory
mode: '775'
with_items:
- '~/Foo'
- '~/Bar
- '~/Baz
One more try:
$ ansible-lint
$
No output means no errors.
Lint early, lint often
If you're writing code or markup in a language with a linter, it just makes sense to lint. There are linters specific to YAML, but ansible-lint
takes it a step further and checks your Ansible tasks themselves. It's a powerful way to protect yourself from errors during execution and possibly from hours of debugging.
À propos de l'auteur
Seth Kenlon is a Linux geek, open source enthusiast, free culture advocate, and tabletop gamer. Between gigs in the film industry and the tech industry (not necessarily exclusive of one another), he likes to design games and hack on code (also not necessarily exclusive of one another).
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