Proxmox dynamic inventory for Ansible. Based on original plugin from Mathieu Gauthier-Lafaye and updated plugin by Xabi Ezpeleta
installed qemu-guest-agent on proxmox vm's
- Removed ansible lib requirements
- Requests instead of urllib
- Qemu interfaces ip detection: You should have qemu-guest-agent installed and activated
- ProxmoxVE cluster: if your have a ProxmoxVE cluster, it will gather the whole VM list from your cluster
- Advanced filtering: you can filter the VM list based in their status or a custom tag included in the
Notes
field
Download proxmox.py
sudo chmod +x proxmox.py
Let's test it:
python /etc/ansible/proxmox.py \
--url=https://<your-proxmox-url>:8006/ \
--username=<proxmox-username> \
--password=<proxmox-password> \
--trust-invalid-certs \
--qemu_interface=ens18 \
--list --pretty
If you get a list with all the VM in your Proxmox cluster, everything is ok.
You may also save your settings in a JSON file with the same name of the Python script, in same folder (e.g.: if the downloaded script is proxmox.py
, the configuration file will be proxmox.json
):
{
"url": "https://10.0.0.1:8006/",
"username": "apiuser@pam",
"password": "apiuser1234",
"validateCert": false,
"qemu_interface": "ens18"
}
you can include the dynamic inventory in your ansible commands:
# Ping: connect to all VM in Proxmox using root user
ansible -i /etc/ansible/proxmox.py all -m ping -u root
#$ Added support for using the Notes field of a VM to define groups and variables:
A well-formatted JSON object in the Notes field will be added to the _meta section for that VM. In addition, the "groups" key of this JSON object may be used to specify group membership:
For instance, you can use the following JSON code in a VM host notes:
{ "groups": ["windows"] }
So if you want to exclude Windows machines, you could do the following:
# Run a playbook in every running Linux machine in Proxmox
ansible-playbook -i ./proxmox.py --limit='running,!windows' playbook-example/playbook.yml