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Prompts
=======
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When running a playbook, you may wish to prompt the user for certain input, and can
do so with the 'vars_prompt' section.
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A common use for this might be for asking for sensitive data that you do not want to record.
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This has uses beyond security, for instance, you may use the same playbook for all
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software releases and would prompt for a particular release version
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in a push-script.
Here is a most basic example::
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---
- hosts: all
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remote_user: root
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vars:
from: "camelot"
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vars_prompt:
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- name: "name"
prompt: "what is your name?"
- name: "quest"
prompt: "what is your quest?"
- name: "favcolor"
prompt: "what is your favorite color?"
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.. note ::
Prompts for individual `` vars_prompt `` variables will be skipped for any variable that is already defined through the command line `` --extra-vars `` option, or when running from a non-interactive session (such as cron or Ansible Tower). See :ref: `_passing_variables_on_the_command_line` in the /Variables/ chapter.
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If you have a variable that changes infrequently, it might make sense to
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provide a default value that can be overridden. This can be accomplished using
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the default argument::
vars_prompt:
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- name: "release_version"
prompt: "Product release version"
default: "1.0"
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An alternative form of vars_prompt allows for hiding input from the user, and may later support
some other options, but otherwise works equivalently::
vars_prompt:
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- name: "some_password"
prompt: "Enter password"
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private: yes
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- name: "release_version"
prompt: "Product release version"
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private: no
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If `Passlib <https://passlib.readthedocs.io/en/stable/> `_ is installed, vars_prompt can also crypt the
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entered value so you can use it, for instance, with the user module to define a password::
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vars_prompt:
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- name: "my_password2"
prompt: "Enter password2"
private: yes
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encrypt: "sha512_crypt"
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confirm: yes
salt_size: 7
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You can use any crypt scheme supported by 'Passlib':
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- *des_crypt* - DES Crypt
- *bsdi_crypt* - BSDi Crypt
- *bigcrypt* - BigCrypt
- *crypt16* - Crypt16
- *md5_crypt* - MD5 Crypt
- *bcrypt* - BCrypt
- *sha1_crypt* - SHA-1 Crypt
- *sun_md5_crypt* - Sun MD5 Crypt
- *sha256_crypt* - SHA-256 Crypt
- *sha512_crypt* - SHA-512 Crypt
- *apr_md5_crypt* - Apache’ s MD5-Crypt variant
- *phpass* - PHPass’ Portable Hash
- *pbkdf2_digest* - Generic PBKDF2 Hashes
- *cta_pbkdf2_sha1* - Cryptacular’ s PBKDF2 hash
- *dlitz_pbkdf2_sha1* - Dwayne Litzenberger’ s PBKDF2 hash
- *scram* - SCRAM Hash
- *bsd_nthash* - FreeBSD’ s MCF-compatible nthash encoding
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However, the only parameters accepted are 'salt' or 'salt_size'. You can use your own salt using
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'salt', or have one generated automatically using 'salt_size'. If nothing is specified, a salt
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of size 8 will be generated.
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.. seealso ::
:doc: `playbooks`
An introduction to playbooks
:doc: `playbooks_conditionals`
Conditional statements in playbooks
:doc: `playbooks_variables`
All about variables
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