├── .gitignore ├── LICENSE ├── README.md ├── ansible-rundeck-docker ├── Dockerfile ├── docker-compose.yaml └── pre-install.sh ├── examples ├── inventory │ ├── 10-static.yaml │ ├── 20-nmap.yaml │ ├── 30-pve-proxmox.yaml │ ├── 50-zabbix_inventory.yaml │ └── 99-construct.yaml └── playbooks │ ├── deploy-ansible.yaml │ ├── lockdownssh.yaml │ ├── show_ansible_facts.yaml │ └── windows_samples.yaml └── install_ansible_rundeck.sh /.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | .env 2 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2 | Version 2.1, February 1999 3 | 4 | Copyright (C) 1991, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 | 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA 6 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 7 | of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 8 | 9 | [This is the first released version of the Lesser GPL. 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Both versions install the following: 6 | 7 | - rundeck 8 | - ansible 9 | - mariadb for rundeck 10 | - Visual Studio Code (vscode) server 11 | 12 | The Visual Studio Code server is available on port 8080 13 | Rundeck answers on port 4440 14 | 15 | For security you would want to hide things behind an NGINX or the like. 16 | 17 | ## Default logins 18 | 19 | The default logins/passwords are as follows: 20 | 21 | - admin/admin for the rundeck GUI 22 | - onemarcfifty for the vscode server 23 | 24 | 25 | ## Script install version 26 | 27 | If you want to run it in a Proxmox Container, then create a container with the following specs: 28 | 29 | - Debian 11 30 | - 2, better 4 GB of RAM 31 | - one or two cores 32 | - 10 or better 12 GB of disk. 33 | 34 | Run the installation script (install_ansible_rundeck.sh) and it will take care of everything. 35 | 36 | The rundeck user's home directory in the script version is **/var/lib/rundeck** 37 | 38 | ## Docker Version 39 | 40 | If you want to use the Docker version then just grab the files from the ansible-rundeck-docker directory and run the **pre-install.sh** script. This script will in fact create a hidden .env file which contains all the parameters for the containers. After that, just do a docker-compose up and that will spawn two containers – one with rundeck and ansible and a second one with a mariadb.The Dockerfile is built on the official rundeck container and just adds Ansible to it really. 41 | 42 | The rundeck user's home directory in the docker version is **/home/rundeck** 43 | 44 | ## VS code server 45 | 46 | My scripts also install a server version of vscode on the rundeck server. So with this you can use a web browser version of Visual Studio code directly in a browser from your workstation. The advantage of this is that you run the editor on the rundeck / ansible server and you can add all the nice vscode plugins here. Furthermore, the web version of vscode can be used to create, move, copy and delete files on the server without any need for ssh, FileZilla, Winscp or the like. If you need a shell then you can also open that directly in the browser in the Terminal menu. Just be advised that this has not been optimized for security in any way. You might want to hide it behind an NGINx for example. 47 | 48 | ## Creating an ansible inventory 49 | 50 | There are a couple of examples in the **examples** subdirectory. I suggest you create an `ansible` subdirectory under the user's home (there is already a hidden `.ansible` folder which we can ignore). In the Docker version, the `~/ansible` directory is mapped to a named volume. The ansible config file should reside in `~/.ansible.cfg` ("~" stands for the rundeck user's home directory). In the docker version there is a symlink from `~/.ansible.cfg` to `~/ansible/ansible.cfg` in order to have the config file in the persistent volume if ever you need to recreate the container. 51 | 52 | ### Inventory defaults 53 | 54 | I suggest pointing the inventory to a subdirectory rather than a file. This way you may use multiple plugins for inventories. So at a minimum you would create the following subdirectories: 55 | 56 | - ~/ansible/inventory 57 | - ~/ansible/playbooks 58 | 59 | and then create the following minimum ~/.ansible.cfg: 60 | 61 | [defaults] 62 | inventory=~/ansible/inventory 63 | 64 | 65 | ### Inventory examples 66 | 67 | Now you can use the example inventory files by just copying them over to to ~/ansible/inventory. The following files are included in the examples: 68 | 69 | | file | description | 70 | | ------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------- | 71 | | 10-static.yaml | static definition of hosts and groups | 72 | | 20-nmap.yaml | scans network for nodes and adds them to inventory | 73 | | 30-pve-proxmox.yaml | uses the Proxmox API to add containers and vms | 74 | | 50-zabbix_inventory.yaml | uses the zabbix inventory for ansible | 75 | | 99-construct.yaml | dispatches nodes to groups | 76 | 77 | ### Adding the inventory to rundeck 78 | 79 | Rundeck can use the Ansible inventory. When you first log into rundeck and you create a new project then rundeck wants to know is where to get the nodes from. Click on “add a new node source” and use the Ansible Resource Model Source. Under “Jobs” – “create a new job” you can now create a job. Under the Workflow section specify the Refresh Project Nodes Type under Workflow steps. When you now run this job then rundeck will query the ansible inventory and update the nodes accordingly. If you use nmap to create the inventory then this may take a while as the network will need to be scanned. You can now verify if the nodes have been added by checking in to the nodes section. 80 | 81 | ## Watch the video on YouTube 82 | 83 | We will walk through the Installation and Usage in [this video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt2hDEONSUs) on my YouTube Channel 84 | 85 | [![Video](https://www.onemarcfifty.com/assets/images/thumbnails/Vt2hDEONSUs.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt2hDEONSUs) 86 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /ansible-rundeck-docker/Dockerfile: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | FROM rundeck/rundeck:4.4.0 2 | 3 | # minimal rundeck with ansible 4 | # no mariadb 5 | 6 | USER root 7 | 8 | ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND noninteractive 9 | RUN apt-get -y update && \ 10 | apt-get -y install \ 11 | apt-transport-https \ 12 | python3-pip \ 13 | sudo \ 14 | wget \ 15 | curl \ 16 | git \ 17 | nmap \ 18 | sshpass 19 | RUN apt-get clean 20 | # let's install ansible using pip as root 21 | # this will give a fat red warning at runtime but is intended this way. 22 | RUN pip install --upgrade pip 23 | RUN pip install ansible 24 | 25 | # we download the debian package for vscode server from the coder github repo 26 | # and install it with apt 27 | RUN wget https://github.com/coder/code-server/releases/download/v4.6.0/code-server_4.6.0_amd64.deb 28 | RUN apt -y install ./code-server_4.6.0_amd64.deb 29 | RUN apt-get clean 30 | # for compatibility with the non-docker version we just link the 31 | # /var/lib/rundeck directory to the /home/rundeck directory 32 | RUN ln -s /home/rundeck /var/lib/rundeck 33 | 34 | USER rundeck 35 | 36 | # now make sure the vscode server gets started at runtime 37 | RUN echo 'export PASSWORD=$VSCODE_PASSWORD' >docker-lib/includes/120_vscode.sh 38 | RUN echo 'pidof node || /usr/bin/code-server --host 0.0.0.0 &' >>docker-lib/includes/120_vscode.sh 39 | RUN chmod 755 docker-lib/includes/120_vscode.sh 40 | 41 | # make sure we can write to the ansible volume 42 | RUN echo 'sudo chown rundeck:root ansible' >docker-lib/includes/110_volume.sh 43 | RUN echo '/bin/touch ~/ansible/ansible.cfg' >>docker-lib/includes/110_volume.sh 44 | RUN if [ ! -e ~/.ansible.cfg ] ; then ln -s ~/ansible/ansible.cfg ~/.ansible.cfg ; fi 45 | RUN chmod 755 docker-lib/includes/110_volume.sh 46 | 47 | #VOLUME ["/home/rundeck/server/data"] 48 | 49 | #EXPOSE 4440 50 | #ENTRYPOINT [ "docker-lib/entry.sh" ] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /ansible-rundeck-docker/docker-compose.yaml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # rundeck-ansible 2 | 3 | version: '3' 4 | 5 | services: 6 | 7 | rundeck: 8 | build: 9 | context: . 10 | container_name: rundeck 11 | hostname: rundeck 12 | restart: on-failure:5 13 | links: 14 | - mariadb 15 | depends_on: 16 | - mariadb 17 | env_file: 18 | .env 19 | ports: 20 | - 4440:4440 21 | - 8080:8080 22 | volumes: 23 | - ansible-data:/home/rundeck/ansible 24 | - rundeck-data:/home/rundeck/server/data 25 | networks: 26 | - db-net 27 | mariadb: 28 | image: mariadb:10.5.8 29 | container_name: mariadb 30 | restart: on-failure:5 31 | env_file: 32 | .env 33 | volumes: 34 | - mariadb-data:/var/lib/mysql 35 | networks: 36 | - db-net 37 | volumes: 38 | mariadb-data: 39 | ansible-data: 40 | rundeck-data: 41 | networks: 42 | db-net: 43 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /ansible-rundeck-docker/pre-install.sh: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/bin/bash 2 | 3 | # this script creates random passwords 4 | # and updates the .env file 5 | 6 | # create a new environment file 7 | 8 | # random password for Database connection 9 | RANDOMPASSWORD=`date +%s | sha256sum | base64 | head -c 32` 10 | 11 | # the hostname which we can use in order to access rundeck 12 | # from the outside. 13 | # we set this to the hostname of the docker host 14 | GRAILS_HOST_NAME=`hostname` 15 | 16 | (cat >.env) </etc/sudoers.d/rundeck 28 | 29 | # install ansible through pip 30 | 31 | pip install ansible 32 | 33 | # download the rundeck installation script and run it directly 34 | # then install rundeck 35 | 36 | curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rundeck/packaging/main/scripts/deb-setup.sh 2> /dev/null | sudo bash -s rundeck 37 | apt update 38 | apt -y install rundeck 39 | 40 | # replace the localhost entries in the config files with the hostname 41 | 42 | sed -i s/localhost/`hostname`/g /etc/rundeck/framework.properties 43 | sed -i s/localhost/`hostname`/g /etc/rundeck/rundeck-config.properties 44 | 45 | # install mariadb 46 | apt install -y mariadb-server 47 | # create rundeck db 48 | mysql -u root -e 'create database rundeck' 49 | # create user, random pass and grant access 50 | RANDOMPASSWORD=`date +%s | sha256sum | base64 | head -c 32` 51 | mysql -u root -e "create user rundeck@localhost identified by '$RANDOMPASSWORD'" 52 | mysql -u root -e 'grant ALL on rundeck.* to rundeck@localhost' 53 | 54 | # update the rundeck config 55 | # comment out the original data source 56 | 57 | sed -i s/^dataSource.url/\#dataSource.url/g /etc/rundeck/rundeck-config.properties 58 | 59 | # point the datasource to the new local mariadb installation 60 | 61 | (cat >> /etc/rundeck/rundeck-config.properties) </etc/systemd/system/code-server.service) <