Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History

builder

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Build and use your own Execution Environment

This page mainly shows you how to build and use your own custom Execution Environment.

Table of Contents

Introduction

When the Job Template is launched on AWX, the playbook runs on the Execution Environment (EE), which is a containerized environment completely isolated from your K3s host.

The default EE, quay.io/ansible/awx-ee:latest, has some typical collections, Pip modules, and RPM packages by default, but sometimes your playbooks require additional (non-default) collections, modules or packages.

In such cases, you need to add Ansible collections, Python packages, and RPM packages to the EE. There are two ways you can choose to achieve this.

  1. Build and use your own Execution Environment
    • This method is used when additional Pip or RPM packages are required in addition to the Ansible collection.
    • Follow the whole of this page to build and use a custom EE.
  2. Place collections/requirements.yml in your project
    • This is useful if you simply need additional Ansible collections only, and no additional Pip or RPM packages are required. However, this method cannot be used if your project type on AWX is Manual.
    • See Use Ansible collections without custom EE at the bottom of this page for instructions.

Build your own custom EE

To build a custom EE, there is a tool called Ansible Builder. You can build your own custom EE with any Ansible collections, Python packages, and RPM packages added.

This repository includes ready-to-use files as an example to use Ansible Builder. You can clone my repository to start with my ready-to-use example files.

cd ~
git clone https:/kurokobo/awx-on-k3s.git
cd awx-on-k3s/builder

Environment in This Example

  • CentOS Stream 9 (Minimal)
  • Python 3.11
  • Docker 25.0.4
  • Ansible Builder 3.1.0

Install Ansible Builder

You can install Ansible Builder by using Pip.

python3 -m pip install ansible-builder

Prepare Required Files

At least, the file execution-environment.yml is required to build an EE.

This repository contains execution-environment.yml as a minimal ready-to-use example. This file is made to achieve the following requirements.

  • Use quay.io/centos/centos:stream9-minimal as the base image
  • Use Python 3.11 as the Python interpreter
  • Use Ansible 2.15.* and Ansible Runner 2.3.* to run playbooks on the EE
  • Add RPM Packages that are listed in dependencies/bindep.txt for basic remote connection and debugging
  • Add Python packages that are listed in dependencies/requirements.txt
  • Add Ansible collections that are listed in dependencies/requirements.yml
  • Customize the configuration for ansible-galaxy (additional_build_files and additional_build_steps)
    • Add a customized ansible.cfg to the context (additional_build_files)
    • Place the customized file as ~/.ansible.cfg for the stage that ansible-galaxy is invoked (prepend_galaxy under additional_build_steps)
  • Run additional commands during build steps (additional_build_steps)
    • To allow the hard-coded interpreter name (python3) to be passed by AWX, the alternatives command is appended under append_base to make the binary /usr/bin/python3.11 executable as command python3

Note that since this example uses the *-minimal image as the base image and added only a few packages for SSH connection and debugging, there should still be missing packages and modules for some modules and collections.

You can review and modify execution-environment.yml and any files referenced from this file to suit your requirements.

The syntax of requirements.yml is the same as for Ansible Galaxy. The syntax of requirements.txt is the same as for Pip, and bindep.txt is for Bindep.

Other customizations are possible besides this. Refer to the official Ansible Builder documentation for details.

Build EE

Once your files are ready, run ansible-builder build command to build an EE as a container image according to the definition in execution-environment.yml. Specify a tag (--tag) to suit your requirements.

ansible-builder build --tag registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom --container-runtime docker --verbosity 3

Below is an example output of this command.

$ ansible-builder build --tag registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom --container-runtime docker --verbosity 3
Ansible Builder is generating your execution environment build context.
File context/_build/requirements.yml will be created.
File context/_build/requirements.txt will be created.
File context/_build/bindep.txt will be created.
Creating context/_build/configs
File context/_build/configs/ansible.cfg will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/assemble will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/install-from-bindep will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/introspect.py will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/check_galaxy will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/check_ansible will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/pip_install will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/entrypoint will be created.
Ansible Builder is building your execution environment image. Tags: registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom
Running command:
  docker build -f context/Dockerfile -t registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom context
#0 building with "default" instance using docker driver

#1 [internal] load build definition from Dockerfile
#1 transferring dockerfile: 3.14kB done
#1 DONE 0.1s
...

#5 [base 1/7] FROM quay.io/centos/centos:stream9-minimal@sha256:08da5b444b6f7bdc1e4253e36fd3bd52d712d9c19c1b9e426fd733c5865c9d30
...

#12 [galaxy 1/7] ADD _build/configs/ansible.cfg ~/.ansible.cfg
...

#13 [builder 1/7] WORKDIR /build
...

#18 [final 1/9] RUN /output/scripts/check_ansible /usr/bin/python3.11
...

#35 exporting to image
#35 exporting layers
#35 exporting layers 1.1s done
#35 writing image sha256:34147e320cd92bf40c545c785e7718dc65936d1b68179f0620b329a286095064 done
#35 naming to registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom done
#35 DONE 1.1s

Complete! The build context can be found at: /home/********/awx-on-k3s/builder/context

Once the command is complete, your custom EE image is built and stored on Docker or Podman.

$ docker image ls
REPOSITORY                        TAG           IMAGE ID       CREATED          SIZE
registry.example.com/ansible/ee   2.15-custom   34147e320cd9   20 seconds ago   285MB

Use EE

You can use your EE in your AWX or Ansible Runner.

Use EE in AWX

To use your EE in AWX, in typical use cases, your EE should be stored on some container registry and should be pulled by AWX, but technically you can use your EE with your AWX without any container registry.

Use EE in AWX with container registry

Simply you can push your EE image to some container registry. Any registry can be acceptable. If you want to deploy your own private container registry, refer additional guide on this repository.

$ docker push registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom
The push refers to repository [registry.example.com/ansible/ee]
...
2.15-custom: digest: sha256:b0d4638a788a74d893075f5600a00e5aef51ada67e46bde2071615fc936ef0d8 size: 3661

Then you can specify registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom as your own custom EE in AWX. Specify registry credentials if your container registry requires authentication.

Use EE in AWX without container registry

The EEs in AWX are just Pods on Kubernetes. When executing a Job Template in AWX, AWX instructs Kubernetes to create a Pod using the specified EE image. Of course Kubernetes requires the specified container image when creating the Pod. So while creating the Pod, Kubernetes usually pulls the specified image from the container registry.

But this happens only if the image is not cached on the container runtime for Kubernetes. If Kubernetes has the cache of the specified image, Kubernetes never pulls the image from the container registry (Technically, this is the default behavior and stated as imagePullPolicy is IfNotPresent).

This means that if your Kubernetes has all the EE images you need in its cache in advance, you can use any EE from AWX without any container registry. To achieve this, you should export your EE image from Docker or Podman, and import it to containerd that the container runtime for K3s.

# Save your EE image as Tar file
docker save registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom -o custom-ee.tar

# Import the Tar file to containerd
sudo $(which k3s) ctr images import --compress-blobs --base-name registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom custom-ee.tar

Ensure your imported image is listed.

$ sudo $(which k3s) crictl images
IMAGE                             TAG           IMAGE ID            SIZE
...
registry.example.com/ansible/ee   2.15-custom   34147e320cd92       295MB
...

Now you can specify registry.example.com/ansible/ee:2.15-custom as your own custom EE in AWX without any container registry and any credentials.

In AWX, you can change the policy of pulling the image in Edit page of your EE. The default Only pull the image if not present before running is ok, but to be safe you should specify Never pull container before running.

Use EE in Ansible Runner

Refer to the guide for Ansible Runner on this repository.

Tips

Some additional information around Ansible Builder and EE.

Get the Dockerfile of your custom EE

The Dockerfile is generated and stored under the context directory once your ansible-builder build command has completed.

$ cat context/Dockerfile
ARG EE_BASE_IMAGE="quay.io/centos/centos:stream9-minimal"
...

# Base build stage
FROM $EE_BASE_IMAGE as base
...

# Galaxy build stage
FROM base as galaxy
...

# Builder build stage
FROM base as builder
...

# Final build stage
FROM base as final
...

If you want to create Dockerfile without building an image, you can use the ansible-builder create command.

$ ansible-builder create --verbosity 3
Ansible Builder is generating your execution environment build context.
File context/_build/requirements.yml will be created.
File context/_build/requirements.txt will be created.
File context/_build/bindep.txt will be created.
Creating context/_build/configs
File context/_build/configs/ansible.cfg will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/assemble will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/install-from-bindep will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/introspect.py will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/check_galaxy will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/check_ansible will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/pip_install will be created.
File context/_build/scripts/entrypoint will be created.
Complete! The build context can be found at: /home/********/awx-on-k3s/builder/context

Use Ansible collections without custom EE

If you simply need additional Ansible collections only, and no additional Pip or RPM packages are required, this method is the simplest way. However, this method can't be applied for Manual type projects. If you want to add your project as Manual type, you should build custom EE.

The procedure is quite simple, create and place collections/requirements.yml in your project root including the list of the collections that you want to use.

The format of collections/requirements.yml is the same as the requirements.yml for ansible-galaxy.

If collections/requirements.yml is present in your project, AWX will install the collections accordingly while updating project.