# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Copyright: (c) 2013, Dag Wieers (@dagwieers) # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt) from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function __metaclass__ = type DOCUMENTATION = r''' --- module: set_fact short_description: Set host variable(s) and fact(s). version_added: "1.2" description: - This action allows setting variables associated to the current host. - These variables will be available to subsequent plays during an ansible-playbook run via the host they were set on. - Set C(cacheable) to C(true) to save variables across executions using a fact cache. Variables will keep the set_fact precedence for the current run, but will used 'cached fact' precedence for subsequent ones. - Per the standard Ansible variable precedence rules, other types of variables have a higher priority, so this value may be overridden. options: key_value: description: - "The C(set_fact) module takes C(key=value) pairs or C(key: value) (YAML notation) as variables to set in the playbook scope. The 'key' is the resulting variable name and the value is, of course, the value of said variable." - You can create multiple variables at once, by supplying multiple pairs, but do NOT mix notations. required: true cacheable: description: - This boolean converts the variable into an actual 'fact' which will also be added to the fact cache. It does not enable fact caching across runs, it just means it will work with it if already enabled. - Normally this module creates 'host level variables' and has much higher precedence, this option changes the nature and precedence (by 7 steps) of the variable created. U(https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/playbooks_variables.html#variable-precedence-where-should-i-put-a-variable) - "This actually creates 2 copies of the variable, a normal 'set_fact' host variable with high precedence and a lower 'ansible_fact' one that is available for persistence via the facts cache plugin. This creates a possibly confusing interaction with C(meta: clear_facts) as it will remove the 'ansible_fact' but not the host variable." type: bool default: no version_added: "2.4" extends_documentation_fragment: - action_common_attributes - action_common_attributes.conn - action_common_attributes.flow - action_core attributes: action: details: While the action plugin does do some of the work it relies on the core engine to actually create the variables, that part cannot be overriden support: partial bypass_host_loop: support: none bypass_task_loop: support: none check_mode: support: full core: details: While parts of this action are implemented in core, other parts are still available as normal plugins and can be partially overridden support: partial delegation: details: - while variable assignment can be delegated to a different host the execution context is always the current inventory_hostname - connection variables, if set at all, would reflect the host it would target, even if we are not connecting at all in this case support: partial diff_mode: support: none notes: - Because of the nature of tasks, set_fact will produce 'static' values for a variable. Unlike normal 'lazy' variables, the value gets evaluated and templated on assignment. - Some boolean values (yes, no, true, false) will always be converted to boolean type, unless C(DEFAULT_JINJA2_NATIVE) is enabled. This is done so the C(var=value) booleans, otherwise it would only be able to create strings, but it also prevents using those values to create YAML strings. Using the setting will restrict k=v to strings, but will allow you to specify string or boolean in YAML. - "To create lists/arrays or dictionary/hashes use YAML notation C(var: [val1, val2])." - Since 'cacheable' is now a module param, 'cacheable' is no longer a valid fact name. seealso: - module: ansible.builtin.include_vars - ref: ansible_variable_precedence description: More information related to variable precedence and which type of variable wins over others. author: - Dag Wieers (@dagwieers) ''' EXAMPLES = r''' - name: Setting host facts using key=value pairs, this format can only create strings or booleans ansible.builtin.set_fact: one_fact="something" other_fact="{{ local_var }}" - name: Setting host facts using complex arguments ansible.builtin.set_fact: one_fact: something other_fact: "{{ local_var * 2 }}" another_fact: "{{ some_registered_var.results | map(attribute='ansible_facts.some_fact') | list }}" - name: Setting facts so that they will be persisted in the fact cache ansible.builtin.set_fact: one_fact: something other_fact: "{{ local_var * 2 }}" cacheable: yes - name: Creating list and dictionary variables ansible.builtin.set_fact: one_dict: something: here other: there one_list: - a - b - c # As of Ansible 1.8, Ansible will convert boolean strings ('true', 'false', 'yes', 'no') # to proper boolean values when using the key=value syntax, however it is still # recommended that booleans be set using the complex argument style: - name: Setting booleans using complex argument style ansible.builtin.set_fact: one_fact: yes other_fact: no - name: Creating list and dictionary variables using 'shorthand' YAML ansible.builtin.set_fact: two_dict: {'something': here2, 'other': somewhere} two_list: [1,2,3] '''