Chapter 9. Using Ansible to automate group membership in IdM
Using automatic group membership, you can assign users and hosts user groups and host groups automatically, based on their attributes. For example, you can:
-
Divide employees' user entries into groups based on the employees' manager, location, position or any other attribute. You can list all attributes by entering
ipa user-add --help
on the command-line. -
Divide hosts into groups based on their class, location, or any other attribute. You can list all attributes by entering
ipa host-add --help
on the command-line. - Add all users or all hosts to a single global group.
You can use Red Hat Ansible Engine to automate the management of automatic group membership in Identity Management (IdM).
This section covers the following topics:
- Using Ansible to ensure that an automember rule for an IdM user group is present
- Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is present in an IdM user group automember rule
- Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is absent in an IdM user group automember rule
- Using Ansible to ensure that an automember rule for an IdM group is absent
- Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is present in an IdM host group automember rule
9.1. Using Ansible to ensure that an automember rule for an IdM user group is present
The following procedure describes how to use an Ansible playbook to ensure an automember
rule for an Identity Management (IdM) group exists. In the example, the presence of an automember
rule is ensured for the testing_group user group.
Prerequisites
-
You know the IdM
admin
password. - The testing_group user group exists in IdM.
You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:
- You are using Ansible version 2.14 or later.
-
You have installed the
ansible-freeipa
package on the Ansible controller. - The example assumes that in the ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory, you have created an Ansible inventory file with the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the IdM server.
-
The example assumes that the secret.yml Ansible vault stores your
ipaadmin_password
.
-
The target node, that is the node on which the
ansible-freeipa
module is executed, is part of the IdM domain as an IdM client, server or replica.
Procedure
Navigate to your ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory:
$ cd ~/MyPlaybooks/
Copy the
automember-group-present.yml
Ansible playbook file located in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/
directory:$ cp /usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/automember-group-present.yml automember-group-present-copy.yml
-
Open the
automember-group-present-copy.yml
file for editing. Adapt the file by setting the following variables in the
ipaautomember
task section:-
Set the
ipaadmin_password
variable to the password of the IdMadmin
. -
Set the
name
variable to testing_group. -
Set the
automember_type
variable to group. -
Ensure that the
state
variable is set topresent
.
This is the modified Ansible playbook file for the current example:
--- - name: Automember group present example hosts: ipaserver vars_files: - /home/user_name/MyPlaybooks/secret.yml tasks: - name: Ensure group automember rule admins is present ipaautomember: ipaadmin_password: "{{ ipaadmin_password }}" name: testing_group automember_type: group state: present
-
Set the
- Save the file.
Run the Ansible playbook. Specify the playbook file, the file storing the password protecting the secret.yml file, and the inventory file:
$ ansible-playbook --vault-password-file=password_file -v -i inventory automember-group-present-copy.yml
9.2. Using Ansible to ensure that a specified condition is present in an IdM user group automember rule
Additional resources
The following procedure describes how to use an Ansible playbook to ensure that a specified condition exists in an automember
rule for an Identity Management (IdM) group. In the example, the presence of a UID-related condition in the automember
rule is ensured for the testing_group group. By specifying the .* condition, you ensure that all future IdM users automatically become members of the testing_group.
Prerequisites
-
You know the IdM
admin
password. - The testing_group user group and automember user group rule exist in IdM.
You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:
- You are using Ansible version 2.14 or later.
-
You have installed the
ansible-freeipa
package on the Ansible controller. - The example assumes that in the ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory, you have created an Ansible inventory file with the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the IdM server.
-
The example assumes that the secret.yml Ansible vault stores your
ipaadmin_password
.
-
The target node, that is the node on which the
ansible-freeipa
module is executed, is part of the IdM domain as an IdM client, server or replica.
Procedure
Navigate to your ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory:
$ cd ~/MyPlaybooks/
Copy the
automember-hostgroup-rule-present.yml
Ansible playbook file located in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/
directory and name it, for example, automember-usergroup-rule-present.yml:$ cp /usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/automember-hostgroup-rule-present.yml automember-usergroup-rule-present.yml
-
Open the
automember-usergroup-rule-present.yml
file for editing. Adapt the file by modifying the following parameters:
- Rename the playbook to correspond to your use case, for example: Automember user group rule member present.
- Rename the task to correspond to your use case, for example: Ensure an automember condition for a user group is present.
Set the following variables in the
ipaautomember
task section:-
Set the
ipaadmin_password
variable to the password of the IdMadmin
. -
Set the
name
variable to testing_group. -
Set the
automember_type
variable togroup
. -
Ensure that the
state
variable is set topresent
. -
Ensure that the
action
variable is set tomember
. -
Set the
inclusive
key
variable toUID
. -
Set the
inclusive
expression
variable to .*
-
Set the
This is the modified Ansible playbook file for the current example:
--- - name: Automember user group rule member present hosts: ipaserver vars_files: - /home/user_name/MyPlaybooks/secret.yml tasks: - name: Ensure an automember condition for a user group is present ipaautomember: ipaadmin_password: "{{ ipaadmin_password }}" name: testing_group automember_type: group state: present action: member inclusive: - key: UID expression: .*
- Save the file.
Run the Ansible playbook. Specify the playbook file, the file storing the password protecting the secret.yml file, and the inventory file:
$ ansible-playbook --vault-password-file=password_file -v -i inventory automember-usergroup-rule-present.yml
Verification
Log in as an IdM administrator.
$ kinit admin
Add a user, for example:
$ ipa user-add user101 --first user --last 101 ----------------------- Added user "user101" ----------------------- User login: user101 First name: user Last name: 101 ... Member of groups: ipausers, testing_group ...
9.3. Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is absent from an IdM user group automember rule
Additional resources
The following procedure describes how to use an Ansible playbook to ensure a condition is absent from an automember
rule for an Identity Management (IdM) group. In the example, the absence of a condition in the automember
rule is ensured that specifies that users whose initials
are dp should be included. The automember rule is applied to the testing_group group. By applying the condition, you ensure that no future IdM user whose initials are dp becomes a member of the testing_group.
Prerequisites
-
You know the IdM
admin
password. - The testing_group user group and automember user group rule exist in IdM.
You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:
- You are using Ansible version 2.14 or later.
-
You have installed the
ansible-freeipa
package on the Ansible controller. - The example assumes that in the ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory, you have created an Ansible inventory file with the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the IdM server.
-
The example assumes that the secret.yml Ansible vault stores your
ipaadmin_password
.
-
The target node, that is the node on which the
ansible-freeipa
module is executed, is part of the IdM domain as an IdM client, server or replica.
Procedure
Navigate to your ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory:
$ cd ~/MyPlaybooks/
Copy the
automember-hostgroup-rule-absent.yml
Ansible playbook file located in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/
directory and name it, for example, automember-usergroup-rule-absent.yml:$ cp /usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/automember-hostgroup-rule-absent.yml automember-usergroup-rule-absent.yml
-
Open the
automember-usergroup-rule-absent.yml
file for editing. Adapt the file by modifying the following parameters:
- Rename the playbook to correspond to your use case, for example: Automember user group rule member absent.
- Rename the task to correspond to your use case, for example: Ensure an automember condition for a user group is absent.
Set the following variables in the
ipaautomember
task section:-
Set the
ipaadmin_password
variable to the password of the IdMadmin
. -
Set the
name
variable to testing_group. -
Set the
automember_type
variable to group. -
Ensure that the
state
variable is set toabsent
. -
Ensure that the
action
variable is set tomember
. -
Set the
inclusive
key
variable toinitials
. -
Set the
inclusive
expression
variable to dp.
-
Set the
This is the modified Ansible playbook file for the current example:
--- - name: Automember user group rule member absent hosts: ipaserver vars_files: - /home/user_name/MyPlaybooks/secret.yml tasks: - name: Ensure an automember condition for a user group is absent ipaautomember: ipaadmin_password: "{{ ipaadmin_password }}" name: testing_group automember_type: group state: absent action: member inclusive: - key: initials expression: dp
- Save the file.
Run the Ansible playbook. Specify the playbook file, the file storing the password protecting the secret.yml file, and the inventory file:
$ ansible-playbook --vault-password-file=password_file -v -i inventory automember-usergroup-rule-absent.yml
Verification
Log in as an IdM administrator.
$ kinit admin
View the automember group:
$ ipa automember-show --type=group testing_group Automember Rule: testing_group
The absence of an Inclusive Regex: initials=dp
entry in the output confirms that the testing_group automember rule does not contain the condition specified.
9.4. Using Ansible to ensure that an automember rule for an IdM user group is absent
Additional resources
The following procedure describes how to use an Ansible playbook to ensure an automember
rule is absent for an Identity Management (IdM) group. In the example, the absence of an automember
rule is ensured for the testing_group group.
Deleting an automember rule also deletes all conditions associated with the rule. To remove only specific conditions from a rule, see Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is absent in an IdM user group automember rule.
Prerequisites
-
You know the IdM
admin
password. You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:
- You are using Ansible version 2.14 or later.
-
You have installed the
ansible-freeipa
package on the Ansible controller. - The example assumes that in the ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory, you have created an Ansible inventory file with the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the IdM server.
-
The example assumes that the secret.yml Ansible vault stores your
ipaadmin_password
.
-
The target node, that is the node on which the
ansible-freeipa
module is executed, is part of the IdM domain as an IdM client, server or replica.
Procedure
Navigate to your ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory:
$ cd ~/MyPlaybooks/
Copy the
automember-group-absent.yml
Ansible playbook file located in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/
directory:$ cp /usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/automember-group-absent.yml automember-group-absent-copy.yml
-
Open the
automember-group-absent-copy.yml
file for editing. Adapt the file by setting the following variables in the
ipaautomember
task section:-
Set the
ipaadmin_password
variable to the password of the IdMadmin
. -
Set the
name
variable to testing_group. -
Set the
automember_type
variable to group. -
Ensure that the
state
variable is set toabsent
.
This is the modified Ansible playbook file for the current example:
--- - name: Automember group absent example hosts: ipaserver vars_files: - /home/user_name/MyPlaybooks/secret.yml tasks: - name: Ensure group automember rule admins is absent ipaautomember: ipaadmin_password: "{{ ipaadmin_password }}" name: testing_group automember_type: group state: absent
-
Set the
- Save the file.
Run the Ansible playbook. Specify the playbook file, the file storing the password protecting the secret.yml file, and the inventory file:
$ ansible-playbook --vault-password-file=password_file -v -i inventory automember-group-absent.yml
Additional resources
-
See the
README-automember.md
file in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/
directory. -
See the
/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember
directory.
9.5. Using Ansible to ensure that a condition is present in an IdM host group automember rule
Follow this procedure to use Ansible to ensure that a condition is present in an IdM host group automember rule. The example describes how to ensure that hosts with the FQDN
of .*.idm.example.com are members of the primary_dns_domain_hosts host group and hosts whose FQDN
is .*.example.org are not members of the primary_dns_domain_hosts host group.
Prerequisites
-
You know the IdM
admin
password. - The primary_dns_domain_hosts host group and automember host group rule exist in IdM.
You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:
- You are using Ansible version 2.14 or later.
-
You have installed the
ansible-freeipa
package on the Ansible controller. - The example assumes that in the ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory, you have created an Ansible inventory file with the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the IdM server.
-
The example assumes that the secret.yml Ansible vault stores your
ipaadmin_password
.
-
The target node, that is the node on which the
ansible-freeipa
module is executed, is part of the IdM domain as an IdM client, server or replica.
Procedure
Navigate to your ~/MyPlaybooks/ directory:
$ cd ~/MyPlaybooks/
Copy the
automember-hostgroup-rule-present.yml
Ansible playbook file located in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/
directory:$ cp /usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember/automember-hostgroup-rule-present.yml automember-hostgroup-rule-present-copy.yml
-
Open the
automember-hostgroup-rule-present-copy.yml
file for editing. Adapt the file by setting the following variables in the
ipaautomember
task section:-
Set the
ipaadmin_password
variable to the password of the IdMadmin
. -
Set the
name
variable to primary_dns_domain_hosts. -
Set the
automember_type
variable to hostgroup. -
Ensure that the
state
variable is set topresent
. -
Ensure that the
action
variable is set tomember
. -
Ensure that the
inclusive
key
variable is set tofqdn
. -
Set the corresponding
inclusive
expression
variable to .*.idm.example.com. -
Set the
exclusive
key
variable tofqdn
. -
Set the corresponding
exclusive
expression
variable to .*.example.org.
This is the modified Ansible playbook file for the current example:
--- - name: Automember user group rule member present hosts: ipaserver vars_files: - /home/user_name/MyPlaybooks/secret.yml tasks: - name: Ensure an automember condition for a user group is present ipaautomember: ipaadmin_password: "{{ ipaadmin_password }}" name: primary_dns_domain_hosts automember_type: hostgroup state: present action: member inclusive: - key: fqdn expression: .*.idm.example.com exclusive: - key: fqdn expression: .*.example.org
-
Set the
- Save the file.
Run the Ansible playbook. Specify the playbook file, the file storing the password protecting the secret.yml file, and the inventory file:
$ ansible-playbook --vault-password-file=password_file -v -i inventory automember-hostgroup-rule-present-copy.yml
Additional resources
-
See the
README-automember.md
file in the/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/
directory. -
See the
/usr/share/doc/ansible-freeipa/playbooks/automember
directory.