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Chapter 26. Installing an Identity Management replica using an Ansible playbook


Configuring a system as an IdM replica by using Ansible enrolls it into an IdM domain and enables the system to use IdM services on IdM servers in the domain.

The deployment is managed by the ipareplica Ansible role. The role can use the autodiscovery mode for identifying the IdM servers, domain and other settings. However, if you deploy multiple replicas in a tier-like model, with different groups of replicas being deployed at different times, you must define specific servers or replicas for each group.

Prerequisites

26.1. Specifying the base, server and client variables for installing the IdM replica

Complete this procedure to configure the inventory file for installing an IdM replica.

Prerequisites

  • You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:

    • You are using Ansible version 2.15 or later.
    • You have installed the ansible-freeipa package on the Ansible controller.

Procedure

  1. Open the inventory file for editing. Specify the fully-qualified domain names (FQDN) of the hosts to become IdM replicas. The FQDNs must be valid DNS names:

    • Only numbers, alphabetic characters, and hyphens (-) are allowed. For example, underscores are not allowed and can cause DNS failures.
    • The host name must be all lower-case.

      Example of a simple inventory hosts file with only the replicas' FQDN defined

      [ipareplicas]
      replica1.idm.example.com
      replica2.idm.example.com
      replica3.idm.example.com
      [...]

      If the IdM server is already deployed and the SRV records are set properly in the IdM DNS zone, the script automatically discovers all the other required values.

  2. Optional: Provide additional information in the inventory file based on how you have designed your topology:

    Scenario 1

    If you want to avoid autodiscovery and have all replicas listed in the [ipareplicas] section use a specific IdM server, set the server in the [ipaservers] section of the inventory file.

    Example inventory hosts file with the FQDN of the IdM server and replicas defined

    [ipaservers]
    server.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas]
    replica1.idm.example.com
    replica2.idm.example.com
    replica3.idm.example.com
    [...]

    Scenario 2

    Alternatively, if you want to avoid autodiscovery but want to deploy specific replicas with specific servers, set the servers for specific replicas individually in the [ipareplicas] section in the inventory file.

    Example inventory file with a specific IdM server defined for a specific replica

    [ipaservers]
    server.idm.example.com
    replica1.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas]
    replica2.idm.example.com
    replica3.idm.example.com ipareplica_servers=replica1.idm.example.com

    In the example above, replica3.idm.example.com uses the already deployed replica1.idm.example.com as its replication source.

    Scenario 3

    If you are deploying several replicas in one batch and time is a concern to you, multitier replica deployment can be useful for you. Define specific groups of replicas in the inventory file, for example [ipareplicas_tier1] and [ipareplicas_tier2], and design separate plays for each group in the install-replica.yml playbook.

    Example inventory file with replica tiers defined

    [ipaservers]
    server.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas_tier1]
    replica1.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas_tier2]
    replica2.idm.example.com \ ipareplica_servers=replica1.idm.example.com,server.idm.example.com

    The first entry in ipareplica_servers will be used. The second entry will be used as a fallback option. When using multiple tiers for deploying IdM replicas, you must have separate tasks in the playbook to first deploy replicas from tier1 and then replicas from tier2:

    Example of a playbook file with different plays for different replica groups

    ---
    - name: Playbook to configure IPA replicas (tier1)
      hosts: ipareplicas_tier1
      become: true
    
      roles:
      - role: ipareplica
        state: present
    
    - name: Playbook to configure IPA replicas (tier2)
      hosts: ipareplicas_tier2
      become: true
    
      roles:
      - role: ipareplica
        state: present

  3. Optional: Provide additional information regarding firewalld and DNS:

    Scenario 1

    If you want the replica to use a specified firewalld zone, for example an internal one, you can specify it in the inventory file. If you do not set a custom zone, IdM will add its services to the default firewalld zone. The predefined default zone is public.

    Important

    The specified firewalld zone must exist and be permanent.

    Example of a simple inventory hosts file with a custom firewalld zone

    [ipaservers]
    server.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas]
    replica1.idm.example.com
    replica2.idm.example.com
    replica3.idm.example.com
    [...]
    
    [ipareplicas:vars]
    ipareplica_firewalld_zone=custom zone

    Scenario 2

    If you want the replica to host the IdM DNS service, add the ipareplica_setup_dns=true line to the [ipareplicas:vars] section. Additionally, specify if you want to use per-server DNS forwarders:

    • To configure per-server forwarders, add the ipareplica_forwarders variable and a list of strings to the [ipareplicas:vars] section, for example: ipareplica_forwarders=192.0.2.1,192.0.2.2
    • To configure no per-server forwarders, add the following line to the [ipareplicas:vars] section: ipareplica_no_forwarders=true.
    • To configure per-server forwarders based on the forwarders listed in the /etc/resolv.conf file of the replica, add the ipareplica_auto_forwarders variable to the [ipareplicas:vars] section.

    Example inventory file with instructions to set up DNS and per-server forwarders on the replicas

    [ipaservers]
    server.idm.example.com
    
    [ipareplicas]
    replica1.idm.example.com
    replica2.idm.example.com
    replica3.idm.example.com
    [...]
    
    [ipareplicas:vars]
    ipareplica_setup_dns=true
    ipareplica_forwarders=192.0.2.1,192.0.2.2

    Scenario 3

    Specify the DNS resolver using the ipaclient_configure_dns_resolve and ipaclient_dns_servers options (if available) to simplify cluster deployments. This is especially useful if your IdM deployment is using integrated DNS:

    An inventory file snippet specifying a DNS resolver:

    [...]
    [ipaclient:vars]
    ipaclient_configure_dns_resolver=true
    ipaclient_dns_servers=192.168.100.1

    Note

    The ipaclient_dns_servers list must contain only IP addresses. Host names are not allowed.

Additional resources

  • /usr/share/ansible/roles/ipareplica/README.md

26.2. Specifying the credentials for installing the IdM replica using an Ansible playbook

Complete this procedure to configure the authorization for installing the IdM replica.

Prerequisites

  • You have configured your Ansible control node to meet the following requirements:

    • You are using Ansible version 2.15 or later.
    • You have installed the ansible-freeipa package on the Ansible controller.

Procedure

  1. Specify the password of a user authorized to deploy replicas, for example the IdM admin.

    • Red Hat recommends using the Ansible Vault to store the password, and referencing the Vault file from the playbook file, for example install-replica.yml:

      Example playbook file using principal from inventory file and password from an Ansible Vault file

      - name: Playbook to configure IPA replicas
        hosts: ipareplicas
        become: true
        vars_files:
        - playbook_sensitive_data.yml
      
        roles:
        - role: ipareplica
          state: present

      For details how to use Ansible Vault, see the official Ansible Vault documentation.

    • Less securely, provide the credentials of admin directly in the inventory file. Use the ipaadmin_password option in the [ipareplicas:vars] section of the inventory file. The inventory file and the install-replica.yml playbook file can then look as follows:

      Example inventory hosts.replica file

      [...]
      [ipareplicas:vars]
      ipaadmin_password=Secret123

      Example playbook using principal and password from inventory file

      - name: Playbook to configure IPA replicas
        hosts: ipareplicas
        become: true
      
        roles:
        - role: ipareplica
          state: present

    • Alternatively but also less securely, provide the credentials of another user authorized to deploy a replica directly in the inventory file. To specify a different authorized user, use the ipaadmin_principal option for the user name, and the ipaadmin_password option for the password. The inventory file and the install-replica.yml playbook file can then look as follows:

      Example inventory hosts.replica file

      [...]
      [ipareplicas:vars]
      ipaadmin_principal=my_admin
      ipaadmin_password=my_admin_secret123

      Example playbook using principal and password from inventory file

      - name: Playbook to configure IPA replicas
        hosts: ipareplicas
        become: true
      
        roles:
        - role: ipareplica
          state: present

Note

As of RHEL 9.5, during the installation of an IdM replica, checking if the provided Kerberos principal has the required privilege also extends to checking user ID overrides. As a result, you can deploy a replica using the credentials of an AD administrator that is configured to act as an IdM administrator.

Additional resources

  • /usr/share/ansible/roles/ipareplica/README.md

26.3. Deploying an IdM replica using an Ansible playbook

Complete this procedure to use an Ansible playbook to deploy an IdM replica.

Prerequisites

Procedure

  • Run the Ansible playbook:

    $ ansible-playbook -i ~/MyPlaybooks/inventory ~/MyPlaybooks/install-replica.yml

26.4. Uninstalling an IdM replica using an Ansible playbook

Note

In an existing Identity Management (IdM) deployment, replica and server are interchangeable terms. For information on how to uninstall an IdM server, see Uninstalling an IdM server using an Ansible playbook or Using an Ansible playbook to uninstall an IdM server even if this leads to a disconnected topology.

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