Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
120 lines (74 loc) · 5.08 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

120 lines (74 loc) · 5.08 KB

Ansible Role: Supervisor

CI

An Ansible Role that installs Supervisor on Linux.

Requirements

Using pip

By default, Python pip is used to install Supervisor, it hence should be installed. If it is not already installed, you can use the geerlingguy.pip Ansible role to install Pip prior to running this role.

Using apt

On distributions that support it and if Supervisor is packaged, you can use apt to install Supervisor by specifying, as a variable:

supervisor_apt_install: true

Depending on your distribution, the binary paths (default: /usr/bin/local/supervisor and /usr/bin/local/supervisorctl) can be overwritten:

supervisor_bin_path: /usr/bin/supervisor
supervisorctl_bin_path: /usr/bin/supervisorctl

Role Variables

Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see defaults/main.yml):

supervisor_version: ''

Install a specific version of Supervisor by setting it here. See available Supervisor versions on Pypi. If no version is set, it will install the latest stable version of Supervisor when the role is run.

supervisor_started: true
supervisor_enabled: true

Choose whether to use an init script or systemd unit configuration to start Supervisor when it's installed and/or after a system boot.

supervisor_config_path: /etc/supervisor

The path where Supervisor configuration should be stored.

supervisor_programs:
  - name: 'foo'
    command: /bin/cat
    state: present

  - name: 'apache'
    command: apache2ctl -DFOREGROUND
    state: present
    configuration: |
      autostart=true
      autorestart=true
      startretries=1
      startsecs=1
      redirect_stderr=true
      stderr_logfile=/var/log/apache-err.log
      stdout_logfile=/var/log/apache-out.log
      user=root
      killasgroup=true
      stopasgroup=true

supervisor_programs is an empty list by default; you can define a list of programs to be managed by Supervisor. If you set state to present, then a configuration file for the program (named [program-name-here].conf) will be added to the conf.d path included by the global Supervisor configuration. You can also manage program-level configuration on your own, outside this role, if you need more flexibility.

supervisor_nodaemon: false

Set to true if you need to run Supervisor in the foreground.

supervisor_log_dir: /var/log/supervisor

The location where Supervisor logs will be stored.

supervisor_user: root
supervisor_password: 'my_secret_password'

The user under which supervisord will be run, and the password to be used when connecting to Supervisor's HTTP server (either for supervisorctl access, or when viewing the administrative UI).

supervisor_service_name: supervisord

This role installs a supervisord.service systemd service when appliable. If using apt (i.e. setting supervisor_apt_install), the name of the service is changed to supervisor by the role.

supervisor_unix_http_server_password_protect: true
supervisor_inet_http_server_password_protect: true

Password protection can be turned off for Unix HTTP and Inet HTTP by setting these variables to false, This would disable password protection for supervisorctl as well.

supervisor_unix_http_server_enable: true
supervisor_unix_http_server_socket_path: /var/run/supervisor.sock
supervisor_unix_http_server_socket_owner: root
supervisor_unix_http_server_socket_mod: 700

Whether to enable the UNIX socket-based HTTP server, and the socket file with permissions to use if enabled.

Note: By default, this role enables an HTTP server over a UNIX socket that can be accessed locally using the _user and _password defined earlier. Make sure you set a secure supervisor_password to prevent unauthorized access! (Or, if you don't need to HTTP server nor need to use supervisorctl, you should disable the UNIX http server by setting this variable to false).

supervisor_inet_http_server_enable: false
supervisor_inet_http_server_port: '*:9001'

Whether to enable the TCP-based HTTP server, and the interface and port on which the server should listen if enabled.

Dependencies

None.

Example Playbook

- hosts: all
  roles:
    - geerlingguy.pip
    - geerlingguy.supervisor

If you need to use supervisorctl, you can either use Ansible's built-in supervisorctl module for management, or run it like so (accounting for the variable path to the configuration directory):

supervisorctl -c /etc/supervisor/supervisord.conf -u root -p [password] status all

License

MIT / BSD

Author Information

This role was created in 2017 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.