6.7 KiB
ansible-doctor
This project is based on the idea (and at some parts on the code) of ansible-autodoc by Andres Bott so credits goes to him for his work.
ansible-doctor
is a simple annotation like documentation generator based on Jinja2 templates. While ansible-doctor
comes with a default template called readme
, it is also possible to write your own templates. This gives you the ability to customize the output and render the data to every format you like (e.g. html or xml).
ansible-doctor
is designed to work within your CI pipeline to complete your testing and deployment workflow. Releases are available as Python Packages on GitHub or PyPI and as Docker Image on DockerHub.
Table of Content
Setup
Using pip
# From PyPI as unprivilegd user
$ pip install ansible-doctor --user
# .. or as root
$ sudo pip install ansible-doctor
# From Wheel file
$ pip install https://github.com/xoxys/ansible-doctor/releases/download/v0.1.1/ansible_doctor-0.1.1-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Using docker
docker run \
-e ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_ROLE_DIR=example/demo-role/ \
-e ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_OUTPUT_DIR=example/ \
-e ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_FORCE_OVERWRITE=true \
-e ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_CUSTOM_HEADER=example/demo-role/HEADER.md \
-e ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_LOG_LEVEL=info \
-e PY_COLORS=1 \
-v $(pwd):/doctor \
-w /doctor \
xoxys/ansible-doctor
Keep in mind, that you have to pass selinux labels (:Z or :z) to your mount option if you are working on a selinux enabled system.
Configuration
ansible-doctor
comes with default settings which should be sufficient for most users to start, but you can adjust most settings to your needs.
Changes can be made on different locations which will be processed in the following order (last wins):
- default config (build-in)
- global config file (path depends on your operating system)
- folder-based config file (.ansibledoctor.yml|.ansibledoctor.yaml|.ansibledoctor in current working dir)
- environment variables
- cli options
Default settings
---
# default is your current working dir
role_dir:
# don't write anything to filesystem
dry_run: False
logging:
# possible options debug | info | warning | error | critical
level: "warning"
# you can enable json logging if a parsable output is required
json: False
# path to write rendered template file
# default is your current working dir
output_dir:
# default is in-build templates dir
template_dir:
template: readme
# don't ask to overwrite if output file exists
force_overwrite: False
# load custom header from given file and append template output
# to it before write.
custom_header: ""
exclude_files: []
# Examples
# exclude_files:
# - molecule/
# - files/**/*.py
CLI options
$ ansible-doctor --help
usage: ansible-doctor [-h] [-c CONFIG_FILE] [-o OUTPUT_DIR] [-f] [-d] [-v]
[-q] [--version]
role_dir
Generate documentation from annotated Ansible roles using templates
positional arguments:
role_dir role directory (default: current working dir)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-c CONFIG_FILE, --config CONFIG_FILE
location of configuration file
-o OUTPUT_DIR, --output OUTPUT_DIR
output base dir
-f, --force force overwrite output file
-d, --dry-run dry run without writing
-v increase log level
-q decrease log level
--version show program's version number and exit
Environment variables
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_CONFIG_FILE=
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_ROLE_DIR=
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_DRY_RUN=false
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_LOG_LEVEL=warning
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_LOG_JSON=false
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_OUTPUT_DIR=
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_TEMPLATE_DIR=
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_TEMPLATE=readme
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_FORCE_OVERWRITE=false
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_CUSTOM_HEADER=
ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_EXCLUDE_FILES=
# ANSIBLE_DOCTOR_EXCLUDE_FILES=molecule/,files/**/*.py
Usage
ansible-doctor FOLDER
If you don't pass a folder to ansible-doctor
your current working directory will be used. The first step is to identify if the given folder is an ansible role. This check is very simple, if the folder contains a subfolder called tasks
is MUST be an ansible role! :)
After the successful check, ansible-doctor
will try to read some static files into a dictionary:
- defaults/main.yml
- meta/main.yml
This will be the base result set which is used as data source for every output template. Without any work, you will get at least a documentation about available variables and some meta information. Theses basic information can be expanded with a set of available annotations. In general, an annotation is a comment with an identifier. This identifier is followed by colon separated options and ends with a value.
# @identifier option1:option2: <value>
# @var docker_registry_password:example: "%8gv_5GA?"
# @var docker_registry_password:description: Very secure password to login to the docker registry
# @var docker_registry_password:description: >
# You can also write it as multiline description
# Very secure password to login to the docker registry.
# @end
docker_registry_password: "secret"
These list of pre-defined identifiers is currently available:
- @meta
- @todo
- @var
- @tag
License
This project is licensed under the GNU v3.0 - see the LICENSE file for details.