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- Ansible Documentation
This documentation covers the version of Ansible noted in the upper left corner of this page We maintain multiple versions of Ansible and of the documentation, so please be sure you are using the version of the documentation that covers the version of Ansible you’re using
- Ansible Documentation
Ansible community documentation Ansible offers open-source automation that is simple, flexible, and powerful Got thoughts or feedback on this site? We want to hear from you! Join us in the Ansible Forum or open a GitHub issue in the docsite repository
- Installation Guide — Ansible Community Documentation
Slides for those who attended AnsibleFest at Red Hat Summit will be available soon This is the latest (stable) Ansible community documentation For Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform subscriptions, see Life Cycle for version details
- Installing Ansible — Ansible Community Documentation
The ansible or ansible-core packages may be available in your operating systems package manager, and you are free to install these packages with your preferred method For more information, see the Installing Ansible on specific operating systems guide
- Getting started with Ansible
Ansible automates the management of remote systems and controls their desired state As shown in the preceding figure, most Ansible environments have three main components:
- Using Ansible command line tools
Welcome to the guide for using Ansible command line tools Ansible provides ad hoc commands and several utilities for performing various operations and automation tasks
- Introduction to Ansible — Ansible Community Documentation
Ansible uses simple, human-readable scripts called playbooks to automate your tasks You declare the desired state of a local or remote system in your playbook
- Ansible playbooks — Ansible Community Documentation
Ansible Playbooks offer a repeatable, reusable, simple configuration management and multi-machine deployment system, one that is well suited to deploying complex applications
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