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Ansible

Ansible uses the OpenSSH client by default. Teleport supports SSH protocol and works as SSH jumphost.

In this guide we will configure OpenSSH client to work with Teleport Proxy and run a sample ansible playbook.

Prerequisites

  • A running Teleport cluster version 17.0.0-dev or above. If you want to get started with Teleport, sign up for a free trial or set up a demo environment.

  • The tctl admin tool and tsh client tool.

    Visit Installation for instructions on downloading tctl and tsh.

  • ssh openssh tool
  • ansible >= 2.9.6
  • Optional tool jq to process JSON output.
  • To check that you can connect to your Teleport cluster, sign in with tsh login, then verify that you can run tctl commands using your current credentials. For example:
    $ tsh login --proxy=teleport.example.com --user=email@example.com
    $ tctl status
    # Cluster teleport.example.com
    # Version 17.0.0-dev
    # CA pin sha256:abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678
    If you can connect to the cluster and run the tctl status command, you can use your current credentials to run subsequent tctl commands from your workstation. If you host your own Teleport cluster, you can also run tctl commands on the computer that hosts the Teleport Auth Service for full permissions.

Step 1/3. Login and configure SSH

Log into Teleport with tsh:

$ tsh login --proxy=example.com

Generate openssh configuration using tsh config shortcut:

$ tsh config > ssh.cfg
tip

You can edit matching patterns used in ssh.cfg if something is not working out of the box.

Step 2/3. Configure Ansible

Create a folder ansible where we will collect all generated files:

$ mkdir -p ansible
# Copy the openssh configuration from the previous step to the ansible dir
$ cp ssh.cfg ansible/
$ cd ansible

Create a file ansible.cfg:

[defaults]
host_key_checking = True
inventory=./hosts
remote_tmp=/tmp

[ssh_connection]
scp_if_ssh = True
ssh_args = -F ./ssh.cfg

You can create an inventory file hosts manually or use a script below to generate it from your environment. Set your cluster name (e.g. teleport.example.com or in the form mytenant.teleport.sh for Teleport Enterprise Cloud) and this script will generate the host names to match the openssh configuration:

$ tsh ls --format=json | jq '.[].spec.hostname + ".teleport.example.com"' > hosts

Step 3/3. Run a playbook

Finally, let's create a simple ansible playbook playbook.yaml.

The playbook below runs hostname on all hosts. Make sure to set the remote_user parameter to a valid SSH username that works with the target host and is allowed by Teleport:

- hosts: all
remote_user: ubuntu
tasks:
- name: "hostname"
command: "hostname"

From the folder ansible, run the ansible playbook:

$ ansible-playbook playbook.yaml

# PLAY [all] *****************************************************************************************************************************************
# TASK [Gathering Facts] *****************************************************************************************************************************
#
# ok: [terminal]
#
# TASK [hostname] ************************************************************************************************************************************
# changed: [terminal]
#
# PLAY RECAP *****************************************************************************************************************************************
# terminal : ok=2 changed=1 unreachable=0 failed=0 skipped=0 rescued=0 ignored=0

You are all set. You are now using short-lived SSH certificates and Teleport can now record all ansible commands in the audit log.

Troubleshooting

In cases where Ansible cannot connect, you may see an error like this:

example.host | UNREACHABLE! => {
"changed": false,
"msg": "Failed to connect to the host via ssh: ssh: Could not resolve hostname example.host: Name or service not known",
"unreachable": true
}

You can examine and tweak patterns matching the inventory hosts in ssh.cfg.

Try the SSH connection using ssh.cfg with verbose mode to inspect the error:

$ ssh -vvv -F ./ssh.cfg root@example.host

If ssh works, try running the playbook with verbose mode on:

$ ansible-playbook -vvvv playbook.yaml

If your hostnames contain uppercase characters (like MYHOSTNAME), please note that Teleport's internal hostname matching is case sensitive by default, which can also lead to seeing this error.

If this is the case, you can work around this by enabling case-insensitive routing at the cluster level.

Edit your /etc/teleport.yaml config file on all servers running the Teleport auth_service, then restart Teleport on each.

auth_service:
case_insensitive_routing: true