I am having issues when trying to use multiple and/or conditionals in a when statement to decide whether a task needs to be ran or not. Basically I am making a playbook to do automated system patching with options for security patches, kernel only patches and to specify packages in a var file.
I run the playbook with the following commands and define the variables through extended variables option (-e)
ansible-playbook site.yml \
-i inventory \
--ask-vault \
-u (username) \
-e "security=true restart=true" \
-k -K
By default the playbook will update every package on the system except kernel but I would like to skip that action if I specify any of a few variables. The code I have is the following:
- name: Update all packages
yum:
name: "*"
state: latest
exclude: "kernel*"
when: >
security is not defined or
kernel is not defined or
specified_packages is not defined
and ansible_os_family == "RedHat"
I've tried all of the following combinations:
when: (ansible_os_family == "RedHat") and (security is defined or kernel is defined or specified_packages is defined)
# this case throws a not defined error because i don't define all variables every time i run the playbook
when: (ansible_os_family == "RedHat") and (security == true or kernel == true or specified_packages == true )
when: ansible_os_family == "RedHat"
when: security is defined or kernel is defined or specified_packages is defined
Note: I am aware and have used an extra variable such as "skip" to skip this task and use the when clause when: ansible_os_family == "RedHat" and skip is not defined
but would prefer not have my users need to use an extra variable just to skip this default action.
I also am not using tags as I am gathering a list of packages before and after the upgrade to compare and report in the end so I wont be able to run those as they are local action commands. This is why I'm using one role with multiple tasks turned on and off via extended variables. I am open to any suggestion that rewrites the playbook in a more efficient way as I am sort of a noob.
It was such a simple answer!
The following works:
when: not (security is defined or kernel is defined or specified_packages is defined) and ansible_os_family == "RedHat"