It takes hours to execute terraform and ansible jobs. What if I want Ansible jobs to start immediately after my infrastructure gets provisioned through Terraform jobs? How would one hand over the monitoring of running jobs to other human resources? How would one get notified if a job fails? IT-Conductor Git/Terraform/Ansible integration to promote Application Infrastructure as Code is now GA per our Q1-2020 Features Announcement.
A normal workflow for a firm that uses Terraform/Ansible would include the following manual activities:
IT-Conductor has taken these pain points into consideration and can configure multiple on-premise gateways that enable us to interact with the local environment. So we don’t need a jump box with pre-configured terraform/ansible. They are configured with portable versions on the fly through a gateway before running jobs. If the machine with one gateway were to fail, we can always transfer the jobs to another gateway.
We’ve also included the concept of process definition where multiple activities can be woven together so that they get processed serially. Activities can be anything like SQL script, shell script, Terraform script, or Ansible script.
Each activity has a self-refreshing web-based log. The Ansible job collects each playbook task containing its own log, with the help of remote backend features. It’s just a matter of sharing the URL of a running job if one wants to hand over the monitoring to another resource. And that’s not required because we encourage automation to manual monitoring, letting IT-Conductor notify you through mail/SMS if the job fails or completes.
In this section, we discuss how we can get the scripts from the git repository, make terraform/ansible jobs out of the scripts, weave them together through process definition, and finally automate it for provisioning/installation of SAP/HANA.
IT-Conductor/automation-ansible Private Repository
https://github.com/IT-Conductor/automation-ansible
https://github.com/IT-Conductor/automation-terraform
Figure 1a: Terraform Automation Scripts
IT-Conductor collects the GitHub files and maps them as file objects.
Figure 1b: Terraform Automation Scripts
For making a Terraform job, we need the git repo project as shown in the previous section, the Terraform backend object to capture Terraform state file information, the provider containing Azure subscription/tenant information, and variables input to the Terraform script.
Figure 2: Modifying Terraform Job in IT-Conductor
Similar to Terraform Jobs, ansible jobs also need a git repo project along with an execution config object containing variable data for the installation process and inventory object or location of the inventory file.
Figure 3: Modifying Ansible Job in IT-Conductor
IT-Conductor has the framework for automating different activities by weaving them together so that they can run serially. Process Definition is a template for processes that can be scheduled to run at the desired time.
Figure 4a: Process Composer
In the picture above the Process Definition template signifies that Terraform Activity “Provision HANA SCS APP Infrastructure” provisions the required infrastructure; when it completes the Ansible Activity “Install HANA SCS APP” starts immediately for installing the configured SAP packages.
The terraform/ansible job can be fed input files and can generate output files. In the above flow, when the terraform job completes it generates output files as inventory, which are needed as an input file to the subsequent ansible job. The Process Definition supports this through the implementation of the ‘Data Files’ feature.
In Process Definition, one can add multiple data files that can be read/written by its activities.
Figure 4b: Data Files Option in Process Composer
Figure 5: List of Process Data Files
In each activity, these data files are available for selection as input or output data files.
Figure 6: Input and Output Data Files
Figure 7: List of Input Data Files
Along with scheduling the Process Definition, one can manually run it anytime by clicking Run/Instantiate.
Figure 8a: Run/Instantiate Process Definition
One can simply name the process and then run it.
Figure 8b: Run/Instantiate Wizard
Then click the object link when the pop-up window appears.
Figure 9: Run Process Definition Pop-up Window
From there one can go to the Process Flowchart:
Figure 10: Navigate to Process Flowchart
And view job status:
Figure 11: Job Status as shown in Process Definition
To look into each job's progress, click on a particular job and then the execution log.
Figure 12a: View Execution Log
Figure 12b: Execution Log
One can also view individual Ansible tasks.
Figure 13a: View Ansible Tasks
Figure 13b: Ansible Tasks as Viewed from IT-Conductor
Overall, there are several advantages to using IT-Conductor as an automation server: