Containers are an increasingly popular development environment. As a developer you have a large choice of tools to manage your containers. This article introduces you to Ansible Container and shows how you can run and test your application in a production-like environment.

Getting started

This example uses a simple Flask Hello World application. This application is served by an Apache HTTP server just like in production. First, install the requisite docker package:

sudo dnf install docker

Ansible Container needs to communicate with the docker service through its local socket. The following commands change the socket ownership, and add you to a docker group that can access the socket:

sudo groupadd docker && sudo gpasswd -a $USER docker MYGRP=$(id -g) ; newgrp docker ; newgrp $MYGRP

Run the id command to ensure the docker group is listed in your group memberships. Finally, enable and start the docker service using sudo:

sudo systemctl enable docker.service sudo systemctl start docker.service

Setting up Ansible Container

Ansible Container enables you to build container images and orchestrate them using only Ansible playbooks. The application is described in a single YAML file, and instead of using a Dockerfile, lists Ansible roles that make up the container images.

Unfortunately Ansible Container is not yet available as an RPM package in Fedora. To install it, use the python3 virtual environment module.

mkdir ansible-container-flask-example cd ansible-container-flask-example python3 -m venv .venv source .venv/bin/activate pip install ansible-container[docker]

These commands install Ansible Container with the Docker engine. Ansible Container provides three engines: Docker, Kubernetes and Openshift.

Setting up the project

Now that Ansible Container is installed, set up the project. Ansible Container provides a simple command to create all files needed to get started:

ansible-container init

Now look at the files this command created in the current directory:

ansible.cfg

ansible-requirements.txt

container.yml

meta.yml

requirements.yml

This project uses only the container.yml file to describe the application services. For more information about the other files, check out the Getting Started documentation of Ansible Container.

Defining the container

Update container.yml as follows:

version: "2" settings: conductor: # The Conductor container does the heavy lifting, and provides a portable # Python runtime for building your target containers. It should be derived # from the same distribution as you're building your target containers with. base: fedora:26 # roles_path: # Specify a local path containing Ansible roles # volumes: # Provide a list of volumes to mount # environment: # List or mapping of environment variables # Set the name of the project. Defaults to basename of the project directory. # For built services, concatenated with service name to form the built image name. project_name: flask-helloworld services: # Add your containers here, specifying the base image you want to build from. # To use this example, uncomment it and delete the curly braces after services key. # You may need to run `docker pull ubuntu:trusty` for this to work. web: from: "fedora:26" roles: - base ports: - "5000:80" command: ["/usr/bin/dumb-init", "httpd", "-DFOREGROUND"] volumes: - $PWD/flask-helloworld:/flaskapp:Z

The conductor section updates the base setting to use a Fedora 26 container base image.

The services section adds the web service. This service uses Fedora 26 and has a role called base to be defined later. It also sets up the port mapping between the container and host. The Apache HTTP server serves the Flask application on port 80 of the container, which redirects to port 5000 of the host. Then this file defines a volume that mounts the Flask application source code to /flaskapp in the container.

Finally the command configuration runs when the container starts. This example uses dumb-init, a simple process supervisor and init system to start the Apache HTTP server.

Ansible role

Now that the container is setup, create an Ansible role to install and configure the dependencies needed by the Flask application. First, create the base role.

mkdir -p roles/base/tasks touch roles/base/tasks/main.yml

Now edit the main.yml file so that it looks like this:

--- - name: Install dependencies dnf: pkg={{item}} state=present with_items: - python3-flask - dumb-init - httpd - python3-mod_wsgi - name: copy the apache configuration copy: src: flask-helloworld.conf dest: /etc/httpd/conf.d/flask-helloworld.conf owner: apache group: root mode: 655

This Ansible role is a simple one. First it installs dependencies. Then, it copies the Apache HTTP server configuration. If you’re not familiar with Ansible roles, check out the Roles documentation.

Apache HTTP configuration

Next, configure the Apache HTTP server by creating the flask-helloworld.conf file:

$ mkdir -p roles/base/files $ touch roles/base/files/flask-helloworld.conf

And finally add the following to the file:

<VirtualHost *> ServerName example.com WSGIDaemonProcess hello_world user=apache group=root WSGIScriptAlias / /flaskapp/flask-helloworld.wsgi <Directory /flaskapp> WSGIProcessGroup hello_world WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL} Require all granted </Directory> </VirtualHost>

The important part of this file is the WSGIScriptAlias. This instruction maps the script flask-helloworld.wsgi to the “/” URL. For more details on Apache HTTP server and mod_wsgi, read the Flask documentation.

Flask “hello world”

Finally, create a simple Flask application and the flask-helloworld.wsgi script.

mkdir flask-helloworld touch flask-helloworld/app.py touch flask-helloworld/flask-helloworld.wsgi

Add the following to app.py:

from flask import Flask app = Flask(__name__) @app.route("/") def hello(): return "Hello World!"

Then edit flask-helloworld.wsgi to add this:

import sys sys.path.insert(0, '/flaskapp/') from app import app as application

Build and run

Now it’s time to build and run the container with the ansible-container build and ansible-container run commands.

ansible-container build

This command takes a bit of time to complete, so be patient.

ansible-container run

You can now access your flask application at this URL: http://localhost:5000/

Conclusion

You’ve now seen how to use Ansible Container to manage, build and configure your applications running inside a container. All the configuration files and the source code of this example are hosted on Pagure.io. You can use this example as the base to start using Ansible Container on your projects.