It's helpful to be able to enforce a minimum required Ansible version in Ansible playbooks. Ansible Roles have long been able to specify a minimum Ansible version—but only for Ansible Galaxy and ansible-galaxy -related dependency management.

I've found more and more that users who installed Ansible further in the past (in the 1.7.x or 1.8.x era) are now using some of my newer projects that require Ansible 2.0 (there are so many nice new shiny things!), and they're running into errors like:

ERROR: [DEPRECATED]: include + with_items is a removed deprecated feature. Please update your playbooks.

Ansible failed to complete successfully. Any error output should be

visible above. Please fix these errors and try again.

The problem, as it turns out, is that these users are running a version < 2.0, but it's not very obvious based on that error message!

Luckily, Ansible has the helpful assert module, and Ansible also provides a global ansible_version dict with the full version string, major and minor versions, etc.—see this output for the var from the debug module in a simple test playbook:

"ansible_version": {

"full": "2.1.1.0",

"major": 2,

"minor": 1,

"revision": 1,

"string": "2.1.1.0"

}

Using these two tools, we are able to build a task in our playbook that will check that the version of Ansible being used to run the playbook meets a minimum (or even exact) requirement.

In Drupal VM's case, I added the task below as the first task in my playbook's pre_tasks :

---

- hosts: all

pre_tasks:

- name: Verify Ansible meets Drupal VM's version requirements.

assert:

that: "ansible_version.full is version_compare('2.1', '>=')"

msg: >

"You must update Ansible to at least 2.1 to use this version of Drupal VM."

Now, if a user runs Drupal VM's playbook with an outdated version of Ansible, they'll get the following warning:

TASK [Verify Ansible meets Drupal VM's version requirements.] ******************

fatal: [drupalvm]: FAILED! => {"assertion": "ansible_version.full is version_compare('2.1', '>=')", "changed": false, "evaluated_to": false, "failed": true, "msg": ""You must update Ansible to at least 2.1 to use this version of Drupal VM."

"}

This is a much more helpful debug message than other 'xyz module failed' messages. Unfortunately, there are still cases (like the one mentioned in this post originally) where this task won't help, because the playbook itself won't be run (since the older version of Ansible can't even parse the full YAML structure correctly).