Ansible tasks are executed locally on the target machine. via generated Python scripts. For debugging it might make sense to analyze the scripts – so Ansible must be told to not delete them.

When Ansible executes a command on a remote host, usually a Python script is copied, executed and removed immediately. For each task, a script is copied and executed, as shown in the logs:

Feb 25 07:40:44 ansible-demo-helium sshd[2395]: Accepted publickey for liquidat from 192.168.122.1 port 54108 ssh2: RSA 78:7c:4a:15:17:b2:62:af:0b:ac:34:4a:00:c0:9a:1c Feb 25 07:40:44 ansible-demo-helium systemd[1]: Started Session 7 of user liquidat Feb 25 07:40:44 ansible-demo-helium sshd[2395]: pam_unix(sshd:session): session opened for user liquidat by (uid=0) Feb 25 07:40:44 ansible-demo-helium systemd-logind[484]: New session 7 of user liquidat. Feb 25 07:40:44 ansible-demo-helium systemd[1]: Starting Session 7 of user liquidat. Feb 25 07:40:45 ansible-demo-helium ansible-yum[2399]: Invoked with name=['httpd'] list=None install_repoquery=True conf_file=None disable_gpg_check=False state=absent disablerepo=None update_cache=False enablerepo=None exclude=None Feb 25 07:40:45 ansible-demo-helium sshd[2398]: Received disconnect from 192.168.122.1: 11: disconnected by user Feb 25 07:40:45 ansible-demo-helium sshd[2395]: pam_unix(sshd:session): session closed for user liquidat

However, for debugging it might make sense to keep the script and execute it locally. Ansible can be persuaded to keep a script by setting the variable ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES to true at the command line:

$ ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES=1 ansible helium -m yum -a "name=httpd state=absent"

The actually executed command – and the created temporary file – is revealed when ansible is executed with the debug option:

$ ANSIBLE_KEEP_REMOTE_FILES=1 ansible helium -m yum -a "name=httpd state=absent" -vvv ... <192.168.122.202> SSH: EXEC ssh -C -vvv -o ForwardAgent=yes -o KbdInteractiveAuthentication=no -o PreferredAuthentications=gssapi-with-mic,gssapi-keyex,hostbased,publickey -o PasswordAuthentication=no -o ConnectTimeout=10 -tt 192.168.122.202 'LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 LC_ALL=de_DE.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=de_DE.UTF-8 /usr/bin/python -tt /home/liquidat/.ansible/tmp/ansible-tmp-1456498240.12-1738868183958/yum' ...

Note that here the script is executed directly via Python. If the “become” flag i set, the Python execution is routed through a shell, the command looks like /bin/sh -c 'sudo -u $SUDO_USER /bin/sh -c "/usr/bin/python $SCRIPT"' .

The temporary file is a Python script, as the header shows:

$ head yum #!/usr/bin/python -tt # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # (c) 2012, Red Hat, Inc # Written by Seth Vidal <skvidal at fedoraproject.org> # (c) 2014, Epic Games, Inc. # # This file is part of Ansible ...

The script can afterwards be executed by /usr/bin/python yum or /bin/sh -c 'sudo -u $SUDO_USER /bin/sh -c "/usr/bin/python yum"' respectively:

$ /bin/sh -c 'sudo -u root /bin/sh -c "/usr/bin/python yum"' {"msg": "", "invocation": {"module_args": {"name": ["httpd"], "list": null, "install_repoquery": true, "conf_file": null, "disable_gpg_check": false, "state": "absent", ...

More detailed information about debugging Ansible can be found at Will Thames’ article “Debugging Ansible for fun and no profit”.