eos-route-control

Route Control Role for EOS

The arista.eos-route-control role creates an abstraction for common EOS routing policy configuration. This means that you do not need to write any ansible tasks. Simply create an object that matches the requirements below and this role will ingest that object and perform the necessary configuration.

This role is used to configure Route-maps and static IPv4 routes.

Installation

ansible-galaxy install arista.eos-route-control

Requirements

Requires an SSH connection for connectivity to your Arista device. You can use any of the built-in eos connection variables, or the convenience provider dictionary.

Role Variables

The tasks in this role are driven by the routemaps and ipv4_static_routes objects described below:

routemaps (list) each entry contains the following keys:

Key Type Notes
name string (required) The name of the routemap to manage.
action choices: permit, deny (required) The action associated with the routemap name.
seqno int (required) The sequence number of the rule that this entry corresponds to.
description string The description for this routemap entry.
match list The list of match statements that define the routemap entry. The match statements should be a list of match statements without the word 'match' at the beginning of the string.
set list The list of set statements that define the routemap entry. The set statements should be a list of set statements without the word 'set' at the beginning of the string.
continue int The statement defines the next routemap clause to evaluate.
state choices: present*, absent Set the state for the routemap configuration.

ipv4_static_routes (list) each entry contains the following keys:

Key Type Notes
ip_dest string (required) Destination IP address or network.
next_hop string (required) The next hop associated with the route.
next_hop_ip string IP address of the next router. Only valid when next_hop is an egress interface
distance int Distance designated for this route. Defaults to 1 if state is 'present'.
tag int Tag assigned for the route. Defaults to 0 if state is 'present'.
route_name string Descriptive name for the route
state choices: present*, absent Set the state for the route configuration.
Note: Asterisk (*) denotes the default value if none specified

Configuration Variables

Key Choices Description
eos_save_running_config true*, false Specifies whether to write any changes to the running-config resulting from the role execution to memory, copying the configuration to the startup-config.
Note: Asterisk (*) denotes the default value if none specified

Connection Variables

Ansible EOS roles require the following connection information to establish communication with the nodes in your inventory. This information can exist in the Ansible group_vars or host_vars directories, or in the playbook itself.

Key Required Choices Description
host yes Specifies the DNS host name or address for connecting to the remote device over the specified transport. The value of host is used as the destination address for the transport.
port no Specifies the port to use when building the connection to the remote device. This value applies to either acceptable value of transport. The port value will default to the appropriate transport common port if none is provided in the task (cli=22, http=80, https=443).
username no Configures the usename to use to authenticate the connection to the remote device. The value of username is used to authenticate either the CLI login or the eAPI authentication depending on which transport is used. If the value is not specified in the task, the value of environment variable ANSIBLE_NET_USERNAME will be used instead.
password no Specifies the password to use to authenticate the connection to the remote device. This is a common argument used for either acceptable value of transport. If the value is not specified in the task, the value of environment variable ANSIBLE_NET_PASSWORD will be used instead.
ssh_keyfile no Specifies the SSH keyfile to use to authenticate the connection to the remote device. This argument is only used when transport=cli. If the value is not specified in the task, the value of environment variable ANSIBLE_NET_SSH_KEYFILE will be used instead.
authorize no yes, no* Instructs the module to enter priviledged mode on the remote device before sending any commands. If not specified, the device will attempt to excecute all commands in non-priviledged mode. If the value is not specified in the task, the value of environment variable ANSIBLE_NET_AUTHORIZE will be used instead.
auth_pass no Specifies the password to use if required to enter privileged mode on the remote device. If authorize=no, then this argument does nothing. If the value is not specified in the task, the value of environment variable ANSIBLE_NET_AUTH_PASS will be used instead.
transport yes cli*, eapi Configures the transport connection to use when connecting to the remote device. The transport argument supports connectivity to the device over cli (ssh) or eapi.
use_ssl no yes*, no Configures the transport to use SSL if set to true only when transport=eapi. If transport=cli, this value is ignored.
provider no Convience method that allows all the above connection arguments to be passed as a dict object. All constraints (required, choices, etc) must be met either by individual arguments or values in this dict.
Note: Asterisk (*) denotes the default value if none specified

Ansible Variables

Key Choices Description
no_log true, false* Prevents module arguments and output from being logged during the playbook execution. By default, no_log is set to true for tasks that gather and save EOS configuration information to reduce output size. Set to true to prevent all output other than task results.
Note: Asterisk (*) denotes the default value if none specified

Dependencies

The eos-route-control role is built on modules included in the core Ansible code. These modules were added in ansible version 2.1

  • Ansible 2.1.0

Example Playbook

The following example will use the arista.eos-route-control role to configure a route-map and a static route. We'll create a hosts file with our switch, then a corresponding host_vars file and then a simple playbook which only references the eos-route-control role. By including the role, we automatically get access to all of the tasks to configure these EOS features. What's nice about this is that if you have a host without any corresponding configuration, the tasks will be skipped without any issue.

Sample hosts file:

[leafs]
leaf1.example.com

Sample host_vars/leaf1.example.com

provider:
  host: "{{ inventory_hostname }}"
  username: admin
  password: admin
  use_ssl: no
  authorize: yes
  transport: cli

routemaps:
  - name: RM-1
    action: permit
    seqno: 10
    description: My wonderful routemap
    match:
      - as 1000
      - source-protocol bgp
    continue: 20
  - name: RM-1
    action: permit
    seqno: 20
    description: My wonderful routemap
    set:
      - distance 50
      - tag 100

ipv4_static_routes:
  - ip_dest: 0.0.0.0/0
    next_hop: Management1
    next_hop_ip: 172.16.130.2
    route_name: Default
    tag: 100

A simple playbook, leaf.yml

- hosts: leafs
  roles:
    - arista.eos-route-control

Then run with:

ansible-playbook -i hosts leaf.yml

Developer Information

Development contributions are welcome. Please see Arista Roles for Ansible - Development Guidelines (test/arista-ansible-role-test/README) for additional information, including how to develop and run test cases for role development.

License

Copyright (c) 2015, Arista Networks EOS+ All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

  • Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

  • Neither the name of Arista nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

Author Information

Please raise any issues using our GitHub repo or email us at ansible-dev@arista.com

About

Role for managing EOS Routemaps and IPv4 static routing configuration

Install
ansible-galaxy install arista-eosplus/ansible-eos-route-control
GitHub repository
License
bsd-3-clause
Downloads
11951
Owner
Applications developed and supported by Arista EOS+