- Closes #45
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Ansible Role: Apache 2.x
An Ansible Role that installs Apache 2.x on RHEL/CentOS and Debian/Ubuntu.
Requirements
If you are using SSL/TLS, you will need to provide your own certificate and key files. You can generate a self-signed certificate with a command like openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout example.key -out example.crt
.
Role Variables
Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see defaults/main.yml
):
apache_enablerepo: ""
The repository to use when installing Apache (only used on RHEL/CentOS systems). If you'd like later versions of Apache than are available in the OS's core repositories, use a repository like EPEL (which can be installed with the geerlingguy.repo-epel
role).
apache_listen_port: 80
apache_listen_port_ssl: 443
The ports on which apache should be listening. Useful if you have another service (like a reverse proxy) listening on port 80 or 443 and need to change the defaults.
apache_create_vhosts: true
apache_vhosts_filename: "vhosts.conf"
If set to true, a vhosts file, managed by this role's variables (see below), will be created and placed in the Apache configuration folder. If set to false, you can place your own vhosts file into Apache's configuration folder and skip the convenient (but more basic) one added by this role.
apache_remove_default_vhost: false
On Debian/Ubuntu, a default virtualhost is included in Apache's configuration. Set this to true
to remove that default virtualhost configuration file.
apache_vhosts:
# Additional optional properties: 'serveradmin, serveralias, extra_parameters'.
- servername: "local.dev"
documentroot: "/var/www/html"
Add a set of properties per virtualhost, including servername
(required), documentroot
(required), serveradmin
(optional), serveralias
(optional) and extra_parameters
(optional: you can add whatever additional configuration lines you'd like in here).
Here's an example using extra_parameters
to add a RewriteRule to redirect all requests to the www.
site:
- servername: "www.local.dev"
serveralias: "local.dev"
documentroot: "/var/www/html"
extra_parameters: |
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www\. [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI} [R=301,L]
The |
denotes a multiline scalar block in YAML, so newlines are preserved in the resulting configuration file output.
apache_vhosts_ssl: []
No SSL vhosts are configured by default, but you can add them using the same pattern as apache_vhosts
, with a few additional directives, like the following example:
apache_vhosts_ssl:
- {
servername: "local.dev",
documentroot: "/var/www/html",
certificate_file: "/home/vagrant/example.crt",
certificate_key_file: "/home/vagrant/example.key",
certificate_chain_file: "/path/to/certificate_chain.crt"
}
Other SSL directives can be managed with other SSL-related role variables.
apache_ssl_protocol: "All -SSLv2 -SSLv3"
apache_ssl_cipher_suite: "AES256+EECDH:AES256+EDH"
The SSL protocols and cipher suites that are used/allowed when clients make secure connections to your server. These are secure/sane defaults, but for maximum security, performand, and/or compatibility, you may need to adjust these settings.
apache_mods_enabled:
- rewrite.load
- ssl.load
apache_mods_disabled: []
(Debian/Ubuntu ONLY) Which Apache mods to enable or disable (these will be symlinked into the appropriate location). See the mods-available
directory inside the apache configuration directory (/etc/apache2/mods-available
by default) for all the available mods.
apache_packages:
- [platform-specific]
The list of packages to be installed. This defaults to a set of platform-specific packages for RedHat or Debian-based systems (see vars/RedHat.yml
and vars/Debian.yml
for the default values).
apache_state: started
Set initial apache state. Recommended values: started
or stopped
Dependencies
None.
Example Playbook
- hosts: webservers
vars_files:
- vars/main.yml
roles:
- { role: geerlingguy.apache }
Inside vars/main.yml
:
apache_listen_port: 8080
apache_vhosts:
- {servername: "example.com", documentroot: "/var/www/vhosts/example_com"}
License
MIT / BSD
Author Information
This role was created in 2014 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.