How to switch a user per task or set of tasks?

In Ansible 2.x, you can use the block for group of tasks:

- block:
    - name: checkout repo
      git:
        repo: https://github.com/some/repo.git
        version: master
        dest: "{{ dst }}"
    - name: change perms
      file:
      dest: "{{ dst }}"
      state: directory
      mode: 0755
      owner: some_user
  become: yes
  become_user: some user

In Ansible >1.4 you can actually specify a remote user at the task level which should allow you to login as that user and execute that command without resorting to sudo. If you can't login as that user then the sudo_user solution will work too.

---
- hosts: webservers
  remote_user: root
  tasks:
    - name: test connection
      ping:
      remote_user: yourname

See http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_intro.html#hosts-and-users


A solution is to use the include statement with remote_user var (describe there : http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks_roles.html) but it has to be done at playbook instead of task level.


With Ansible 1.9 or later

Ansible uses the become, become_user, and become_method directives to achieve privilege escalation. You can apply them to an entire play or playbook, set them in an included playbook, or set them for a particular task.

- name: checkout repo
  git: repo=https://github.com/some/repo.git version=master dest={{ dst }}
  become: yes
  become_user: some_user

You can use become_with to specify how the privilege escalation is achieved, the default being sudo.

The directive is in effect for the scope of the block in which it is used (examples).

See Hosts and Users for some additional examples and Become (Privilege Escalation) for more detailed documentation.

In addition to the task-scoped become and become_user directives, Ansible 1.9 added some new variables and command line options to set these values for the duration of a play in the absence of explicit directives:

  • Command line options for the equivalent become/become_user directives.
  • Connection specific variables which can be set per host or group.

As of Ansible 2.0.2.0, the older sudo/sudo_user syntax described below still works, but the deprecation notice states, "This feature will be removed in a future release."


Previous syntax, deprecated as of Ansible 1.9 and scheduled for removal:

- name: checkout repo
  git: repo=https://github.com/some/repo.git version=master dest={{ dst }}
  sudo: yes
  sudo_user: some_user

Tags:

Ansible