you need to learn Ansible RIGHT NOW!! (Linux Automation)

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @GlutesEnjoyer
    @GlutesEnjoyer 4 роки тому +426

    This was one of the simplest and most straightforward ansible guides I've seen thanks man

  • @nigelnovelo279
    @nigelnovelo279 Рік тому +40

    I must say that the amount of knowledge I have gained from this channel is unmatched, went from a regular HelpDesk Job to a sysadmin, thanks to the inspiration that chuck brings.

  • @akpesiriodiyoma4016
    @akpesiriodiyoma4016 2 роки тому +11

    Shawn Powers from CBT NUGGET and Network Chuck are like the best teachers ever..you can always feel the excitement and enthusiasm in their voice, that energy is contagious. and their real-life analogy to the IT concept they are tutoring is second to none and that alone is a winner for me...Thank you so much guys..

  • @vadoosheecho3924
    @vadoosheecho3924 Рік тому

    Genuinely can’t express how much I love this channel, all the questions I have have been answered already by this guy. No need to go on Google for a confusing explanation, instead listen to a guy that has a coffee break 11 times per day

  • @ashs5320
    @ashs5320 4 роки тому +2

    This is the most easy to understand Ansible video out there. Chuck explains everything so well. I use ansible in my lab for a few things. Mainly at the minute I have ansible playbooks for:
    - Deploying VMs
    - Removing VMs
    - Configuring VMs with a base config to get things started.
    - Preparing nodes to become K8s nodes

  • @TravisHubbard1
    @TravisHubbard1 2 місяці тому

    super helpful and relatable! thanks so much for clarifying terms, walking thru this for folks that aren't super savvy on all the related apps!

  • @cainiak
    @cainiak 4 роки тому +21

    Can attest to how intuitive Ansible is. In half a year, I learned basic Ansible to develop a custom CIS template to assist in baselining RHEL systems for an organization. The template can be re-applied periodically on schedule (every 30 mins for example) to assist in maintaining those configurations, not just at the beginning of the systems lifecycle. Just one example of automation! Imagine going through a system and running every hardening command manually... I realize many automation tools exist that are capable of this. However, I would again like to express how easy, and actually fun, it is to learn and use Ansible.

    • @cainiak
      @cainiak 2 роки тому +1

      @@dabadoo7631
      Answering this based on my past experience, other people might be able to answer that question better than I.
      Malicious individuals attempting to circumvent security controls. If someone (a hacker for example) gains administrative access to a system, they might want to change certain settings to make post-exploitation easier, such as communication with C2 or exfiltration of data. Local firewall rules (iptables/firewalld) to allow inbound outbound traffic from the system, for example. If you have a firewall configuration restricting ip/port access, an automated ansible task containing your configuration could overwrite any changes made locally. To accompany this, any kind of alerting mechanism, maybe rsyslog to SIEM for example, for the modification of such firewall configs would be preferable.
      Further, insiders or even end users that already have access to the box might be capable of making certain changes that an admin simply does not want to be changed, for one reason or another. Examples could be meeting an approved compliance baseline such as CIS or STIGS, or not wanting to introduce certain risks or vulnerabilities to the system such as users installing and using an unencrypted protocol such as FTP as opposed to an encrypted protocol.
      Hope this helps.

    • @devops1044
      @devops1044 Рік тому +3

      Doing unit testing against a 'sacrificial' system, getting screens full of red error messages, updating the role, repeat. And then a 'yellow and green' run. Then a green run. Then you deploy to hundreds of systems and watch them come into line. All that drift corrected. Correcting huge chunks of technical debt in one broad stroke. If you like making computers do what you want them to do, this type of tool is very rewarding.

    • @imnottellingyoumyname3050
      @imnottellingyoumyname3050 2 місяці тому

      Don't even know what this comment means

  • @edddieee-main-geee-
    @edddieee-main-geee- Рік тому

    Twice I stopped your video to do more research...afterwards, once I resumed play, I realized you taught what I went on to research (how to remove packages through Playbooks and more module references). Your teaching method is on point, thank you!

  • @gerrymaddock9234
    @gerrymaddock9234 4 роки тому +49

    Chuck, great video. I’m already an ansible admin, but I’m definitely going to show this to my junior admins.
    I use ansible on my Cisco switches, updating firmware, adding vlans. Adding NTP and correct time zones. Similar things with my Junipers. My VMware environments to auto configure vms from templates in the fly. Scripts for emergency shutdown of physical and virtual machines. I even use ansible on my windows host to install/remove software that isn’t available as an MSI . I even have scripts to fix Windows update issues (windows update not working or hung... deleting software distribution folder, etc). I initially started ansible for updating Linux, but I also have Space for updates and space was easier for my windows admins in the event I get hit by a bus. Any major task I need to do that may need repeated in the future, I’ll go out of my way to write a playbook.

    • @mrwaeta1
      @mrwaeta1 4 роки тому +2

      Man this sounds cool , your CV must be massive , do you mind to be my mentor ? followed you on LinkedIn

    • @Viraj2595
      @Viraj2595 4 роки тому +1

      This might sound really weird, but are you looking to add another super awesome junior admin to your team? Someone who doesn't have much work experience but, has a degree, watches all of NetworkChuck, and totally geeks out over most of the things he covers!

    • @gerrymaddock9234
      @gerrymaddock9234 4 роки тому

      Viraj Hodavdekar unfortunately with everything going on right now, we are in a hiring freeze

    • @allybiggs5423
      @allybiggs5423 4 роки тому +2

      You should do videos bro would love to learn from you.

    • @c0p0n
      @c0p0n 4 роки тому

      Cool story bro

  • @benstoll9380
    @benstoll9380 2 роки тому +1

    I love using ansible, I used this course to get me started over a year ago and now im using it to deploy changes on hundereds of servers. I learned to develop custom modules for the edge cases where the builtin modules don't suffice. It is a very satisfying way to automate and im glad i have it in my arsenal of automation. Thanks Chuck!

    • @R5123
      @R5123 2 роки тому

      Nice job, Ben!
      I'm late to the party

  • @actually_peanuts
    @actually_peanuts 4 роки тому +3

    Thanks man, spent 12h privately grinding ansible, reduced effectively a server setup of 4h into 5 minutes. Now I know stuff, and will save hours in the future like crazy. *THUMBS UP*

  • @xghram
    @xghram 4 роки тому +138

    “Ansible” is a term from sci-fi novels for instant communication across the galaxy. It’s put to great effect in the novel Ender’s Game. It’s worth a read, if you happen to have a little time on your hands.

    • @phabeondominguez5971
      @phabeondominguez5971 4 роки тому +1

      Ain't there a movie too for Enders? Must watch or nah?

    • @calebkandoro4513
      @calebkandoro4513 4 роки тому +12

      @@phabeondominguez5971 Nah, the books are way better!

    • @howlingfjord106
      @howlingfjord106 4 роки тому +1

      I knew that sounded familiar! Thank you!

    • @phabeondominguez5971
      @phabeondominguez5971 4 роки тому

      @@calebkandoro4513 for sure but time is of the essence most of the time, at least for me. Used to read mad books as a shorty, but now I find as an adult there is no time... And that's me saying that as a young hustler that RETIRED at age 40....
      But I'll try to look into the books as well
      oNe

    • @phabeondominguez5971
      @phabeondominguez5971 4 роки тому +1

      @@MichaelBushey SOLD, that's not a small claim so must check it out, will get to the book one day too though.. thanks

  • @TheRealKitWalker
    @TheRealKitWalker 4 роки тому +16

    Learn it right now!! This is the kind of push I need! You're amazing dude and I can't thank you🙏🙏 enough for the highly informative and to the point fun videos about the latest tech that's out there. I hope your reach grows 100x folds. 👏👏👏🙏🙏 😊

    • @NetworkChuck
      @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +2

      Thank you Kit!! This comment has me fired up!!

  • @ogedaykhan9909
    @ogedaykhan9909 2 місяці тому

    This was one of the best tutorial about software enginnering i watched in this 7 years as.

  • @NetworkChuck
    @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +26

    Start learning Ansible with a lab on Linode $100 credit: bit.ly/nc_linode
    *Sponsored by Linode
    ➡️The NEW CCNP ENCOR training is OUT!!!: bit.ly/ccnp-cbt
    ➡️Checkout ALL my training at CBT Nuggets: bit.ly/nc-cbt-2020
    1:02 ⏩ Why Ansible?
    5:06 ⏩ FREE Ansible LAB
    6:38 ⏩ Ansible Installation
    8:23 ⏩ Hosts (inventory) setup
    11:56 ⏩ ad-hoc Ansible Commands
    13:52 ⏩ Ansible Playbooks
    FREE Ansible lab on Linode: ($20 credit): linode.com/networkchuck
    Download SolarPutty: bit.ly/usesolarputty
    ➡️Support NetworkChuck: bit.ly/2XPaF7u
    ➡️Need help? Join the community: bit.ly/nc-discord

  • @ManishChalise
    @ManishChalise 4 роки тому

    Your teaching is insane. I love it. You are by far the BEST GURU I have ever found on youtube. Hands Down.

  • @mmrk_
    @mmrk_ 4 роки тому +11

    Hey NetworkChuck I really enjoy these "how to" types of videos you have been making. I really enjoyed the docker Linode lab you made not long ago and this is another great example of a "how to" video that i got a lot out of. Keep up the awesome content!
    Thank you.

  • @AnmolSoin-kg2hs
    @AnmolSoin-kg2hs 4 роки тому

    I have really saw many videos of networking and before you I never thought that it will be so much interesting because it was boring a lot on books, you know . I am happy to have you on youtube. Thank You so much for this.

  • @alisonholloway6726
    @alisonholloway6726 4 роки тому +12

    I LOVE Ansible. I've been using/learning it for months and I cannot live without it anymore in my lab work. My programming skills are ordinary, but my Linux skills are pretty good. So it's a perfect match for the my VM-based Cloud lab work. This was a nice intro for people. Ansible is a powerful beast.

  • @joaquin_cloudarch
    @joaquin_cloudarch 4 роки тому

    Hi, NetworkChuck!
    That's perfectly explained! I'm using Ansible for a year now for my tasks in my company and I have seen many tutorials about it, and I have to say yours is one of the most clearest videos I have ever seen. Congrats!!!
    Thank you for your videos!

  • @z-avlogs8739
    @z-avlogs8739 4 роки тому +10

    For sure you don't cover all the stuff related to the topic but you do illuminate passion among the IT folks.Thanks once again for this brilliant work you're doing.....do come up with such Videos again and again and cover many other technologies out there like Jenkins,puppet,chef,etc.

  • @p.c.336
    @p.c.336 3 роки тому

    When I was watching Dallas TV series in Turkey, you probably weren't born. Now you are teaching me something new.. But don't get wrong, I have no problem with this, thanks for your efforts, just wanted to mention ☺ 🙃

  • @DanielStinebaugh
    @DanielStinebaugh 4 роки тому +142

    Being a Sr Systems Admin for a large cloud consultancy, I can say, terraform and ansible are pretty much must have knowledge to start managing med-large enterprise or cloud networks period. Chef and Puppet are nice, but most of the companies I've helped I can say default to terraform and ansible about 85% of the time.

    • @blkbrry4375
      @blkbrry4375 4 роки тому +22

      Being 5 years into my first job as an Infrastructure Engineer, I can confidently say that my life basically consists of Terraform and Ansible. We have a solid pipeline that deploys VMs with Terraform and then installs/configures software on them post-deployment via Ansible. They work really well together and since they’re infrastructure-as-code tools, all of our playbooks and state files are stored in a code repository for safekeeping.

    • @manicbassa
      @manicbassa 4 роки тому +2

      @@blkbrry4375 as a Windows admin what's the best way to make the move like you did?

    • @heyheyheyy5008
      @heyheyheyy5008 3 роки тому

      What about Vagrant?

    • @ar_prichan
      @ar_prichan 3 роки тому +1

      Can't agree more. I'm completing my degree rn, using Terraform and Ansible are "absolute duo".

    • @Reiner030
      @Reiner030 3 роки тому

      You forgot or didn't know that Saltstack is also a very nice and handful automation system (which can also use Ansible templates since last years) ... which could use also Windows and devices like routers and more

  • @nevoyu
    @nevoyu 3 роки тому +1

    Since watching this video I've gone insane with ansible.
    I run redhat on all my devices, ansible is setup to deploy basically my desktop/server usecases on everything, manage the updates, deploy podman containers, VMs, manage the backups even restore backups :)

  • @neoand_in2matrix
    @neoand_in2matrix 4 роки тому +3

    You are an amazing man, the way of teach, give an example and capt the audience, thanks for your support!

  • @fleggle
    @fleggle 3 роки тому

    ansible has some of the best official documentation that I've ever seen, rarely have to look elsewhere for the module instructions!

  • @maverickpeck6012
    @maverickpeck6012 2 роки тому +3

    I have to say this is the most helpful video I’ve seen in a while. I’m a Student Sys Admin at my college and I was tasked to make an ansible server for our student GNS3 severs in order to automate lab creation. Needless to say I was very lost and found your video shortly after… I have seen the light!!! Keep doing what you’re doing, I’ve always loved your content!

  • @cybersecurity-for-beginners
    @cybersecurity-for-beginners 2 роки тому

    We are so used to learning from your magical style of teaching that we don't like technologies where your tutorials are not available for.

  • @zackerthehacker
    @zackerthehacker 4 роки тому +3

    Your presentation, production value and knowledge are all amazing. I loved this video and learned a thing. Thanks :D

  • @johnkennedy7110
    @johnkennedy7110 4 роки тому

    I just used Ansible playbooks to install docker on both machines simultaneously. This is awesome! Thank you NetworkChuck!

  • @dekrob
    @dekrob 4 роки тому +433

    Im on to chuck, getting us trained with all these trendy tools. Then he opens a consulting company hiring us out for maximum profit....

    • @whiskeyjack7529
      @whiskeyjack7529 4 роки тому +24

      i'd be down tbh

    • @omo-ogun2517
      @omo-ogun2517 4 роки тому +44

      I just enjoy the dude's energy, it's contagious

    • @knucklecorn
      @knucklecorn 4 роки тому +9

      hah trendy tools from 5-10 years ago

    • @TheDrAkira
      @TheDrAkira 4 роки тому +1

      I'm totally IN if that happens xD

    • @ashp834
      @ashp834 4 роки тому +2

      @@knucklecorn have they all maxed out the hype cycle?

  • @LemonMinttt
    @LemonMinttt 3 роки тому +1

    This was definitely the simplest ansible video literally!!!! Straight forward, I literally feel like I can make a playbook right now !! Thank you

  • @nogodiggydie
    @nogodiggydie 4 роки тому +3

    I don't know shit about networking and I'm not necessarily trying to learn, but I love watching your videos. I believe that's a compliment.

  • @lsismeiro
    @lsismeiro 4 роки тому

    vi is hard in the begining but after some decades using it you will miss vi to edit files everywhere. :) You can "learn" vi in a few weeks, no worries. Most productive editor ever. :)

  • @Ffreeze90
    @Ffreeze90 4 роки тому +13

    as a pentester i really like "automation" - ansible looks pretty

    • @emsheeranstudio3459
      @emsheeranstudio3459 4 роки тому

      Bro what qualification need for pentester & what is the basic things we should do?

    • @Ffreeze90
      @Ffreeze90 4 роки тому +3

      @@emsheeranstudio3459 oscp is a good start and then practise, practise, practise. I recommend hackthebox and tryhackme for beginner

    • @emsheeranstudio3459
      @emsheeranstudio3459 4 роки тому

      @@Ffreeze90 thanks dude

  • @AdenMocca
    @AdenMocca 4 роки тому

    Just wanted to say I went through the whole RedHat Ansible Sales training and learned more in your 20 minute brief. Really appreciate the showing and learning approach to crappy PowerPoint slides.

  • @karanbalwani
    @karanbalwani 4 роки тому +9

    Thank you for your "learn x right now" series of videos, I do keep adding things to my list of things to study, though your videos give quite a big idea about what it entails. This helps us choose the streams we could use to grow our IT career. Knowing a little about a lot of different things definitely helps in IT.

    • @louies6914
      @louies6914 4 роки тому +1

      It helps you know one thing..like master it than to try to be The Jack of all trades master of none.

  • @sharmanick1
    @sharmanick1 3 роки тому

    Your videos have become 1st videos to see and understand the overview in the simplest & relatable explanation for IT topics like this, thank you !!

  • @cristypy2145
    @cristypy2145 4 роки тому +3

    A very nice video, Chuck! Thanks for another great content! Your explanation is excelent and easy to follow, as usual. Keep it up!!

  • @flapa2010
    @flapa2010 2 роки тому

    These was all I needed to kick-off learning ansible...now am already dancing in the playbook. Thanks Chuck!

  • @joekilbreth3901
    @joekilbreth3901 4 роки тому +7

    Dude. You're ridiculous! This (and your whole channel, frankly) is one of the coolest things to happen to my Linux journey in years.
    KEEP THIS STUFF COMING! You rock.
    Do you have a patreon?

  • @TheEast007
    @TheEast007 9 місяців тому

    Just finished a project in Ansible and it was pretty fun

  • @msana4420
    @msana4420 4 роки тому +10

    Every UA-cam video: Hallo guys, today..
    NetworkChuck: You need to learn __________ RIGHT NOW!!!!!

    • @NetworkChuck
      @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +6

      :)
      I hope everyone is catching on to the meme and not taking me too seriously. Learn it if it helps.

    • @msana4420
      @msana4420 4 роки тому

      @@NetworkChuck ;)

  • @supriyoguha9314
    @supriyoguha9314 4 роки тому

    Sir, I'm one of ur big fan..... I learnt so many things from u.... U teaching style is really different.... I really like that..... U already made me crazy sir...... Huge respect to u sir....🙏🏻

  • @CaptDunkstormen
    @CaptDunkstormen 4 роки тому +6

    Reminds me so much of Desired State Configuration on Windows 👌

    • @robertthomas5906
      @robertthomas5906 4 роки тому

      ansible works on windows serves as well. I think you would use one or the other, not both. Since ansible can handle so much more than just Linux or routers it makes a lot of sense to use ansible and not DSC I think.

  • @fagu0
    @fagu0 4 роки тому

    Ansible is amazing!
    I had a project where I had to create a web server, setting up a firewall, protect it against port scanning and dos attacks, ensure ssl (self signed) and redirect http to https.
    Then i used ansible to deploy my solution on other servers. I made a famous playbook and scripts so that each machine had its iptable up, running and configured (to not ban its own ip). Each machine had its own signed ssl certificate and a lot of other configs... Totally automatically! Just with one little command on the host machine!
    Crazy

  • @MadrasaTechOfficial
    @MadrasaTechOfficial 4 роки тому +42

    What board and software you are using to do the explanation if you don't mind?

    • @interguy589
      @interguy589 4 роки тому +1

      I believe he uses adobe photoshop to draw.

    • @juanignacioaschura9437
      @juanignacioaschura9437 4 роки тому +13

      Adobe Photoshop on a WACOM Cintiq 22HD

    • @---iy7bj
      @---iy7bj 3 роки тому +2

      MS Paint on a TI-83 Calculator

  • @rasmuslauritsen3395
    @rasmuslauritsen3395 4 роки тому

    I installed Ansible yesterday to control my raspberry pi cluster (testing Kubernetes), and today UA-cam recommended this video.. thats what I call timing. :-)

  • @sytzebuz
    @sytzebuz 4 роки тому +7

    Hey NWC, second video I watch and can again say: "Now I get it!" God bless your work.

  • @termi05
    @termi05 2 роки тому

    you need to learn Ansible RIGHT NOW!! ... bullshit i thought, but after watching this tutorial I use ansible everyday. Thank you Chuck!

  • @joshd.8190
    @joshd.8190 4 роки тому +363

    Dude chill out with the "You need to learn this right now!" IM STILL TRYING TO LEARN PYTHON, first you want me to do that, then linux, then learn CCNA, then learn docker, then learn this, and that!!! GIVE ME TIMEEEEE

    • @rujaywhitehorne5155
      @rujaywhitehorne5155 4 роки тому +14

      Looool same here

    • @headinthekloudz
      @headinthekloudz 4 роки тому +14

      Who's only talking to ppl who are trying to go Super Sayian Blue🤣

    • @katherine836
      @katherine836 4 роки тому +7

      Hahaha that's true I'm also learning python and linux😂

    • @davea99
      @davea99 4 роки тому +7

      I'm in the same boat. Trying to just get Cloud fundementals first before I jump into Linux. It's just too much

    • @rujaywhitehorne5155
      @rujaywhitehorne5155 4 роки тому +4

      @@davea99 you can do it. I learned CCNA in 6 weeks

  • @MrEvenStranger
    @MrEvenStranger Рік тому

    Excellent guide. I got started with automation with pssh, a small linux app that makes ssh connections in parallel instead of a series of connections from a typical bash loop. In a normal bash loop, it took hours to change one file on 1500+servers. With pssh, I could push the change out in under three minutes. Ansible is even more powerfui!

  • @afroman1242
    @afroman1242 4 роки тому +4

    Linux purists will probably hate this, but checkout Microsoft's VSCode for SSHing in to run commands and edit files. Way easier to edit files than vim or nano in my opinion. They probably have an Ansible plugin too.

  • @steveoc64
    @steveoc64 4 роки тому

    Oh - this is powerful. I have Macs, FreeBSD boxes, Centos machines, and Ubuntu machines - all with different package managers (apt / yum / pkg / brew), different ways of getting priviledges (sudo / doas), different user accounts and different ports to connect to ssh on.
    But I can write 1 simple playbook that says "make sure its got the latest version of this hexeditor" and ansible just works it all out for each machine.
    Awesome.
    You NEED to do a video on FreeBSD and Jails right now !

  • @katherine836
    @katherine836 4 роки тому +391

    Learn Docker right now
    Learn Ansible right now
    Next will be
    Learn Kubernetes right now😂

  • @AKATrae
    @AKATrae 2 роки тому

    I started watching your channel to make my gf think I’m really smart but ended up actually learning a lot from you 😁

  • @GenX-Memories
    @GenX-Memories 4 роки тому +9

    Chuck, here's the problem: Many, many of us out here are IT guys in our late-30s, 40s, and 50s. We have certs (CCNAs, MCSEs, VMware, hardware vendor stuff, firewalls, etc.) decades of experience in various IT areas, and quite honestly, bills to pay. I'm 45. I do not have the time, nor the energy, to completely revamp myself at my age. Networking, servers, all kinds of software, etc. was the name of the game for the last 40 years. The fact that all of the sudden everyone needs to ALSO become a developer is just stupid.
    I might be the only one, but I'm in IT because back in the 90s everyone kept telling me I was good at it. Now, I honestly can't stand it. If I could be a carpenter (and still pay my bills) I would. But alas, instead I have to keep renewing certs over and over, keep learning every new version of every single server and firewall generation, iOS, or software title (management suites, AV, backups, cloud, VMware, etc., etc., etc.) every couple of years. It is exhausting. Why didn't I just become an accountant or a fireman, sigh.

    • @jeffherdzina6716
      @jeffherdzina6716 4 роки тому +2

      LOL Being a firefighter was great, Until I was hurt. Things changed, Now I am in I.T. and 55 years old. And losing ground and job opportunities to 21 year olds. You know anyone that's looking for a Redhat / Cisco Administrator ? Neither do I...

    • @tubes9181
      @tubes9181 4 роки тому

      If you don't like the video, don't watch. You must be a joy to work with.

    • @greenvm
      @greenvm 4 роки тому +3

      What did you expect when you got started? That technology isn't gonna improve and progress will be stuck at the level of what we had in the 90s? You got into a field that's constantly changing and now you are looking surprised that you have to learn new things..

  • @bswordsman4320
    @bswordsman4320 4 роки тому +122

    Too many things to learn sir. Still trying to learn docker... and python, but at least I got my CCNA.

    • @K2_Chris
      @K2_Chris 4 роки тому +10

      Haha, you will learn a lot and keep learning... trust me... it never ends! If you're like me, you will end up learning blueprints and building codes, etc. etc. Then your office will have a big old tool storage, bookshelf, solder station, fiber cleaners/test equipment, etc. etc. Then you will learn Python, Powershell and web languages, etc. etc. Then off to IDS systems, Nagios (She is my girlfriend on my phone - SMS), SSL, and anything else your Director throws at you... Maybe even GSuites!

    • @K2_Chris
      @K2_Chris 4 роки тому +2

      Oh, I almost forgot.... an Airgun for squirrels and set of BiDi SFP......

    • @mt1885
      @mt1885 4 роки тому +2

      Here is some advice, no one person will be all knowing in 500 software products (then 1/2 knowing stuff is a huge security hole) that seems to be out the window now. It would be better to be highly skilled in an area (no one person) can know everything.

  • @RenatoRegalado
    @RenatoRegalado 4 роки тому

    I'm not an ansible beast, but I use ansible to patch clients server environments! It's managed to save a lot of man hours. Unfortunately I haven't been able to automatically reboot the servers because we have a lot of clustered windows servers who don't like to play well. I've been evangelizing Ansible for several years now and so happy for this video :)

  • @DaveSomething
    @DaveSomething 4 роки тому +3

    the beard of knowledge strikes again!

  • @AnantaAkash.Podder
    @AnantaAkash.Podder 10 місяців тому

    This is most Simple Introduction to Ansible... Thank you very much NetworkChuck... Your Explanation is truly amazing

  • @AuXXKeyz
    @AuXXKeyz 4 роки тому +6

    We've gotta learn everything now

  • @marginbuu212
    @marginbuu212 2 роки тому

    Been going through your network learning about all the new keywords that are appearing in network engineer job searches nowadays. Very helpful. Thanks.

  • @samuelb7944
    @samuelb7944 4 роки тому +7

    We ended up connecting all our 350 nodes to ansimble. Thanks for the tutorial! This is amazing.
    - Deploys.cc

    • @NetworkChuck
      @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +1

      Thank you!

    • @LieberLois
      @LieberLois 4 роки тому

      May I ask what type of tasks you are using? I can't quite see the usecases for Ansible since i usually deploy to Kubernetes (where I can configure the machine state with ease)

    • @djsimplyseth
      @djsimplyseth 4 роки тому

      @@LieberLois Verizon deploys EKS and all critical components with Ansible. Search `Ansible Module Index` that might inspire you

  • @krsna800
    @krsna800 4 роки тому +2

    Hello Chuck,
    this was a very well put video which helped me get started....I followed two other courses on udemy and packt and they were quite a mess! you got me sorted and helped me get started. I like your style ....keep posting new videos. Cheers!

  • @Questchaun
    @Questchaun 4 роки тому +123

    This guy makes a lot of "you need to learn [insert] naooo" vids.

    • @deus5215
      @deus5215 4 роки тому +11

      Questchaun Because he’s right

    • @DanStarktheReal
      @DanStarktheReal 4 роки тому +37

      Welcome to IT, where we must always LEARN ALL THE THINGS!

    • @GavinFreeborn
      @GavinFreeborn 4 роки тому +7

      @@DanStarktheReal except vim apparently

    • @zestrixalex3786
      @zestrixalex3786 4 роки тому

      Turns out I really do. I need CCNA even for BDM positions novadays.

    • @Questchaun
      @Questchaun 4 роки тому

      @@deus5215 lol I know.

  • @djvincon
    @djvincon 4 роки тому

    Dear Chuck, I need to apologize. The mostly clickbaity title's made me not click and watch your content. Today I made first contact with ansible and I thought lets give it a try... And o boy im glad I did! Very well explained and the live drawing makes it teacher -> student easy. You make the right decisions in were to go in depth and where not. Subbed and liked. Thank you.

  • @a.ismael47
    @a.ismael47 3 роки тому +3

    4:01 "cisco routers running cisco ios"
    EverythingApplePro: "There are rumors about cisco ios"

  • @wickgurl14
    @wickgurl14 2 роки тому

    learning this this week through full sail university. this video was much more informative than the lecture was

  • @MrKeith-hc2fv
    @MrKeith-hc2fv 4 роки тому +3

    "Learn this now" = "The most important part of every lesson is getting started."

  • @dawitaraya6727
    @dawitaraya6727 4 роки тому +1

    The best tutorial video I have seen so far on UA-cam. Love the way you deliver the concepts and your energy man.

  • @Johnnyboycurtis
    @Johnnyboycurtis 4 роки тому +6

    You need to learn Ansible if you think you’ll end up needing to use Ansible at your job

  • @ajaygoel1860
    @ajaygoel1860 2 роки тому

    You are amazing bro..the way you teach shows how much passionate and knowledgeable you are about cutting edge technologies

  • @earlofnim
    @earlofnim 4 роки тому +3

    Heres a stupid question: “how does this work in autoscaling environments when your hosts are constantly changing?”

    • @djsimplyseth
      @djsimplyseth 4 роки тому +1

      You can use dynamic inventories, It's used in Verizon for very large multi-service AWS deployments.

  • @scotttabor2406
    @scotttabor2406 4 роки тому

    I need to learn ansible for work, you did the best job I could find explaining it. Great job!

  • @douglasmclainberdeaux1534
    @douglasmclainberdeaux1534 4 роки тому +3

    Look, I'm gonna watch the rest of the video, lol but my first reaction to your very first example was - "why doesn't he just do:" for i in $(seq 1 5);do echo ssh -i key me@server$i sed -ri 's/(regexp)/value/ /etc/resolv.conf';done

    • @NetworkChuck
      @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +2

      Haha, yeah, totally get that. Ansible is designed to be a bit more polished than a one off bash script.

    • @PMA65537
      @PMA65537 4 роки тому

      How about some of the servers are powered off when you zap them so miss the update. Nothing breaks till someone decommissions the old DNS server later.

    • @wizdude
      @wizdude 4 роки тому +1

      You can get ansible to power on the machines first :-)

    • @twentyrothmans7308
      @twentyrothmans7308 4 роки тому

      That's pretty much what we do.
      We're not exactly haemorrhaging sysadmins where I ork. We just steal each other's code.

  • @sanfordkenyoniii5918
    @sanfordkenyoniii5918 Рік тому

    I have an exercise to do for an interview that will involve automating some IT tasks with ansible. this helped a lot, thank you

  • @wtfitsaduck._.7788
    @wtfitsaduck._.7788 4 роки тому +68

    sooooo its a glorified sshpass bash script 🤔

    • @dadquestionmark
      @dadquestionmark 4 роки тому +2

      Yep

    • @ER_aka_RAM
      @ER_aka_RAM 4 роки тому +1

      My thoughts exactly! 🤦🏽‍♂️

    • @davidthedreamer0
      @davidthedreamer0 4 роки тому

      oooooooohhh! 😂 underrated comment, man

    • @johnjames_cowperthwaite
      @johnjames_cowperthwaite 4 роки тому +12

      not anywhere close to understanding the scalability and use cases for Ansible, Ansible Engine or the RESTful api

    • @bogdanbliznuk7355
      @bogdanbliznuk7355 4 роки тому

      A tool designed on top of SSH - protocol from 1995. SSH wasn't designed for scalability, it's not the case. It's used for interactive terminal sessions and ad-hoc commands evaluation.
      Imagine that nowadays service oriented architecture would use "SSH commands" for communication. Does that sound okay to you?
      I don't even say about "declarativity" with global variables and flow control on top of yaml.
      Poor bastards from red hat sold this to you.

  • @okomazubuike9032
    @okomazubuike9032 2 роки тому

    One of the best videos on Ansible I've seen. Thanks Chuck

  • @ayoubaitlachgar816
    @ayoubaitlachgar816 4 роки тому +11

    YOU NEED TO STOP LEARNING RIGHT NOW

    • @codenoob9325
      @codenoob9325 4 роки тому +1

      Maybe you should Shut up right now?

  • @TheNimblegeek
    @TheNimblegeek Рік тому

    Best instructional I've experienced so far on the web... Amazing energy and practical content.

  • @b213videoz
    @b213videoz Рік тому +2

    No, I don't 😛

  • @TheDrAkira
    @TheDrAkira 4 роки тому

    I Just found this channel a few days ago and i really love the enthusiasm of the explanations!!! Precise, concise and good quality. Plus I always trust a man with a good neat beard talking about IT stuff xDDD

  • @carlsagan2371
    @carlsagan2371 4 роки тому

    AHHH I just watched all of Chuck's videos at once and am having to learn 50 whole networking tools all at once!!!!!

  • @quame2024
    @quame2024 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you NetworkChunk your videos always inspire me. Much love all the way from Ghana.

  • @DavidSanchez-gv8nx
    @DavidSanchez-gv8nx 4 роки тому

    I have been using ansible for the last 6 mounths i have lost the truck of the HUNDREDS of work hours i have saved. This is a usefull tool really easy to learn and that has the capabilities to radically change tue way you manage your servers

  • @vigneshwaranravichandran2721
    @vigneshwaranravichandran2721 Місяць тому

    Chuck, I just berated a click-bait video, I had to skip because I am not a video guy. I prefer reading. Today I had a task and based on the RHEL RHCE study guide and some luck I managed to get the grip on getting on ansible. Because you know, RHEL RHCE is not a joke with MCQ, it requires you to perform the tasks and one task may affect another task. I failed my RHCSA twice before getting it right the 3rd time.
    TL;DR
    Your video was smooth as the icing on the cake. I liked how you want people to do some batshit crazy stuff with ansible. For beginners this will be nice to sit back with your fav beverages and absorb slowly.
    Thank you chuck.

  • @hildicortes
    @hildicortes 3 роки тому +1

    I just wanna say that I really love this video, I did my lab and It was absolutely awesome!! THANK YOU MASTER!

  • @Mukawakadoodoo
    @Mukawakadoodoo 4 роки тому +1

    I’m switching fields to biomedical sciences, and realising that I will need some programming skills. Subscribed instantly man.

  • @DJchristopher92
    @DJchristopher92 4 роки тому

    Well there are too many things to learn, you just need to take all those step by step, you don't have to learn them all at once, just the ones that currently will help you and make your life easier!!! Chuck. Dude you make these seem so simple to understand! Nice!

  • @eightiesgeek
    @eightiesgeek 4 роки тому +2

    'x' key is your friend in Vim. Instead of ':wq' for saving and quitting, you can use ':x'. Also, you can delete a character by pressing 'x'

    • @rinat1985
      @rinat1985 4 роки тому +1

      not to mention using Ctrl-c instead of badly inconvenient Esc for normal mode :)

  • @christiansonnenberg6306
    @christiansonnenberg6306 4 роки тому

    it's so nice to see how enthusiastic you are about the topics you are talking about :)

  • @allybiggs5423
    @allybiggs5423 4 роки тому +1

    This is awesome ;)
    I'm not a network engineer I have been reading CCNA materials in spare time mainly as a hobby. My journey into IT was different I started with Linux and that became a passion.
    This Ansible stuff seems very powerful thank you for the introduction awesome stuff!

  • @davidg4612
    @davidg4612 4 роки тому

    I love it how open source projects are becoming the best softwares to use. Gonna dig in, thx for the vid!

  • @g-jalil6961
    @g-jalil6961 4 роки тому

    Dude, you were born for teaching 👍. I have come 1000 times across your videos but never payed attention coz it seemed like you make small talk bout various things. Today i needed Ansible and as your video appeared, decided to give try. I didn't expect that it will be tutoring. But i enjoyed it. Keep doin staff and if you feel confident make udemy courses, i'll be the first customer. Going this way you gonna beat Eli the computer guy)

    • @NetworkChuck
      @NetworkChuck  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks Gaya!! This means a lot to me.

  • @TheLakeJake3
    @TheLakeJake3 4 роки тому +1

    Every video your space gets better looking. Very warm chill vibe, seems like a nice place to stare into a screen haha for real though

  • @dwaynep9346
    @dwaynep9346 2 роки тому

    Chuck Rocks man been watching this guy though my whole IT career.

  • @mohanurs2943
    @mohanurs2943 4 роки тому

    Oh Dude, Your explanations are just like an Ansible PlayBooks 😂.. like to learn more from your videos. Please keep uploading more on Ansible.

  • @flexyt8547
    @flexyt8547 3 роки тому

    bruh swear to god I been stuck in the ansible loophole since my port wasnt correct and thanks to this video I found out how to fix it. Thank you man

  • @ianstewart1188
    @ianstewart1188 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the quick overview, just manged to install Ansible on my Ubuntu system which I install from the Windows store on my Windows 10 box and updated my Linux box , up in running in under 5 mins.