The meraki-ansible project provides an Ansible collection for managing and automating your Cisco Meraki environment. It consists of a set of modules and roles for performing tasks related to Meraki.
This collection has been tested and supports Cisco Meraki v1.33.0
Note: This collection is not compatible with versions of Ansible before v2.8.
Other versions of this collection have support for previous Cisco Meraki versions. The recommended versions are listed below on the Compatibility matrix.
Cisco Meraki version | Ansible "cisco.meraki" version | Python "DashboardAPI" version |
---|---|---|
1.33.0 | 1.0.0 | 1.33.0 |
Notes:
- The "Python 'merakisdk' version" column has the minimum recommended version used when testing the Ansible collection. This means you could use later versions of the Python "merakisdk" than those listed.
- The "Cisco Meraki version" column has the value of the
meraki_version
you should use for the Ansible collection.
For example, for Cisco Meraki 1.33.0, it is recommended to use Ansible "cisco.meraki" v1.0.0 and Python "meraki DashboardAPI" v1.33.0.
To get the Python Meraki SDK v1.33.0 in a fresh development environment:
sudo pip install meraki==1.33.0
To get the Ansible collection v1.0.0 in a fresh development environment:
ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.meraki:1.0.0
- Ansible >= 2.9
- Python Meraki SDK v1.33.0 or newer
- Python >= 3.6, as the Meraki SDK doesn't support Python version 2.x
Ansible must be installed (Install guide)
sudo pip install ansible
Python Meraki SDK must be installed
sudo pip install meraki
Install the collection (Galaxy link)
ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.meraki
First, your Meraki API key needs to be available for the playbook to use. You can leverage environment variables export MERAKI_DASHBOARD_API_KEY=093b24e85df15a3e66f1fc359f4c48493eaa1b73
, or create a credentials.yml
(example) file.
Note: storing your API key in an unencrypted text file is not recommended for security reasons.
---
meraki_api_key: "ABC"
meraki_base_url: "https://api.meraki.com/api/v1"
meraki_single_request_timeout: ""
meraki_certificate_path: ""
meraki_requests_proxy: True
meraki_wait_on_rate_limit: 60
meraki_nginx_429_retry_wait_time: 60
meraki_action_batch_retry_wait_time: 60
meraki_retry_4xx_error: False
meraki_retry_4xx_error_wait_time: 60
meraki_maximum_retries: 2
meraki_output_log: True
meraki_log_file_prefix: "meraki_api_"
meraki_log_path: ""
meraki_print_console: True
meraki_suppress_logging: False
meraki_simulate: False
meraki_be_geo_id: ""
meraki_caller: ""
meraki_use_iterator_for_get_pages: False
meraki_inherit_logging_config: False
Create a hosts
(example) file that uses [meraki_servers]
with your Cisco Meraki Settings:
[meraki_servers]
meraki_server
Then, create a playbook myplaybook.yml
(example) referencing the variables in your credentials.yml file and specifying the full namespace path to the module, plugin and/or role:
---
- hosts: meraki_servers
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- name: Get all administered _identities _me
cisco.meraki.administered_identities_me_info:
meraki_suppress_logging: true
register: result
Execute the playbook:
ansible-playbook -i hosts myplaybook.yml
In the playbooks
directory you can find more examples and use cases.
Getting the latest/nightly collection build
Clone the meraki-ansible repository.
git clone https://github.com/cisco-en-programmability/meraki-ansible.git
Go to the meraki-ansible directory
cd meraki-ansible
Pull the latest master from the repo
git pull origin master
Build and install a collection from source
ansible-galaxy collection build --force
ansible-galaxy collection install cisco-meraki-* --force
- Ansible Using collections for more details.
If you're using macOS you may receive this error when running your playbook:
objc[34120]: +[__NSCFConstantString initialize] may have been in progress in another thread when fork() was called.
objc[34120]: +[__NSCFConstantString initialize] may have been in progress in another thread when fork() was called. We cannot safely call it or ignore it in the fork() child process. Crashing instead. Set a breakpoint on objc_initializeAfterForkError to debug.
ERROR! A worker was found in a dead state
If that's the case try setting this environment variable:
export OBJC_DISABLE_INITIALIZE_FORK_SAFETY=YES
Ongoing development efforts and contributions to this collection are tracked as issues in this repository.
We welcome community contributions to this collection. If you find problems, need an enhancement or need a new module, please open an issue or create a PR against the Cisco Meraki Ansible collection repository.
This collection follows the Ansible project's Code of Conduct. Please read and familiarize yourself with this document.
This collection follows Semantic Versioning. More details on versioning can be found in the Ansible docs.
New minor and major releases as well as deprecations will follow new releases and deprecations of the Cisco Meraki product, its REST API and the corresponding Python SDK, which this project relies on.