Configuring the Ansible Tower connector
Before you begin
Before you configure the on-premises connector, ensure that you the following conditions are met:
- The server where you want to run and install the remote plugin matches the minimum requirements.
For more information, see System-requirements. (For Linux) The GCC G++ compiler version is 5.4.0 or later.
Task 1: To create a plugin key
- Click Connectors > Plugin Keys tab.
- Click Create Plugin Key and do the following steps:
- (Optional) Enter a new name for the plugin with which you want to associate the plugin key.
- (Optional) Update the expiry date for the plugin key.
By default, a plugin key expires in 90 days. To ensure that the connector is running, you can extend the date before it expires. Click Download Plugin Key.
A creds.json file gets downloaded.
- Click Save.
The plugin and the associated plugin key appear on the Plugins page.
Optional Task: To reuse an existing plugin key
If you have configured any on-premises connector, you already have a plugin key. You can use the same key to configure any other on-premises connector.
- Click Connectors > Available Connectors and click Configure against the connector that you want to configure.
- On the following message that appears on the configure connector page, click the download & install link.
On the Configure On-premises Connector page, the plugin keys available for reuse are displayed. - Skip Task 2 and continue with Task 3 to configure the connector.
Task 2: To download the plugin
You can download and run a plugin on a Linux or a Microsoft Windows server. This server should be accessible from the computer where the automation tool or application is installed.
- In the BMC Helix Intelligent Automation console, click Connectors > Available Connectors and click Configure against the connector.
- On the following message that appears on the configure connector page, click the download & install link.
- On the Configure On-premises Connector page, click Download Plugin.
The remote-restapi-plugin.zip file is downloaded. - Copy and extract the downloaded ZIP file and go to the remote-restapi-plugin directory.
- Go to the remote-restapi-plugin\config location and and replace the creds.json file with the credential file generated in Task 1.
- (For Linux only) Ensure that the run.sh file has the execute permission.
Optional task: To use a pass-through proxy server
If the host where you download the plugin to configure a connector does not have internet access, you can use a proxy server to configure the connector. The host where the connector is to be configured and the automation tool must be in the same network domain. You can also configure the proxy server with basic authentication mechanism.
- Navigate to the remote-restapi-plugin directory.
Run the following command to create credentials for the proxy server without any authentication.
For Linuxcredential.sh create -n proxy -i <hostname:port of the proxy server> -p proxy -a noauthFor Windowscredential.bat create -n proxy -i <hostname:port of the proxy server> -p proxy -a noauthRun the following command to create credentials for the proxy server with basic authentication.
credential.bat create -n proxy -i <hostname:port of the proxy server> -p proxy -a basicWhen prompted, enter the username and password for the proxy server.
- Continue to the next task.
Task 3: To create credentials by using the plugin key
A plugin requires credentials to authenticate and execute various actions on the target applications that are defined in an automation policy. The credential CLI utility enables you to create, search, update, and delete credentials for a plugin.
This server should be accessible from the server where the on-premise application is installed.
- Navigate to the directory where you have extracted the remote-restapi-plugin.zip file.
The remote-restapi-plugin directory contains credential.sh/credential.bat. - Ensure that the credential.sh file has the execute permission.
Run the following create switch command to create credentials.
Whenever credentials are created, a unique credential ID is assigned to it.Sample command for Microsoft Windowscredential.bat create -n <credentialsName> -i <http://host:port> -p <provider> -a <AuthenticationType>Sample command for Linux./credential.sh create -n <credentialsName> -i <http://host:port> -p <provider> -a <AuthenticationType>Example for Ansible Tower by using basic authentication./credential.sh create -n ansibleCreds -i https://172.20.65.241:6443 -p ansible_tower -a basicExample for Ansible Tower credentials by using bearer authentication./credential.sh create -n ansibleCreds -i https://172.20.65.241:6443 -p ansible_tower -a bearerIn the example:
Field
Description
Sample value
credentialsNameEnter a unique name for the credentials. A name can contain a maximum of 30 characters. Enclose the name in double quotes if it contains spaces.
AnsibleTowerCredentials
credentialsTargetIDEnter the target identifier based on the credentials provider.
Note: Ensure that you do not provide the same target ID while configuring any other connector.
https://172.20.65.241:6443
credentialsProviderIDEnter ansible_tower
-
authenticationTypeEnter one of the supported authentication mechanisms:
- basic: Requires a username and a password
- bearer: Requires the access token generated from Ansible Tower
Bearer: 1ZmDqTScGhe6SHct7vF5To6Pp3Vf3h
- For Login required, enter n.
Credentials are created successfully. (Optional) To create credentials in a single step, create a JSON file, which contains all the credentials required for configuring the connector and run the following command:
Sample command for Microsoft Windowscredential.bat create -n <ConnectorName> -i <hostname> -p ansible_tower -a bearer -f C:\\Users\\Administrator\\Downloads\\auth_json_file.jsonCredentials are created successfully. The following figure shows a sample output:
"credential_id": "fd5af7f8-6c3d-4116-9ff8-32582b6a64ed",
"credential_name": "ansible",
"credential_target_id": "https://hostname.com",
"credential_type": "",
"credential_provider_id": "ansible_tower",
"credential_source": "External",
"credential_object": {
"api_key": "dN4k9HzQZYRNII1Q1X8xEKl3zvJv04",
"login_action": {
"": {
"post": {
"parameters": [],
"requestBody": {
"content": {
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded": {
"username": "",
"password": "*******"
}
}
}
}
}
},
"security_scheme": {
"type": "http",
"in": "bearer",
"bearerFormat": ""
}
},
"encryption_key_id": null,
"credential_metadata": null,
"createdAt": "2022-04-27T14:56:56.146Z",
"updatedAt": "2022-04-27T14:56:56.146Z"
}
]
Task 4: To provide a server-side SSL certificate
To configure the plugin to connect to any of the products running on HTTPS/SSL, do the following steps:
- Download the server-side certificate and convert it into a .PEM format.
In case of multiple products, convert and merge all individual certificates into a single .PEM file. - Copy and place the certificate in the server-certs directory located in the remote-restapi-plugin directory.
- Continue to the next step to start and run the plugin.
Task 5: To start and run the plugin as a service
If a remote plugin is installed as a service, you can start, stop, or restart it as any other service. BMC recommends that you run the plugin as a service as against running it as a batch or shell process. You can run remote plugin as a service only on Microsoft Windows Server 2016 Enterprise and CentOS 7 operating systems.
Before running a plugin as a service, ensure that the following prerequisites are fulfilled:
- You have administrative or root privileges on the host where the plugin is extracted.
- The host where the plugin is available is also accessible from the host where the application is installed.
To run plugin as a service:
- Navigate to the directory where you have extracted the remote-restapi-plugin.zip file.
- Run the install.bat (for Microsoft Windows) or install.sh (for Linux) command.
You can also use the install.bat install command. The plugin now runs as a service.
If a service is installed successfully, in the list of services available in the Microsoft Windows Service Manager, the remote restapi plugin service is displayed. On Linux servers, if you run the install.sh status command, a system process with the name BMC remote-restapi-plugin appears.
Optional: To start the plugin as a batch or shell process
After successfully creating the credentials, run the plugin to enable the connector.
- Navigate to the remote-restapi-plugin/config directory, and replace the creds.json file with the creds.json file that you have downloaded while creating the plugin key.
- Run the run.sh script to start the plugin.
Task 6: To test the plugin
BMC recommends that you test whether the plugin is able to connect to the automation tool or application successfully before creating automation policies.
- In the BMC Helix Intelligent Automation console, click Connectors > PluginKeys.
- Click Actions > Test against the plugin that is used to configure the connector.
A message appears that shows that the connection is successful.
The Ansible Tower connector is configured and appears in the Configured Connectors tab with the status as Connected.
If the connector is not successfully connected, the status appear as Disconnected. Click the icon to view the error message and fix the configuration issue.
Where to go from here
Now that the connector is configured successfully, you can create policies to execute actions supported by Ansible Tower. For more information, see Launching-a-job-template.