Provides modules for Ansible to manage MikroTik RouterOS instances.
You can find documentation for the modules and plugins in this collection here.
Tested with the current Ansible 2.9, ansible-base 2.10, ansible-core 2.11, ansible-core 2.12, ansible-core 2.13, ansible-core 2.14, ansible-core 2.15, ansible-core 2.16, and ansible-core 2.17 releases and the current development version of ansible-core. Ansible versions before 2.9.10 are not supported.
The exact requirements for every module are listed in the module documentation.
The collection supports the network_cli
connection.
Please note that community.routeros.api
module does not support Windows jump hosts!
Browsing the latest collection documentation will show docs for the latest version released in the Ansible package, not the latest version of the collection released on Galaxy.
Browsing the devel collection documentation shows docs for the latest version released on Galaxy.
We also separately publish latest commit collection documentation which shows docs for the latest commit in the main
branch.
If you use the Ansible package and do not update collections independently, use latest. If you install or update this collection directly from Galaxy, use devel. If you are looking to contribute, use latest commit.
community.routeros.api
community.routeros.api_facts
community.routeros.api_find_and_modify
community.routeros.api_info
community.routeros.api_modify
community.routeros.command
community.routeros.facts
You can find documentation for the modules and plugins in this collection here.
See Ansible Using collections for general detail on using collections.
There are two approaches for using this collection. The command
and facts
modules use the network_cli
connection and connect with SSH. The api
module connects with the HTTP/HTTPS API.
The terminal-based modules in this collection (community.routeros.command
and community.routeros.facts
) do not support arbitrary symbols in router's identity. If you are having trouble connecting to your device, please make sure that your MikroTik's identity contains only alphanumeric characters and dashes. Also, the community.routeros.command
module does not support nesting commands and expects every command to start with a forward slash (/
). Running the following command will produce an error.
- community.routeros.command:
commands:
- /ip
- print
Example inventory hosts
file:
[routers]
router ansible_host=192.168.1.1
[routers:vars]
ansible_connection=ansible.netcommon.network_cli
ansible_network_os=community.routeros.routeros
ansible_user=admin
ansible_ssh_pass=test1234
Example playbook:
---
- name: RouterOS test with network_cli connection
hosts: routers
gather_facts: false
tasks:
- name: Run a command
community.routeros.command:
commands:
- /system resource print
register: system_resource_print
- name: Print its output
ansible.builtin.debug:
var: system_resource_print.stdout_lines
- name: Retrieve facts
community.routeros.facts:
- ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "First IP address: {{ ansible_net_all_ipv4_addresses[0] }}"
Example playbook:
---
- name: RouterOS test with API
hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
vars:
hostname: 192.168.1.1
username: admin
password: test1234
module_defaults:
group/community.routeros.api:
hostname: "{{ hostname }}"
password: "{{ password }}"
username: "{{ username }}"
tls: true
force_no_cert: false
validate_certs: true
validate_cert_hostname: true
ca_path: /path/to/ca-certificate.pem
tasks:
- name: Get "ip address print"
community.routeros.api:
path: ip address
register: print_path
- name: Print the result
ansible.builtin.debug:
var: print_path.msg
- name: Change IP address to 192.168.1.1 for interface bridge
community.routeros.api_find_and_modify:
path: ip address
find:
interface: bridge
values:
address: "192.168.1.1/24"
- name: Retrieve facts
community.routeros.api_facts:
- ansible.builtin.debug:
msg: "First IP address: {{ ansible_net_all_ipv4_addresses[0] }}"
We're following the general Ansible contributor guidelines; see Ansible Community Guide.
If you want to clone this repositority (or a fork of it) to improve it, you can proceed as follows:
- Create a directory
ansible_collections/community
; - In there, checkout this repository (or a fork) as
routeros
; - Add the directory containing
ansible_collections
to your ANSIBLE_COLLECTIONS_PATH.
See Ansible's dev guide for more information.
See the changelog.
We plan to regularly release minor and patch versions, whenever new features are added or bugs fixed. Our collection follows semantic versioning, so breaking changes will only happen in major releases.
- Ansible Collection overview
- Ansible User guide
- Ansible Developer guide
- Ansible Collections Checklist
- Ansible Community code of conduct
- The Bullhorn (the Ansible Contributor newsletter)
- Changes impacting Contributors
This collection is primarily licensed and distributed as a whole under the GNU General Public License v3.0 or later.
See LICENSES/GPL-3.0-or-later.txt for the full text.
Parts of the collection are licensed under the BSD 2-Clause license.
All files have a machine readable SDPX-License-Identifier:
comment denoting its respective license(s) or an equivalent entry in an accompanying .license
file. Only changelog fragments (which will not be part of a release) are covered by a blanket statement in .reuse/dep5
. This conforms to the REUSE specification.