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ec2_eni – Create and optionally attach an Elastic Network Interface (ENI) to an instance
New in version 2.0.
Synopsis
- Create and optionally attach an Elastic Network Interface (ENI) to an instance. If an ENI ID or private_ip is provided, the existing ENI (if any) will be modified. The ‘attached’ parameter controls the attachment status of the network interface.
 
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- python >= 2.6
 - boto
 
Parameters
| Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments | 
|---|---|---|
| allow_reassignment
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 2.7
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Indicates whether to allow an IP address that is already assigned to another network interface or instance to be reassigned to the specified network interface.
         | 
     
| attached
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 2.2
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Specifies if network interface should be attached or detached from instance. If omitted, attachment status won't change
         | 
     
| aws_access_key
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        AWS access key. If not set then the value of the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_ACCESS_KEY or EC2_ACCESS_KEY environment variable is used.
        
       aliases: ec2_access_key, access_key  | 
     |
| aws_secret_key
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        AWS secret key. If not set then the value of the AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, AWS_SECRET_KEY, or EC2_SECRET_KEY environment variable is used.
        
       aliases: ec2_secret_key, secret_key  | 
     |
| debug_botocore_endpoint_logs
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 2.8
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Use a botocore.endpoint logger to parse the unique (rather than total) "resource:action" API calls made during a task, outputing the set to the resource_actions key in the task results. Use the aws_resource_action callback to output to total list made during a playbook. The ANSIBLE_DEBUG_BOTOCORE_LOGS environment variable may also be used.
         | 
     
| delete_on_termination
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Delete the interface when the instance it is attached to is terminated. You can only specify this flag when the interface is being modified, not on creation.
         | 
     
| description
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        Optional description of the ENI.
         | 
     |
| device_index
        
        -
         | 
      Default: 
        0
         | 
      
        
        The index of the device for the network interface attachment on the instance.
         | 
     
| ec2_url
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        Url to use to connect to EC2 or your Eucalyptus cloud (by default the module will use EC2 endpoints). Ignored for modules where region is required. Must be specified for all other modules if region is not used. If not set then the value of the EC2_URL environment variable, if any, is used.
         | 
     |
| eni_id
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        The ID of the ENI (to modify); if null and state is present, a new eni will be created.
         | 
     |
| force_detach
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Force detachment of the interface. This applies either when explicitly detaching the interface by setting instance_id to None or when deleting an interface with state=absent.
         | 
     
| instance_id
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        Instance ID that you wish to attach ENI to. Since version 2.2, use the 'attached' parameter to attach or detach an ENI. Prior to 2.2, to detach an ENI from an instance, use 'None'.
         | 
     |
| private_ip_address
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        Private IP address.
         | 
     |
| profile
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        Uses a boto profile. Only works with boto >= 2.24.0.
         | 
     |
| purge_secondary_private_ip_addresses
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 2.5
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        To be used with secondary_private_ip_addresses to determine whether or not to remove any secondary IP addresses other than those specified. Set secondary_private_ip_addresses to an empty list to purge all secondary addresses.
         | 
     
| region
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The AWS region to use. If not specified then the value of the AWS_REGION or EC2_REGION environment variable, if any, is used. See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html#ec2_region
        
       aliases: aws_region, ec2_region  | 
     |
| secondary_private_ip_address_count
        
        -
        
       
        added in 2.2
         | 
      
        
        The number of secondary IP addresses to assign to the network interface. This option is mutually exclusive of secondary_private_ip_addresses
         | 
     |
| secondary_private_ip_addresses
        
        -
        
       
        added in 2.2
         | 
      
        
        A list of IP addresses to assign as secondary IP addresses to the network interface. This option is mutually exclusive of secondary_private_ip_address_count
         | 
     |
| security_groups
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        List of security groups associated with the interface. Only used when state=present. Since version 2.2, you can specify security groups by ID or by name or a combination of both. Prior to 2.2, you can specify only by ID.
         | 
     |
| security_token
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        AWS STS security token. If not set then the value of the AWS_SECURITY_TOKEN or EC2_SECURITY_TOKEN environment variable is used.
        
       aliases: access_token  | 
     |
| source_dest_check
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        By default, interfaces perform source/destination checks. NAT instances however need this check to be disabled. You can only specify this flag when the interface is being modified, not on creation.
         | 
     
| state
        
        -
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Create or delete ENI
         | 
     
| subnet_id
        
        -
         | 
      
        
        ID of subnet in which to create the ENI.
         | 
     |
| validate_certs
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        When set to "no", SSL certificates will not be validated for boto versions >= 2.6.0.
         | 
     
Notes
Note
- This module identifies and ENI based on either the eni_id, a combination of private_ip_address and subnet_id, or a combination of instance_id and device_id. Any of these options will let you specify a particular ENI.
 - If parameters are not set within the module, the following environment variables can be used in decreasing order of precedence 
AWS_URLorEC2_URL,AWS_ACCESS_KEY_IDorAWS_ACCESS_KEYorEC2_ACCESS_KEY,AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEYorAWS_SECRET_KEYorEC2_SECRET_KEY,AWS_SECURITY_TOKENorEC2_SECURITY_TOKEN,AWS_REGIONorEC2_REGION - Ansible uses the boto configuration file (typically ~/.boto) if no credentials are provided. See https://boto.readthedocs.io/en/latest/boto_config_tut.html
 AWS_REGIONorEC2_REGIONcan be typically be used to specify the AWS region, when required, but this can also be configured in the boto config file
Examples
# Note: These examples do not set authentication details, see the AWS Guide for details.
# Create an ENI. As no security group is defined, ENI will be created in default security group
- ec2_eni:
    private_ip_address: 172.31.0.20
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    state: present
# Create an ENI and attach it to an instance
- ec2_eni:
    instance_id: i-xxxxxxx
    device_index: 1
    private_ip_address: 172.31.0.20
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    state: present
# Create an ENI with two secondary addresses
- ec2_eni:
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    state: present
    secondary_private_ip_address_count: 2
# Assign a secondary IP address to an existing ENI
# This will purge any existing IPs
- ec2_eni:
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    eni_id: eni-yyyyyyyy
    state: present
    secondary_private_ip_addresses:
      - 172.16.1.1
# Remove any secondary IP addresses from an existing ENI
- ec2_eni:
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    eni_id: eni-yyyyyyyy
    state: present
    secondary_private_ip_address_count: 0
# Destroy an ENI, detaching it from any instance if necessary
- ec2_eni:
    eni_id: eni-xxxxxxx
    force_detach: yes
    state: absent
# Update an ENI
- ec2_eni:
    eni_id: eni-xxxxxxx
    description: "My new description"
    state: present
# Update an ENI identifying it by private_ip_address and subnet_id
- ec2_eni:
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxx
    private_ip_address: 172.16.1.1
    description: "My new description"
# Detach an ENI from an instance
- ec2_eni:
    eni_id: eni-xxxxxxx
    instance_id: None
    state: present
### Delete an interface on termination
# First create the interface
- ec2_eni:
    instance_id: i-xxxxxxx
    device_index: 1
    private_ip_address: 172.31.0.20
    subnet_id: subnet-xxxxxxxx
    state: present
  register: eni
# Modify the interface to enable the delete_on_terminaton flag
- ec2_eni:
    eni_id: "{{ eni.interface.id }}"
    delete_on_termination: true
  Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
| Key | Returned | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| interface
        
        complex
         | 
      when state != absent | 
        
        Network interface attributes
          | 
     |
| description
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        interface description
         Sample:
        
       
        Firewall network interface
         | 
     ||
| groups
        
        list of dictionaries
         | 
      
        
        list of security groups
         Sample:
        
       
        [{'sg-f8a8a9da': 'default'}]
         | 
     ||
| id
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        network interface id
         Sample:
        
       
        eni-1d889198
         | 
     ||
| mac_address
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        interface's physical address
         Sample:
        
       
        00:00:5E:00:53:23
         | 
     ||
| owner_id
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        aws account id
         Sample:
        
       
        812381371
         | 
     ||
| private_ip_address
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        primary ip address of this interface
         Sample:
        
       
        10.20.30.40
         | 
     ||
| private_ip_addresses
        
        list of dictionaries
         | 
      
        
        list of all private ip addresses associated to this interface
         Sample:
        
       
        [{'primary_address': True, 'private_ip_address': '10.20.30.40'}]
         | 
     ||
| source_dest_check
        
        boolean
         | 
      
        
        value of source/dest check flag
         Sample:
        
       
        True
         | 
     ||
| status
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        network interface status
         Sample:
        
       
        pending
         | 
     ||
| subnet_id
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        which vpc subnet the interface is bound
         Sample:
        
       
        subnet-b0a0393c
         | 
     ||
| vpc_id
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        which vpc this network interface is bound
         Sample:
        
       
        vpc-9a9a9da
         | 
     ||
Status
- This module is not guaranteed to have a backwards compatible interface. [preview]
 - This module is maintained by the Ansible Community. [community]
 
Authors
- Rob White (@wimnat)
 
Hint
If you notice any issues in this documentation you can edit this document to improve it.
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
 https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.8/modules/ec2_eni_module.html