* Describe each of the following components in Ansible, including the relationship between them:
* Task
* Module
* Play
* Playbook
* Role
```
Task ā a call to a specific Ansible module
Module ā the actual unit of code executed by Ansible on your own host or a remote host. Modules are indexed by category (database, file, network, ā¦) and also referred as task plugins.
Play ā One or more tasks executed on a given host(s)
Playbook ā One or more plays. Each play can be executed on the same or different hosts
Role ā Ansible roles allows you to group resources based on certain functionality/service such that they can be easily reused. In a role, you have directories for variables, defaults, files, templates, handlers, tasks, and metadata. You can then use the role by simply specifying it in your playbook.
```
* Write a task to create the directory ā/tmp/new_directoryā
```
- name: Create a new directory
file:
path: "/tmp/new_directory"
state: directory
```
* What would be the result of the following play?
```
---
- name: Print information about my host
hosts: localhost
gather_facts: 'no'
tasks:
- name: Print hostname
debug:
msg: "It's me, {{ ansible_hostname }}"
```
```
When given a written code, always inspect it thoroughly. If your answer is āthis will failā then you are right. We are using a fact (ansible_hostname), which is a gathered piece of information from the host we are running on. But in this case, we disabled facts gathering (gather_facts: no) so the variable would be undefined which will result in failure.
```
* Write a playbook to install āzlibā and āvimā on all hosts if the file ā/tmp/marioā exists on the system.
```
---
- hosts: all
vars:
mario_file: /tmp/mario
package_list:
- 'zlib'
- 'vim'
tasks:
- name: Check for mario file
stat:
path: "{{ mario_file }}"
register: mario_f
- name: Install zlib and vim if mario file exists
become: "yes"
package:
name: "{{ item }}"
state: present
with_items: "{{ package_list }}"
when: mario_f.stat.exists
```
* Write a playbook to deploy the file ā/tmp/system_infoā on all hosts except for controllers group, with the following content
```
I'm <HOSTNAME> and my operating system is <OS>
```
replace <HOSTNAME> and <OS> with the actual data for the specific host you are running on
The playbook to deploy the system_info file
```
---
- name: Deploy /tmp/system_info file
hosts: all:!controllers
tasks:
- name: Deploy /tmp/system_info
template:
src: system_info.j2
dest: /tmp/system_info
```
The content of the system_info.j2 template
```
# {{ ansible_managed }}
I'm {{ ansible_hostname }} and my operating system is {{ ansible_distribution }
* What happens when you run `docker run hello-world`?
* How do you run a container?
* What do you see when you run `docker ps`?
* What `docker commit` does? when will you use it?
## Python
###### beginner
* What data type supported in Python and which of them are mutable?
What function can you use to show that a certain data type is mutable?
```
The mutable data types are:
List
Dictionary
Set
The immutable data types are:
Numbers (int, float, ...)
String
Bool
Tuple
The id function can be used to check if a given variable is mutable or not.
```
* What is PEP8? Give an example of 5 style guidelines
```
PEP8 is a list of coding conventions and style guidelines for Python
5 style guidelines:
1. Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters.
2. Surround top-level function and class definitions with two blank lines.
3. Use commas when making a tuple of one element
4. Use spaces (and not tabs) for indentation
5. Use 4 spaces per indentation level
```
###### Intermediate
* What _ is used for in Python?
```
1. Translation lookup in i18n
2. Hold the result of the last executed expression or statement
3. As a general purpose "throwaway" variable name. For example: x, y, _ = get_data() (x and y are used but since we don't care about third variable, we "threw it away").
```
* Sort a list of lists by the second item of each nested list
```
li = [[1, 4], [2, 1], [3, 9], [4, 2], [4, 5]]
sorted(x, key=lambda l: l[1])
```
* You have the following lists: [{'name': 'Mario', 'food': ['mushrooms', 'goombas']}, {'name': 'Luigi', 'food': ['mushrooms', 'turtles']}]
Extract all type of foods. Final output should be: {'mushrooms', 'goombas', 'turtles'}