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Ansarch

Ansarch is a set of Ansible playbooks for installing, configuring, and maintaining Arch Linux hosts. It can also perform the basic tasks necessary to safeguard a freshly installed server, so you can go from nothing to a relatively secure system in no time flat.

Overview

If you apply the entire site.yml playbook to your hosts, the following tasks will be handled for you by the "common" role:

  • an updated pacman mirrorlist will be downloaded
  • an non-root administrative user will be created
  • OpenSSH will be configured more securely
  • basic ingress firewall rules will be put into place
  • kernel parameters will be set to harden the network stack
  • the Network Time Protocol (NTP) service will be configured

Note that you don't have to apply all of these tasks; everything is tagged for flexibility.

Initial Setup

$ git clone https://github.com/ulygit/ansarch.git
$ cd ansarch/

Prerequisites

  • Ansible v1.3+
  • Arch Linux host(s)
  • root-level access on the host(s), directly or via sudo
  • an inventory file

For the inventory hosts file, it's easiest to keep it in the same directory as Ansarch so Ansible can find the correct group_vars. By default, things are configured to look for a file named "hosts", but you can override that either by setting the ANSIBLE_HOSTS environment variable to point to its full path, or use the -i <inventory file> flag on all of your Ansible commands.

Bootstrapping

Arch Linux doesn’t have Python v2 installed by default, which is a dependency for Ansible. Luckily we can use the raw module to fix that:

For the bootstrapping instructions, I'm assuming that you can connect to your hosts as the root user...adjust these commands as necessary.

$ ansible all -m raw -a '/usr/bin/pacman -Sy --noconfirm python2' --user=root

Always having to specify the user can get annoying, and using root directly isn't the most secure practice. Instead we can create a new administrative user based on your current username and ssh key by running just the "bootstrap" tagged tasks from the playbook:

$ ansible-playbook site.yml --tags=bootstrap --user=root

Now you should be able to connect as yourself for all future tasks:

$ ansible all -m ping

Firewall Considerations

Only ssh (TCP port 22) is allowed through the firewall out of the box, so you'll have to update the appropriate templates if you want to expose other services.

Playbook Options

Most of the tasks performed by Ansarch can be customized by setting the value of particular variables. The default values for these variables are set and documented in the group_vars/all file on the controlling machine.

If you just want to override the values for a single run, you can use the --extra-vars flag:

$ ansible-playbook site.yml --extra-vars="update_mirrorlist=true"

License

Ansarch is provided under the terms of the ISC License.

Copyright © 2013–2014, Aaron Bull Schaefer. Copyright © 2017 Ulises M.

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Ansible playbook for configuring Arch Linux

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