rishavnandi/ansible_homelab

Ansible playbooks to quickly setup a homelab. The playbook will update the system, install Docker, and then deploy the Docker containers.

HCLPythondockeransibleansible-playbookautomationdebianubuntuterraformfedoracentosrhelhomelab
This is stars and forks stats for /rishavnandi/ansible_homelab repository. As of 30 Apr, 2024 this repository has 214 stars and 22 forks.

Ansible homelab Ansible playbooks to quickly setup a homelab. These playbooks are designed to be run on a fresh install of Ubuntu/Debian or RedHat based distros (Fedora, CentOS). The playbook will update the system, install Docker, and then deploy the Docker containers. Bootstrap script I have included a bootstrap script that clones the repo, asks the user for the username and IP address of the server, and then runs the playbook. You can run the script like this: wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rishavnandi/ansible_homelab/master/bootstrap.py && python3 bootstrap.py Using Traefik as a reverse proxy I have finally switched from using nginx proxy manager to using Traefik as a reverse proxy. I have included a playbook to install Traefik and configure it to work with the apps. For traefik to pull certificates I use cloudflare, so you will need to create a cloudflare account and add your domain to it. You will also need to create an API token in cloudflare and add it to the group_vars/vars.yml file. For the traefik user basic auth, I use a password hash, you can generate a password hash using the htpasswd command, for example: echo $(htpasswd -nB <USER>) | sed -e s/\\$/\\$\\$/g It will prompt you for a password, enter the password and it will output the password hash, copy the output and remove any double $ characters as they are only needed when using it directly in a docker compose file. Then add the password hash to the group_vars/vars.yml file. Using Authelia as a second factor authentication I have also added support for Authelia, which is a second factor authentication service. There are many variables that need to be set for Authelia to work, since I also use the google smtp server to send password reset emails. jwt_secret: Needs to be a random string upto 64 characters I believe sqlite_encryption_key: Needs to be a random string atleast 20 characters google_mail_id: Of the account which will be used to send the password reset emails google_insecure_app_password: You will need to generate an insecure app password for authelia to use, check more details in Authelia docs authelia_admin_mail: email of the authelia admin user authelia_admin_argon2id: argon2id hash of the password for admin user, see how to generate one in the Authelia docs Blog post I have written a blog post about this repo, you can find it here: https://www.rishavnandi.com/posts/Ansible_homelab Usage Clone the repo to your local machine git clone https://github.com/rishavnandi/ansible_homelab.git Update the inventory file with the IP address of your server and the user you want to use to connect to the server and add the path to your ssh key, incase you are not using ssh keys (you should always use ssh keys for security) then you can replace the ansible_ssh_private_key_file with ansible_ssh_pass and add the password for the user. Also update the group_vars/vars.yml file with the correct variables for your setup, for the pgid and puid, you can find the correct values by running the id command on your server and using the values for the uid and gid fields. Run the playbook ansible-playbook main.yml You'll notice that for most apps the ports are not exposed, as I prefer exposing only the neccessary ports and for the rest I add them to a custom Docker network and then use nginx proxy manager to access the apps, a benefit of putting all the containers on a custom Docker network is that you can reference them in nginx proxy manager using their container name instead of the IP address, which makes it easier to manage. Removing unwanted apps If you don't want to run some of the apps, you can easily remove them from the main.yml file since all the containers are stored as tasks in the tasks folder and are included in the main.yml file. Info about the apps If you want to learn more about any of the apps, you can check out the awesome selfhosted repo. Included Terraform script I have included a Terraform script that I use to quickly spin up an AWS instance to run the playbook on. You can use this script to spin up an instance, or you can use it as a reference to create your own Terraform script. You can find more info about using Terraform with AWS here: https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/aws-build Goals Add support for Ubuntu 22.04 Add support for Debian 11 Add support for RedHat based distros (Fedora, CentOS) Find a permanent fix for the Docker install issue on Ubuntu 22.04 Credits Jeff Geerling for all the awesome Ansible content linuxserver.io for the Docker containers Ansible docs for the Ansible documentation Wolfgang's infra repo for the Docker install fix for Ubuntu 22.04 Star History
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