cisco.meraki.meraki_action_batch module -- Manage Action Batch jobs within the Meraki Dashboard.

Note

This module is part of the cisco.meraki collection (version 2.18.2).

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.meraki.

To use it in a playbook, specify: cisco.meraki.meraki_action_batch.

DEPRECATED

Removed in:

version 3.0.0

Why:

Updated modules released with increased functionality

Alternative:

cisco.meraki.organizations_action_batches

Synopsis

  • Allows for management of Action Batch jobs for Meraki.

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

action_batch_id

string

ID of an existing Action Batch job.

actions

list / elements=dictionary

List of actions the job should execute.

body

any

Required body of action.

operation

string

resource

string

Path to Action Batch resource.

auth_key

string / required

Authentication key provided by the dashboard. Required if environmental variable MERAKI_KEY is not set.

confirmed

boolean

Whether job is to be executed.

Choices:

host

string

Hostname for Meraki dashboard.

Can be used to access regional Meraki environments, such as China.

Default: :ansible-option-default:`"api.meraki.com"`

internal_error_retry_time

integer

Number of seconds to retry if server returns an internal server error.

Default: :ansible-option-default:`60`

net_id

string

ID of network, if applicable.

net_name

string

Name of network, if applicable.

org_id

string

ID of organization.

org_name

aliases: organization

string

Name of organization.

output_format

string

Instructs module whether response keys should be snake case (ex. net_id) or camel case (ex. netId).

Choices:

output_level

string

Set amount of debug output during module execution.

Choices:

rate_limit_retry_time

integer

Number of seconds to retry if rate limiter is triggered.

Default: :ansible-option-default:`165`

state

string

Specifies whether to lookup, create, or delete an Action Batch job.

Choices:

synchronous

boolean

Whether job is a synchronous or asynchronous job.

Choices:

timeout

integer

Time to timeout for HTTP requests.

Default: :ansible-option-default:`30`

use_https

boolean

If no, it will use HTTP. Otherwise it will use HTTPS.

Only useful for internal Meraki developers.

Choices:

use_proxy

boolean

If no, it will not use a proxy, even if one is defined in an environment variable on the target hosts.

Choices:

validate_certs

boolean

Whether to validate HTTP certificates.

Choices:

Notes

Note

  • This module is in active development and the interface may change.

  • More information about the Meraki API can be found at https://dashboard.meraki.com/api_docs.

  • Some of the options are likely only used for developers within Meraki.

  • As of Ansible 2.9, Meraki modules output keys as snake case. To use camel case, set the ANSIBLE_MERAKI_FORMAT environment variable to camelcase.

  • Ansible's Meraki modules will stop supporting camel case output in Ansible 2.13. Please update your playbooks.

  • Check Mode downloads the current configuration from the dashboard, then compares changes against this download. Check Mode will report changed if there are differences in the configurations, but does not submit changes to the API for validation of change.

Examples

- name: Query all Action Batches
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: query
  delegate_to: localhost

- name: Query one Action Batch job
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: query
    action_batch_id: 12345
  delegate_to: localhost

- name: Create an Action Batch job
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: present
    actions:
    - resource: '/organizations/org_123/networks'
      operation: 'create'
      body:
        name: 'AnsibleActionBatch1'
        productTypes:
          - 'switch'
  delegate_to: localhost

- name: Update Action Batch job
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: present
    action_batch_id: 12345
    synchronous: false

- name: Create an Action Batch job with multiple actions
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: present
    actions:
    - resource: '/organizations/org_123/networks'
      operation: 'create'
      body:
        name: 'AnsibleActionBatch2'
        productTypes:
          - 'switch'
    - resource: '/organizations/org_123/networks'
      operation: 'create'
      body:
        name: 'AnsibleActionBatch3'
        productTypes:
          - 'switch'
  delegate_to: localhost

- name: Delete an Action Batch job
  meraki_action_batch:
    auth_key: abc123
    org_name: YourOrg
    state: absent
    action_batch_id: 12345
  delegate_to: localhost

Return Values

Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:

Key

Description

data

complex

Information about action batch jobs.

Returned: always

actions

dictionary

List of actions associated to job.

Returned: success

confirmed

boolean

Whether action batch job was confirmed for execution.

Returned: success

id

string

Unique ID of action batch job.

Returned: success

Sample: :ansible-rv-sample-value:`"123"`

organization_id

string

Unique ID of organization which owns batch job.

Returned: success

Sample: :ansible-rv-sample-value:`"2930418"`

status

complex

Information about the action batch job state.

Returned: success

completed

boolean

Whether job has completed.

Returned: success

created_resources

list / elements=string

List of resources created during execution.

Returned: success

Sample: :ansible-rv-sample-value:`[{"id": 100, "uri": "/networks/L\_XXXXX/groupPolicies/100"}]`

errors

list / elements=string

List of errors, if any, created during execution.

Returned: success

failed

boolean

Whether execution of action batch job failed.

Returned: success

synchronous

boolean

Whether action batch job executes synchronously or asynchronously.

Returned: success

Status

  • This module will be removed in version 3.0.0. [deprecated]

  • For more information see DEPRECATED.

Authors

  • Kevin Breit (@kbreit)