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Git installation

Using Git as the source of collections in Ansible provides an easy way to implement all the changes once they’re part of the development branch without waiting for a new tagged version shipped to Ansible Galaxy.

Use Git as the source of collection

In this setup, the Git repository will be used by Ansible as a collection. It’s useful when working on feature development as we can change the Git branch and test code live.

Clone the remote repository

# Clone repository
git clone https://github.com/aristanetworks/ansible-avd.git

# Move to git folder
cd ansible-avd

Update your ansible.cfg

In your project, update your ansible.cfg file to point collection_paths to your local version of ansible-avd

  • Get the full path to your newly cloned AVD repository.
# Get your current location
$ pwd
/path/to/ansible/avd/collection_repository
  • Configure your project to use the AVD repository as a source of collections:
# Update your ansible.cfg in your playbook project
# $ vim ansible.cfg
[default]
...
collections_paths = /path/to/ansible/avd/collection_repository
...

Build & install collection from Git

This approach uses an Ansible collection package built from the current Git version and installed locally.

Clone repository

git clone https://github.com/aristanetworks/ansible-avd.git
cd ansible-avd

Build and install collection

This section should be used only to test collection packaging and to create an offline package to ship on your internal resources if required.

ansible-galaxy collection build --force ansible_collections/arista/avd
ansible-galaxy collection install arista-avd-<VERSION>.tar.gz