netscaler.adc.change_password module – Change password of a user on a NetScaler ADC node.

Note

This module is part of the netscaler.adc collection (version 2.6.0).

It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install netscaler.adc.

To use it in a playbook, specify: netscaler.adc.change_password.

New in netscaler.adc 2.0.0

Synopsis

  • Configuration for changing password of a user on a NetScaler ADC node.

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

api_path

string

Base NITRO API path.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

Default: "nitro/v1/config"

first_boot

boolean / required

true if the NetScaler ADC node is booting for the first time after installation.

false if the NetScaler ADC node is already configured and running.

Choices:

  • false

  • true

managed_netscaler_instance_id

string

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The ID of the managed NetScaler instance to which NetScaler Console

has to configure as a proxy server.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

managed_netscaler_instance_ip

string

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The IP of the managed NetScaler instance to which NetScaler Console

has to configure as a proxy server.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

managed_netscaler_instance_name

string

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The name of the managed NetScaler instance to which NetScaler Console

has to configure as a proxy server.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

managed_netscaler_instance_password

string

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The password of the managed NetScaler instance.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

In Settings > Administration > System Configurations > Basic Settings,

if you select Prompt Credentials for Instance Login,

ensure to configure username and password of a managed instance.

managed_netscaler_instance_username

string

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The username of the managed NetScaler instance.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

In Settings > Administration > System Configurations > Basic Settings,

if you select Prompt Credentials for Instance Login,

ensure to configure username and password of a managed instance.

netscaler_console_as_proxy_server

boolean

added in netscaler.adc 2.6.0

The IP address of the NetScaler ADC appliance acting as a proxy server.

Define only in case of an ADM service proxy call

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

new_password

string / required

New desired password of the user on the NetScaler ADC node.

nitro_auth_token

string

The authentication token provided by a login operation.

nitro_pass

string

The password with which to authenticate to the NetScaler ADC node.

nitro_protocol

string

Which protocol to use when accessing the nitro API objects.

Choices:

  • "http"

  • "https" ← (default)

nitro_user

string

The username with which to authenticate to the NetScaler ADC node.

nsip

string / required

The ip address of the NetScaler ADC appliance where the nitro API calls will be made.

The port can be specified with the colon (:). E.g. 192.168.1.1:555.

password

string / required

Current password of the user on the NetScaler ADC node.

save_config

boolean

If true the module will save the configuration on the NetScaler ADC node if it makes any changes.

The module will not save the configuration on the NetScaler ADC node if it made no changes.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

state

string

The state of the resource being configured by the module on the NetScaler ADC node.

When present the resource will be created if needed and configured according to the module’s parameters.

Choices:

  • "present" ← (default)

username

string / required

Username of the user whose password to be changed

validate_certs

boolean

If false, SSL certificates will not be validated. This should only be used on personally controlled sites using self-signed certificates.

Choices:

  • false

  • true ← (default)

Notes

Note

Examples

---
- name: Sample change_password
  hosts: demo_netscalers

  gather_facts: false

  tasks:
    # Change password of previously logged in user on a NetScaler ADC node
    - name: V2 | Sample Task | change_password
      delegate_to: localhost
      netscaler.adc.change_password:
        # nsip: 10.0.0.1 # This can also be given via NETSCALER_NSIP environment variable
        # nitro_protocol: https # This can also be given via NETSCALER_NITRO_PROTOCOL environment variable
        # validate_certs: false # This can also be given via NETSCALER_VALIDATE_CERTS environment variable
        # save_config: false # This can also be given via NETSCALER_SAVE_CONFIG environment variable

        username: nsroot
        password: strongpassword
        new_password: newverystrongpassword
        first_boot: false

    # Change password of first time login (first_boot) user on a NetScaler ADC node
    - name: V2 | Sample Task | change_password
      delegate_to: localhost
      netscaler.adc.change_password:
        # nsip: 10.0.0.1 # This can also be given via NETSCALER_NSIP environment variable
        # nitro_protocol: https # This can also be given via NETSCALER_NITRO_PROTOCOL environment variable
        # validate_certs: false # This can also be given via NETSCALER_VALIDATE_CERTS environment variable
        # save_config: false # This can also be given via NETSCALER_SAVE_CONFIG environment variable

        username: nsroot
        password: strongpassword
        new_password: newverystrongpassword
        first_boot: true

Return Values

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

Key

Description

changed

boolean

Indicates if any change is made by the module. `change_password` module always returns `true` unless it fails.

Returned: always

Sample: true

failed

boolean

Indicates if the module failed or not

Returned: always

Sample: false

loglines

list / elements=string

list of logged messages by the module

Returned: always

Sample: ["message 1", "message 2"]

Authors

  • Sumanth Lingappa (@sumanth-lingappa)