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About Luca Berton

Luca Berton is an Ansible automation expert, author of 8 Ansible books published by Apress and Leanpub including "Ansible for VMware by Examples" and "Ansible for Kubernetes by Example", and creator of the Ansible Pilot YouTube channel. He shares practical automation knowledge through tutorials, books, and video courses to help IT professionals and DevOps engineers master infrastructure automation.

How to install Ansible in RHEL 9.5 — Ansible install

By Luca Berton · Published 2024-01-01 · Category: installation

Install Ansible on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.5 with this 2026 guide. Step-by-step instructions using dnf.

How to install Ansible in RHEL 9.5 — Ansible install

Introduction

RHEL 9.5 provides a stable and reliable platform for running Ansible automation. This guide walks you through installing Ansible on RHEL 9.5, ensuring you have everything needed to automate your infrastructure.

See also: How to install Ansible in Fedora 40 — Ansible install

Prerequisites

Before you begin, ensure that you have: • Access to a RHEL 9.5 system with root or sudo privileges. • An active internet connection to download necessary packages. • Python 3.12 or later installed (included by default).

Step-by-Step Installation

Connect to Your Server Initiate an SSH connection from your terminal:
ssh devops@server.example.com
Switch to Root User For installing system-wide software:
sudo su
Update System Packages Before installing any new software, update your system:
dnf update

Confirm any prompts to ensure your system has the latest updates. Install Ansible Using the dnf package manager, install Ansible:

dnf install ansible-core

This command installs Ansible along with its dependencies. Confirm the installation when prompted. Verify the Installation Once installation is complete, check the installed version:

ansible --version

This command displays the version of Ansible and configuration details, confirming a successful installation.

See also: How to install Ansible in Fedora 43 — Ansible install

Configuration and First Steps

Configure Ansible Adjust settings in /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg to customize default inventory file, privilege escalation, and more. Edit the Inventory File Define your managed hosts:
[local]
localhost ansible_connection=local

[webservers] web1.example.com web2.example.com

Test Ansible Connectivity Ensure Ansible can communicate with your hosts:

ansible all -m ping

Expected output:

localhost | SUCCESS => {
    "ansible_facts": {
        "discovered_interpreter_python": "/usr/bin/python3"
    },
    "changed": false,
    "ping": "pong"
}

Conclusion

With Ansible installed on RHEL 9.5, you are ready to automate your infrastructure. Start by creating simple playbooks and explore the vast library of modules available through Ansible Galaxy.

For more Ansible tutorials and guides, explore the complete article collection on Ansible Pilot.

See also: How to install Ansible in Fedora 44 — Ansible install

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