Asynchronous Actions and Polling
================================

By default tasks in playbooks block, meaning the connections stay open
until the task is done on each node.  This may not always be desirable, or you may
be running operations that take longer than the SSH timeout.

The easiest way to do this is
to kick them off all at once and then poll until they are done.

You will also want to use asynchronous mode on very long running
operations that might be subject to timeout.

To launch a task asynchronously, specify its maximum runtime
and how frequently you would like to poll for status.  The default
poll value is 10 seconds if you do not specify a value for `poll`::

    ---

    - hosts: all
      remote_user: root

      tasks:

      - name: simulate long running op (15 sec), wait for up to 45 sec, poll every 5 sec
        command: /bin/sleep 15
        async: 45
        poll: 5

.. note::
   There is no default for the async time limit.  If you leave off the
   'async' keyword, the task runs synchronously, which is Ansible's
   default.

Alternatively, if you do not need to wait on the task to complete, you may
"fire and forget" by specifying a poll value of 0::

    ---

    - hosts: all
      remote_user: root

      tasks:

      - name: simulate long running op, allow to run for 45 sec, fire and forget
        command: /bin/sleep 15
        async: 45
        poll: 0

.. note::
   You shouldn't "fire and forget" with operations that require
   exclusive locks, such as yum transactions, if you expect to run other
   commands later in the playbook against those same resources.

.. note::
   Using a higher value for ``--forks`` will result in kicking off asynchronous
   tasks even faster.  This also increases the efficiency of polling.

If you would like to perform a variation of the "fire and forget" where you 
"fire and forget, check on it later" you can perform a task similar to the 
following::

      --- 
      # Requires ansible 1.8+
      - name: 'YUM - fire and forget task'
        yum: name=docker-io state=installed
        async: 1000
        poll: 0
        register: yum_sleeper

      - name: 'YUM - check on fire and forget task'
        async_status: jid={{ yum_sleeper.ansible_job_id }}
        register: job_result
        until: job_result.finished
        retries: 30

.. note::
   If the value of ``async:`` is not high enough, this will cause the 
   "check on it later" task to fail because the temporary status file that
   the ``async_status:`` is looking for will not have been written or no longer exist 

.. seealso::

   :doc:`playbooks`
       An introduction to playbooks
   `User Mailing List <http://groups.google.com/group/ansible-devel>`_
       Have a question?  Stop by the google group!
   `irc.freenode.net <http://irc.freenode.net>`_
       #ansible IRC chat channel