fortinet.fortios.fortios_firewall_service_group – Configure service groups in Fortinet’s FortiOS and FortiGate.

From Get docs
Ansible/docs/2.10/collections/fortinet/fortios/fortios firewall service group module


fortinet.fortios.fortios_firewall_service_group – Configure service groups in Fortinet’s FortiOS and FortiGate.

Note

This plugin is part of the fortinet.fortios collection (version 1.1.8).

To install it use: ansible-galaxy collection install fortinet.fortios.

To use it in a playbook, specify: fortinet.fortios.fortios_firewall_service_group.


New in version 2.8: of fortinet.fortios


Synopsis

  • This module is able to configure a FortiGate or FortiOS (FOS) device by allowing the user to set and modify firewall_service feature and group category. Examples include all parameters and values need to be adjusted to datasources before usage. Tested with FOS v6.0.0

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

  • ansible>=2.9.0

Parameters

Parameter Choices/Defaults Comments

access_token

string

Token-based authentication. Generated from GUI of Fortigate.

firewall_service_group

dictionary

Configure service groups.

color

integer

Color of icon on the GUI.

comment

string

Comment.

member

list / elements=string

Service objects contained within the group.

name

string / required

Address name. Source firewall.service.custom.name firewall.service.group.name.

name

string / required

Address group name.

proxy

string

  • enable
  • disable

Enable/disable web proxy service group.

state

string

  • present
  • absent

Deprecated

Starting with Ansible 2.9 we recommend using the top-level 'state' parameter.

Indicates whether to create or remove the object.

state

string

added in 2.9 of fortinet.fortios

  • present
  • absent

Indicates whether to create or remove the object. This attribute was present already in previous version in a deeper level. It has been moved out to this outer level.

vdom

string

Default:

"root"

Virtual domain, among those defined previously. A vdom is a virtual instance of the FortiGate that can be configured and used as a different unit.



Notes

Note

  • Legacy fortiosapi has been deprecated, httpapi is the preferred way to run playbooks


Examples

- hosts: fortigates
  collections:
    - fortinet.fortios
  connection: httpapi
  vars:
   vdom: "root"
   ansible_httpapi_use_ssl: yes
   ansible_httpapi_validate_certs: no
   ansible_httpapi_port: 443
  tasks:
  - name: Configure service groups.
    fortios_firewall_service_group:
      vdom:  "{{ vdom }}"
      state: "present"
      access_token: "<your_own_value>"
      firewall_service_group:
        color: "3"
        comment: "Comment."
        member:
         -
            name: "default_name_6 (source firewall.service.custom.name firewall.service.group.name)"
        name: "default_name_7"
        proxy: "enable"

Return Values

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

Key Returned Description

build

string

always

Build number of the fortigate image


Sample:

1547

http_method

string

always

Last method used to provision the content into FortiGate


Sample:

PUT

http_status

string

always

Last result given by FortiGate on last operation applied


Sample:

200

mkey

string

success

Master key (id) used in the last call to FortiGate


Sample:

id

name

string

always

Name of the table used to fulfill the request


Sample:

urlfilter

path

string

always

Path of the table used to fulfill the request


Sample:

webfilter

revision

string

always

Internal revision number


Sample:

17.0.2.10658

serial

string

always

Serial number of the unit


Sample:

FGVMEVYYQT3AB5352

status

string

always

Indication of the operation's result


Sample:

success

vdom

string

always

Virtual domain used


Sample:

root

version

string

always

Version of the FortiGate


Sample:

v5.6.3




Authors

  • Link Zheng (@chillancezen)
  • Jie Xue (@JieX19)
  • Hongbin Lu (@fgtdev-hblu)
  • Frank Shen (@frankshen01)
  • Miguel Angel Munoz (@mamunozgonzalez)
  • Nicolas Thomas (@thomnico)

© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.10/collections/fortinet/fortios/fortios_firewall_service_group_module.html