The documentation for import_tasks mentions
Any loops, conditionals and most other keywords will be applied to the included tasks, not to this statement itself.
This is exactly what I want. Unfortunately, when I attempt to make import_tasks work with a loop
- import_tasks: msg.yml
with_items:
- 1
- 2
- 3
I get the message
ERROR! You cannot use loops on 'import_tasks' statements. You should use 'include_tasks' instead.
I don't want the include_tasks behaviour, as this applies the loop to the included file, and duplicates the tasks. I specifically want to run the first task for each loop variable (as one task with the standard with_items output), then the second, and so on. How can I get this behaviour?
Specifically, consider the following:
Suppose I have the following files:
playbook.yml
---
- hosts: 192.168.33.100
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- include_tasks: msg.yml
with_items:
- 1
- 2
msg.yml
---
- name: Message 1
debug:
msg: "Message 1: {{ item }}"
- name: Message 2
debug:
msg: "Message 2: {{ item }}"
I would like the printed messages to be
Message 1: 1
Message 1: 2
Message 2: 1
Message 2: 2
However, with import_tasks I get an error, and with include_tasks I get
Message 1: 1
Message 2: 1
Message 1: 2
Message 2: 2
You can add a with_items loop taking a list to every task in the imported file, and call import_tasks with a variable which you pass to the inner with_items loop. This moves the handling of the loops to the imported file, and requires duplication of the loop on all tasks.
Given your example, this would change the files to:
playbook.yml
---
- hosts: 192.168.33.100
gather_facts: no
tasks:
- import_tasks: msg.yml
vars:
messages:
- 1
- 2
msg.yml
---
- name: Message 1
debug:
msg: "Message 1: {{ item }}"
with_items:
- "{{ messages }}"
- name: Message 2
debug:
msg: "Message 2: {{ item }}"
with_items:
- "{{ messages }}"
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