Streamline Your Ansible Development with Auto-Fixing of FCQN Rule Violations using [Ansible-Lint](/articles/ansible-lint).
FCQN stands for Fully Qualified Collection Name. In Ansible, collections are a way to organize and distribute roles, modules, and plugins. The FCQN is a naming convention that specifies the full name of a collection, including the author's namespace, the collection name, and the version number. The purpose of using FCQN is to avoid naming conflicts between different collections, especially when collections are distributed across multiple namespaces. Ansible-lint checks for FCQN rule violations in Ansible playbooks to ensure that collections are referenced with their fully qualified names to avoid ambiguity and naming conflicts.
As IT infrastructure management becomes more complex, many organizations turn to automation tools such as Ansible to help manage their systems more efficiently. Ansible playbooks provide a powerful toolset for automating system management tasks. However, as playbooks become more complex, maintaining their quality can become a daunting task. This is where ansible-lint comes in.
The ansible-lint is a powerful linting tool for Ansible playbooks, roles, and collections. It checks for issues that may cause problems when executing Ansible tasks, such as syntax errors, indentation problems, or deprecated features. Recently, [Ansible-Lint](/articles/ansible-lint) has added a new feature that allows auto-fixing of FCQN (Fully Qualified Collection Name) rule violations in Ansible playbooks.
The FCQN rule violation occurs when a playbook uses a reference to a collection without the fully qualified name. For example, if a playbook includes a task that references a role in a collection, but the role is not fully qualified with the collection name, ansible-lint will flag this as a violation.
Before this latest feature was added, fixing these violations required manual intervention by the developer. However, with the auto-fixing capability of ansible-lint, these issues can now be automatically corrected, saving time and improving code quality.
To use the auto-fixing feature, developers simply need to run ansible-lint on their playbook with the --fix flag. ansible-lint will then attempt to automatically fix any FCQN rule violations it finds in the playbook. If ansible-lint is unable to fix the violation, it will provide a detailed message explaining the issue so that the developer can manually resolve it.
This new feature not only saves time, but it also improves code quality by ensuring that playbooks are consistent in their use of fully qualified names. This helps to prevent errors and improve maintainability in large codebases.
[Ansible-Lint](/articles/ansible-lint) is a powerful tool for improving the quality of Ansible playbooks. With the addition of auto-fixing of FCQN rule violations, ansible-lint has become an even more valuable tool for developers who want to streamline their Ansible