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Watch: Install Google Chrome on Red Hat Using Ansible

Use Ansible to install Google Chrome on Red Hat. Follow our detailed playbook to add repositories and install Chrome efficiently.

How to Install Google Chrome in RedHat-like systems with Ansible?

I'm going to show you a live Playbook with some simple Ansible code.

I'm Luca Berton and welcome to today's episode of Ansible Pilot.

Ansible install Google Chrome in RedHat-like systems

  • Add Google Chrome key => ansible.builtin.rpm_key
  • Add Google Chrome repository => ansible.builtin.yum_repository
  • Update yum cache and install Google Chrome => ansible.builtin.yum

In order to install Google Chrome on a RedHat-like system, we need to perform three different steps.

The first step is to download the GPG signature key for the repository. You are going to use the ansible.builtin.rpm_key Ansible module.

This encrypted key verifies the genuinity of the packages and the repository and guarantees that the software is the same as Google releases.

The second step is to add the add Google Chrome repository to the distribution. It’s an extra website where yum/dnf, your distribution package manager looks like for software.

You are going to use the ansible.builtin.yum_repository Ansible module.

The third step is to update the yum cache for the available packages and install Google Chrome using the ansible.builtin.yum Ansible module.

Parameters

  • rpm_key key string — URL
  • rpm_key state string — present/absent
  • yum_repository name string — repository
  • yum_repository baseurl string — URL
  • yum_repository gpgcheck boolean — enable GPG
  • yum_repository gpgkey string — GPG check and key URL
  • yum name string — name or package-specific
  • yum state string — latest/present/absent
  • yum update_cache boolean — no/yes

For the ansible.builtin.rpm_key Ansible module I’m going to use two parameters: “key” and “state”.

The “key” parameter specifies the URL or the key ID of the repository gpg signature key and the “state” verify that is present in our system after the execution.

For the ansible.builtin.yum_repository Ansible module I’m going to use four parameters: “name”, “baseurl”, “gpgcheck” and “gpgkey”.

The “name” parameter specifies the repository parameters and the “baseurl” URL of it.

The “gpgcheck” parameter enables the gpg verification with the URL specified in “gpgkey” parameter.

For the ansible.builtin.yum Ansible module I’m going to use three parameters: “name”, “state”, and “update_cache”.

The “name” parameter specifies the package name (Google Chrome in our use-case) and the “state” verify that is present in our system af

Read the full tutorial: Install Google Chrome on Red Hat Using Ansible