Yes.
It's been deprecated in version 0.6 in 2012 and reintroduced in a commit first included in version 2.1 in 2016.
The example file on GitHub contains the guidelines and examples:
- Comments begin with the '#' character
- Blank lines are ignored
- Top level entries are assumed to be groups
- Hosts must be specified in a group's hosts: and they must be a key (: terminated)
- groups can have children, hosts and vars keys
- Anything defined under a hosts is assumed to be a var
- You can enter hostnames or ip addresses
- A hostname/ip can be a member of multiple groups
Ex 1: Ungrouped hosts, put in 'ungrouped' group
ungrouped:
hosts:
green.example.com:
ansible_ssh_host: 191.168.100.32
blue.example.com:
192.168.100.1:
192.168.100.10:
Ex 2: A collection of hosts belonging to the 'webservers' group
webservers:
hosts:
alpha.example.org:
beta.example.org:
192.168.1.100:
192.168.1.110:
Ex 3: You can create hosts using ranges and add children groups and vars to a group.
The child group can define anything you would normally add to a group
testing:
hosts:
www[001:006].example.com:
vars:
testing1: value1
children:
webservers:
hosts:
beta.example.org:
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