Steve Martinelli 1d75edb167 Default user domain id and project domain id
If either of OS_USER_DOMAIN_ID or OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME are present
then we don't tinker with anything. Otherwise, we should set
the USER_DOMAIN_ID to 'OS_DEFAULT_DOMAIN', as this provides a better UX,
since the end user doesn't have to specify these arguments.

Same logic applies for OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_ID.

Closes-Bug: #1385338

Change-Id: I8a4034c16a1dd50d269f809abab8e960d5de20f7
2015-01-16 02:52:15 -05:00
2014-06-20 16:18:33 -04:00
2013-02-06 16:47:06 +02:00
2013-08-16 14:35:46 -05:00
2014-07-22 17:51:15 -06:00
2012-04-18 13:16:39 -05:00
2014-09-22 13:07:31 +03:00
2014-10-01 19:46:07 -04:00
2014-07-31 00:53:36 -04:00
2015-01-15 00:04:55 -06:00
2014-05-01 13:50:49 +00:00
2015-01-12 15:22:39 -05:00

OpenStack Client

OpenStack Client (aka python-openstackclient) is a command-line client for the OpenStack APIs. It is primarily a wrapper to the stock python-*client modules that implement the actual REST API client actions.

This is an implementation of the design goals shown in OpenStack Client Wiki. The primary goal is to provide a unified shell command structure and a common language to describe operations in OpenStack. The master repository is on GitHub.

OpenStack Client has a plugin mechanism to add support for API extensions.

Note

OpenStackClient is considered to be beta release quality as of the 0.3 release; no assurances are made at this point for ongoing compatibility in command forms or output. We do not, however, expect any major changes at this point.

Getting Started

OpenStack Client can be installed from PyPI using pip:

pip install python-openstackclient

Developers can use the install virtualenv script to create the virtualenv:

python tools/install_venv.py
source .venv/bin/activate
python setup.py develop

Unit tests are now run using tox. The run_test.sh script provides compatibility but is generally considered deprecated.

The client can be called interactively by simply typing:

openstack

There are a few variants on getting help. A list of global options and supported commands is shown with --help:

openstack --help

There is also a help command that can be used to get help text for a specific command:

openstack help
openstack help server create

Configuration

The CLI is configured via environment variables and command-line options as listed in https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/OpenStackClient/Authentication.

The 'password flow' variation is most commonly used:

export OS_AUTH_URL=<url-to-openstack-identity>
export OS_PROJECT_NAME=<project-name>
export OS_USERNAME=<user-name>
export OS_PASSWORD=<password>  # (optional)

The corresponding command-line options look very similar:

--os-auth-url <url>
--os-project-name <project-name>
--os-username <user-name>
[--os-password <password>]

If a password is not provided above (in plaintext), you will be interactively prompted to provide one securely.

The token flow variation for authentication uses an already-acquired token and a URL pointing directly to the service API that presumably was acquired from the Service Catalog:

export OS_TOKEN=<token>
export OS_URL=<url-to-openstack-service>

The corresponding command-line options look very similar:

--os-token <token>
--os-url <url-to-openstack-service>

Additional command-line options and their associated environment variables are listed here:

--debug             # turns on some debugging of the API conversation
--verbose | -v      # Increase verbosity of output. Can be repeated.
--quiet | -q        # suppress output except warnings and errors
--help | -h         # show a help message and exit

Building Documentation

This documentation is written by contributors, for contributors.

The source is maintained in the doc/source folder using reStructuredText and built by Sphinx

Building Manually:

cd doc
make html

Results are in the build/html directory.

Description
Client for OpenStack services
Readme 73 MiB
Languages
Python 100%