Monty Taylor c97bac2997
Do less work when deleting a server and floating ips
When we delete a server with floating ips, we tell get_server to not
fetch a bare server, which does the work to fill in the network info
from neutron. Then we look in the server for the floating ip address and
look up the port it goes with.

This is not necessary.

We can tell get_server to get us a bare server, then look up floating
ips by device_id. Then just delete them.

Change-Id: I5ec04dc2a356aa20cf561866e8f43f9e28b2db21
2017-06-01 16:46:27 -05:00
2016-10-20 15:03:09 +11:00
2015-10-12 12:54:39 -04:00
2015-10-23 09:51:05 +09:00
2016-09-06 14:25:09 -05:00
2014-08-30 17:05:28 -07:00
2014-08-30 17:05:28 -07:00
2017-03-30 14:03:25 +00:00

Introduction

shade is a simple client library for interacting with OpenStack clouds. The key word here is simple. Clouds can do many many many things - but there are probably only about 10 of them that most people care about with any regularity. If you want to do complicated things, you should probably use the lower level client libraries - or even the REST API directly. However, if what you want is to be able to write an application that talks to clouds no matter what crazy choices the deployer has made in an attempt to be more hipster than their self-entitled narcissist peers, then shade is for you.

shade started its life as some code inside of ansible. ansible has a bunch of different OpenStack related modules, and there was a ton of duplicated code. Eventually, between refactoring that duplication into an internal library, and adding logic and features that the OpenStack Infra team had developed to run client applications at scale, it turned out that we'd written nine-tenths of what we'd need to have a standalone library.

Example

Sometimes an example is nice. :

import shade

# Initialize and turn on debug logging
shade.simple_logging(debug=True)

# Initialize cloud
# Cloud configs are read with os-client-config
cloud = shade.openstack_cloud(cloud='mordred')

# Upload an image to the cloud
image = cloud.create_image(
    'ubuntu-trusty', filename='ubuntu-trusty.qcow2', wait=True)

# Find a flavor with at least 512M of RAM
flavor = cloud.get_flavor_by_ram(512)

# Boot a server, wait for it to boot, and then do whatever is needed
# to get a public ip for it.
cloud.create_server(
    'my-server', image=image, flavor=flavor, wait=True, auto_ip=True)
Description
Client library for OpenStack containing Infra business logic
Readme 21 MiB
Languages
Python 99.7%
Shell 0.3%