OpenStack Client Configuation Library
Project description
os-client-config is a library for collecting client configuration for using an OpenStack cloud in a consistent and comprehensive manner. It will find cloud config for as few as 1 cloud and as many as you want to put in a config file. It will read environment variables and config files, and it also contains some vendor specific default values so that you don’t have to know extra info to use OpenStack
If you have a config file, you will get the clouds listed in it
If you have environment variables, you will get a cloud named envvars
If you have neither, you will get a cloud named defaults with base defaults
Environment Variables
os-client-config honors all of the normal OS_* variables. It does not provide backwards compatibility to service-specific variables such as NOVA_USERNAME.
If you have OpenStack environment variables set, os-client-config will produce a cloud config object named envvars containing your values from the environment. If you don’t like the name envvars, that’s ok, you can override it by setting OS_CLOUD_NAME.
Service specific settings, like the nova service type, are set with the default service type as a prefix. For instance, to set a special service_type for trove set
export OS_DATABASE_SERVICE_TYPE=rax:database
Config Files
os-client-config will look for a file called clouds.yaml in the following locations:
Current Directory
~/.config/openstack
/etc/openstack
The first file found wins.
You can also set the environment variable OS_CLIENT_CONFIG_FILE to an absolute path of a file to look for and that location will be inserted at the front of the file search list.
The keys are all of the keys you’d expect from OS_* - except lower case and without the OS prefix. So, region name is set with region_name.
Service specific settings, like the nova service type, are set with the default service type as a prefix. For instance, to set a special service_type for trove (because you’re using Rackspace) set:
database_service_type: 'rax:database'
Site Specific File Locations
In addition to ~/.config/openstack and /etc/openstack - some platforms have other locations they like to put things. os-client-config will also look in an OS specific config dir
USER_CONFIG_DIR
SITE_CONFIG_DIR
USER_CONFIG_DIR is different on Linux, OSX and Windows.
Linux: ~/.config/openstack
OSX: ~/Library/Application Support/openstack
Windows: C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Local\OpenStack\openstack
SITE_CONFIG_DIR is different on Linux, OSX and Windows.
Linux: /etc/openstack
OSX: /Library/Application Support/openstack
Windows: C:\ProgramData\OpenStack\openstack
An example config file is probably helpful:
clouds: mordred: profile: hp auth: username: mordred@inaugust.com password: XXXXXXXXX project_name: mordred@inaugust.com region_name: region-b.geo-1 dns_service_type: hpext:dns compute_api_version: 1.1 monty: auth: auth_url: https://region-b.geo-1.identity.hpcloudsvc.com:35357/v2.0 username: monty.taylor@hp.com password: XXXXXXXX project_name: monty.taylor@hp.com-default-tenant region_name: region-b.geo-1 dns_service_type: hpext:dns infra: profile: rackspace auth: username: openstackci password: XXXXXXXX project_id: 610275 regions: - DFW - ORD - IAD
You may note a few things. First, since auth_url settings are silly and embarrasingly ugly, known cloud vendor profile information is included and may be referenced by name. One of the benefits of that is that auth_url isn’t the only thing the vendor defaults contain. For instance, since Rackspace lists rax:database as the service type for trove, os-client-config knows that so that you don’t have to. In case the cloud vendor profile is not available, you can provide one called clouds-public.yaml, following the same location rules previously mentioned for the config files.
regions can be a list of regions. When you call get_all_clouds, you’ll get a cloud config object for each cloud/region combo.
As seen with dns_service_type, any setting that makes sense to be per-service, like service_type or endpoint or api_version can be set by prefixing the setting with the default service type. That might strike you funny when setting service_type and it does me too - but that’s just the world we live in.
Auth Settings
Keystone has auth plugins - which means it’s not possible to know ahead of time which auth settings are needed. os-client-config sets the default plugin type to password, which is what things all were before plugins came about. In order to facilitate validation of values, all of the parameters that exist as a result of a chosen plugin need to go into the auth dict. For password auth, this includes auth_url, username and password as well as anything related to domains, projects and trusts.
SSL Settings
When the access to a cloud is done via a secure connection, os-client-config will always verify the SSL cert by default. This can be disabled by setting verify to False. In case the cert is signed by an unknown CA, a specific cacert can be provided via cacert. WARNING: verify will always have precedence over cacert, so when setting a CA cert but disabling verify, the cloud cert will never be validated.
Client certs are also configurable. cert will be the client cert file location. In case the cert key is not included within the client cert file, its file location needs to be set via key.
Cache Settings
Accessing a cloud is often expensive, so it’s quite common to want to do some client-side caching of those operations. To facilitate that, os-client-config understands passing through cache settings to dogpile.cache, with the following behaviors:
Listing no config settings means you get a null cache.
cache.expiration_time and nothing else gets you memory cache.
Otherwise, cache.class and cache.arguments are passed in
Different cloud behaviors are also differently expensive to deal with. If you want to get really crazy and tweak stuff, you can specify different expiration times on a per-resource basis by passing values, in seconds to an expiration mapping keyed on the singular name of the resource. A value of -1 indicates that the resource should never expire.
os-client-config does not actually cache anything itself, but it collects and presents the cache information so that your various applications that are connecting to OpenStack can share a cache should you desire.
cache: class: dogpile.cache.pylibmc expiration_time: 3600 arguments: url: - 127.0.0.1 expiration: server: 5 flavor: -1 clouds: mordred: profile: hp auth: username: mordred@inaugust.com password: XXXXXXXXX project_name: mordred@inaugust.com region_name: region-b.geo-1 dns_service_type: hpext:dns
IPv6
IPv6 is the future, and you should always use it if your cloud supports it and if your local network supports it. Both of those are easily detectable and all friendly software should do the right thing. However, sometimes you might exist in a location where you have an IPv6 stack, but something evil has caused it to not actually function. In that case, there is a config option you can set to unbreak you force_ipv4, or OS_FORCE_IPV4 boolean environment variable.
client: force_ipv4: true clouds: mordred: profile: hp auth: username: mordred@inaugust.com password: XXXXXXXXX project_name: mordred@inaugust.com region_name: region-b.geo-1 monty: profile: rax auth: username: mordred@inaugust.com password: XXXXXXXXX project_name: mordred@inaugust.com region_name: DFW
The above snippet will tell client programs to prefer returning an IPv4 address.
Usage
The simplest and least useful thing you can do is:
python -m os_client_config.config
Which will print out whatever if finds for your config. If you want to use it from python, which is much more likely what you want to do, things like:
Get a named cloud.
import os_client_config cloud_config = os_client_config.OpenStackConfig().get_one_cloud( 'hp', region_name='region-b.geo-1') print(cloud_config.name, cloud_config.region, cloud_config.config)
Or, get all of the clouds.
import os_client_config cloud_config = os_client_config.OpenStackConfig().get_all_clouds() for cloud in cloud_config: print(cloud.name, cloud.region, cloud.config)
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