Stephen Finucane 23da7b73a2 Silence warnings from openstacksdk
OSC has historically relied on project-specific clients like novaclient
for library bindings. These did not support auto-negotiation of
versions. Instead, users were advised to set the requested microversion
to e.g. '2.latest' to opt into the latest API version supported by the
client.

We're slowly migrating everything to SDK which *does* support
auto-negotiation (well, of sorts). This makes versions like '2.latest'
unecessary and SDK correctly warns the user about this.

  You have a configured API_VERSION with 'latest' in it. In the context
  of openstacksdk this doesn't make any sense.

Unfortunately, we have not yet migrated all commands to SDK, meaning we
have a mix of SDK and legacy client-based commands. So long as there are
any command using the legacy client, we can't insist on users removing
this configuration. This makes the warning both annoying and something
the user can't do anything about. We also don't want to remove the
warning from SDK so instead we opt to filter it out, along with all
other warnings from openstacksdk (which similarly a user can't do
anything about).

Change-Id: If8a7cf9bc876f84864d66f5aed5f2f61c5d0696a
Signed-off-by: Stephen Finucane <sfinucan@redhat.com>
2023-04-11 16:45:56 +02:00
2023-03-25 10:53:23 +00:00
2017-09-15 06:32:58 +00:00
2019-04-19 19:45:05 +00:00
2017-09-15 06:32:58 +00:00
2020-09-11 10:25:56 +02:00
2022-07-04 17:48:55 +01:00
2015-11-18 13:25:56 +09:00
2020-03-30 20:00:41 +02:00
2022-12-26 15:56:28 +01:00

Team and repository tags

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OpenStackClient

Latest Version

OpenStackClient (aka OSC) is a command-line client for OpenStack that brings the command set for Compute, Identity, Image, Network, Object Store and Block Storage APIs together in a single shell with a uniform command structure.

The primary goal is to provide a unified shell command structure and a common language to describe operations in OpenStack.

Getting Started

OpenStack Client can be installed from PyPI using pip:

pip install python-openstackclient

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

If you want to make changes to the OpenStackClient for testing and contribution, make any changes and then run:

python setup.py develop

or:

pip install -e .

Configuration

The CLI is configured via environment variables and command-line options as listed in https://docs.openstack.org/python-openstackclient/latest/cli/authentication.html.

Authentication using username/password is most commonly used:

  • For a local user, your configuration will look like the one below:

    export OS_AUTH_URL=<url-to-openstack-identity>
    export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
    export OS_PROJECT_NAME=<project-name>
    export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME=<project-domain-name>
    export OS_USERNAME=<username>
    export OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME=<user-domain-name>
    export OS_PASSWORD=<password>  # (optional)

    The corresponding command-line options look very similar:

    --os-auth-url <url>
    --os-identity-api-version 3
    --os-project-name <project-name>
    --os-project-domain-name <project-domain-name>
    --os-username <username>
    --os-user-domain-name <user-domain-name>
    [--os-password <password>]
  • For a federated user, your configuration will look the so:

    export OS_PROJECT_NAME=<project-name>
    export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME=<project-domain-name>
    export OS_AUTH_URL=<url-to-openstack-identity>
    export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
    export OS_AUTH_PLUGIN=openid
    export OS_AUTH_TYPE=v3oidcpassword
    export OS_USERNAME=<username-in-idp>
    export OS_PASSWORD=<password-in-idp>
    export OS_IDENTITY_PROVIDER=<the-desired-idp-in-keystone>
    export OS_CLIENT_ID=<the-client-id-configured-in-the-idp>
    export OS_CLIENT_SECRET=<the-client-secred-configured-in-the-idp>
    export OS_OPENID_SCOPE=<the-scopes-of-desired-attributes-to-claim-from-idp>
    export OS_PROTOCOL=<the-protocol-used-in-the-apache2-oidc-proxy>
    export OS_ACCESS_TOKEN_TYPE=<the-access-token-type-used-by-your-idp>
    export OS_DISCOVERY_ENDPOINT=<the-well-known-endpoint-of-the-idp>

    The corresponding command-line options look very similar:

    --os-project-name <project-name>
    --os-project-domain-name <project-domain-name>
    --os-auth-url <url-to-openstack-identity>
    --os-identity-api-version 3
    --os-auth-plugin openid
    --os-auth-type v3oidcpassword
    --os-username <username-in-idp>
    --os-password <password-in-idp>
    --os-identity-provider <the-desired-idp-in-keystone>
    --os-client-id <the-client-id-configured-in-the-idp>
    --os-client-secret <the-client-secred-configured-in-the-idp>
    --os-openid-scope <the-scopes-of-desired-attributes-to-claim-from-idp>
    --os-protocol <the-protocol-used-in-the-apache2-oidc-proxy>
    --os-access-token-type <the-access-token-type-used-by-your-idp>
    --os-discovery-endpoint <the-well-known-endpoint-of-the-idp>

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

Description
Client for OpenStack services
Readme 74 MiB
Languages
Python 100%