This is a client for the OpenStack Identity API, implemented by Keystone.
There's a Python API (the keystoneclient
module), and a command-line script
(keystone
).
Development takes place via the usual OpenStack processes as outlined in the `OpenStack wiki`_. The master repository is on GitHub__.
This code a fork of `Rackspace's python-novaclient`__ which is in turn a fork of `Jacobian's python-cloudservers`__. The python-keystoneclient is licensed under the Apache License like the rest of OpenStack.
Contents:
By way of a quick-start:
# use v2.0 auth with http://example.com:5000/v2.0 >>> from keystoneclient.v2_0 import client >>> keystone = client.Client(username=USERNAME, password=PASSWORD, tenant_name=TENANT, auth_url=AUTH_URL) >>> keystone.tenants.list() >>> tenant = keystone.tenants.create(tenant_name="test", description="My new tenant!", enabled=True) >>> tenant.delete()
Installing this package gets you a shell command, keystone
, that you can
use to interact with OpenStack's Identity API.
You'll need to provide your OpenStack tenant, username and password. You can do
this with the --os-tenant-name
, --os-username
and --os-password
params, but it's easier to just set them as environment variables:
export OS_TENANT_NAME=project export OS_USERNAME=user export OS_PASSWORD=pass
You will also need to define the authentication url with --os-auth-url
and
the version of the API with --os-identity-api-version
. Or set them as an
environment variables as well:
export OS_AUTH_URL=http://example.com:5000/v2.0 export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=2.0
Alternatively, to bypass username/password authentication, you can provide a
pre-established token. In Keystone, this approach is necessary to bootstrap the
service with an administrative user, tenant & role (to do so, provide the
client with the value of your admin_token
defined in keystone.conf
in
addition to the URL of your admin API deployment, typically on port 35357):
export OS_SERVICE_TOKEN=thequickbrownfox-jumpsover-thelazydog export OS_SERVICE_ENDPOINT=http://example.com:35357/v2.0
Since the Identity service can return multiple regions in the service catalog,
you can specify the one you want with --os-region-name
(or export
OS_REGION_NAME
):
export OS_REGION_NAME=north
Warning
If a region is not specified and multiple regions are returned by the Identity service, the client may not access the same region consistently.
You'll find complete documentation on the shell by running keystone help
:
usage: keystone [--os-username <auth-user-name>] [--os-password <auth-password>] [--os-tenant-name <auth-tenant-name>] [--os-tenant-id <tenant-id>] [--os-auth-url <auth-url>] [--os-region-name <region-name>] [--os-identity-api-version <identity-api-version>] [--os-token <service-token>] [--os-endpoint <service-endpoint>] [--os-cacert <ca-certificate>] [--os-cert <certificate>] [--os-key <key>] [--insecure] <subcommand> ... Command-line interface to the OpenStack Identity API. Positional arguments: <subcommand> catalog ec2-credentials-create Create EC2-compatibile credentials for user per tenant ec2-credentials-delete Delete EC2-compatibile credentials ec2-credentials-get Display EC2-compatibile credentials ec2-credentials-list List EC2-compatibile credentials for a user endpoint-create Create a new endpoint associated with a service endpoint-delete Delete a service endpoint endpoint-get endpoint-list List configured service endpoints role-create Create new role role-delete Delete role role-get Display role details role-list List all roles service-create Add service to Service Catalog service-delete Delete service from Service Catalog service-get Display service from Service Catalog service-list List all services in Service Catalog tenant-create Create new tenant tenant-delete Delete tenant tenant-get Display tenant details tenant-list List all tenants tenant-update Update tenant name, description, enabled status token-get user-create Create new user user-delete Delete user user-get Display user details. user-list List users user-password-update Update user password user-role-add Add role to user user-role-list List roles granted to a user user-role-remove Remove role from user user-update Update user's name, email, and enabled status discover Discover Keystone servers and show authentication protocols and bootstrap Grants a new role to a new user on a new tenant, after creating each. bash-completion Prints all of the commands and options to stdout. help Display help about this program or one of its subcommands. Optional arguments: --os-username <auth-user-name> Name used for authentication with the OpenStack Identity service. Defaults to env[OS_USERNAME] --os-password <auth-password> Password used for authentication with the OpenStack Identity service. Defaults to env[OS_PASSWORD] --os-tenant-name <auth-tenant-name> Tenant to request authorization on. Defaults to env[OS_TENANT_NAME] --os-tenant-id <tenant-id> Tenant to request authorization on. Defaults to env[OS_TENANT_ID] --os-auth-url <auth-url> Specify the Identity endpoint to use for authentication. Defaults to env[OS_AUTH_URL] --os-region-name <region-name> Defaults to env[OS_REGION_NAME] --os-identity-api-version <identity-api-version> Defaults to env[OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION] or 2.0 --os-token <service-token> Specify an existing token to use instead of retrieving one via authentication (e.g. with username & password). Defaults to env[OS_SERVICE_TOKEN] --os-endpoint <service-endpoint> Specify an endpoint to use instead of retrieving one from the service catalog (via authentication). Defaults to env[OS_SERVICE_ENDPOINT] --os-cacert <ca-certificate> Defaults to env[OS_CACERT] --os-cert <certificate> Defaults to env[OS_CERT] --os-key <key> Defaults to env[OS_KEY] --insecure Explicitly allow keystoneclient to perform "insecure" SSL (https) requests. The server's certificate will not be verified against any certificate authorities. This option should be used with caution. See "keystone help COMMAND" for help on a specific command.