Add v2 & v3 API documentation
Keystone itself didn't have much documentation on the APIs it was implementing, so I made space for that documentation first, and then followed it with a first pass on what it takes to move things to v3. Change-Id: I71ee6d3c87b6919eb2f7569069d91f3a00d6337c bp: document-v2-to-v3-transition
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doc/source/http-api.rst
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doc/source/http-api.rst
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..
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
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use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy
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of the License at
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
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WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
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License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
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under the License.
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========
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HTTP API
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========
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Specifications
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==============
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Keystone implements two major HTTP API versions, along with several API
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extensions that build on top of each core API. The two APIs are specified as
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`Identity API v2.0`_ and `Identity API v3`_. Each API is specified by a single
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source of truth to avoid conflicts between documentation and implementation.
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The original source of truth for the v2.0 API is defined by a set of WADL and
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XSD files. The original source of truth for the v3 API is defined by
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documentation.
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.. _`Identity API v2.0`: https://github.com/openstack/identity-api/tree/master/v2.0/src
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.. _`Identity API v3`: https://github.com/openstack/identity-api/tree/master/v3/src/markdown
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History
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=======
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You're probably wondering why Keystone does not implement a "v1" API. As a
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matter of fact, one exists, but it actually predates OpenStack. The v1.x API
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was an extremely small API documented and implemented by Rackspace for their
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early public cloud products.
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With the advent of OpenStack, Keystone served to provide a superset of the
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authentication and multi-tenant authorization models already implemented by
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Rackspace's public cloud, Nova, and Swift. Thus, Identity API v2.0 was
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introduced.
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Identity API v3 was established to introduce namespacing for users and projects
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by using "domains" as a higher-level container for more flexible identity
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management and fixed a security issue in the v2.0 API (bearer tokens appearing
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in URLs).
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Should I use v2.0 or v3?
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========================
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Identity API v3.
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Identity API v3 is a superset of all the functionality available in v2.0 and
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several of its extensions, and provides a much more consistent developer
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experience to boot. We're also on the road to deprecating, and ultimately
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reducing (or dropping) support for, Identity API v2.0.
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How do I migrate from v2.0 to v3?
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=================================
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I am a deployer
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---------------
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You'll need to ensure the v3 API is included in your Paste pipeline, usually
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``etc/keystone-paste.ini``. Our `latest sample configuration`_ includes the v3
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application pipeline.
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First define a v3 application, which refers to the v3 application factory
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method:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[app:service_v3]
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paste.app_factory = keystone.service:v3_app_factory
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Then define a v3 pipeline, which terminates with the v3 application you defined
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above:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[app:app_v3]
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pipeline = ... service_v3
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Replace "..." with whatever middleware you'd like to run in front of the API
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service. Our `latest sample configuration`_ documents our tested
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recommendations, but your requirements may vary.
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Finally, include the v3 pipeline in at least one ``composite`` application (but
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usually both ``[composite:main]`` and ``[composite:admin]``), for example:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[composite:main]
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use = egg:Paste#urlmap
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/v3 = api_v3
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...
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.. _`latest sample configuration`: https://github.com/openstack/keystone/blob/master/etc/keystone-paste.ini
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I have a Python client
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----------------------
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The Keystone community provides first-class support for Python API consumers
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via our client library, `python-keystoneclient`_. If you're not currently using
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this library, you should, as it is intended to expose all of our HTTP API
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functionality. If we're missing something you're looking for, please
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contribute!
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Adopting `python-keystoneclient`_ should be the easiest way to migrate to
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Identity API v3.
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.. _`python-keystoneclient`: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/python-keystoneclient/
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I have a non-Python client
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--------------------------
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You'll likely need to heavily reference our `API documentation`_ to port your
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application to Identity API v3.
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.. _`API documentation`: https://github.com/openstack/identity-api/blob/master/v3/src/markdown/identity-api-v3.md
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The most common operation would be password-based authentication including a
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tenant name (i.e. project name) to specify an authorization scope. In Identity
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API v2.0, this would be a request to ``POST /v2.0/tokens``:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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{
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"auth": {
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"passwordCredentials": {
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"password": "my-password",
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"username": "my-username"
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},
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"tenantName": "project-x"
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}
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}
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And you would get back a JSON blob with an ``access`` -> ``token`` -> ``id``
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that you could pass to another web service as your ``X-Auth-Token`` header
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value.
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In Identity API v3, an equivalent request would be to ``POST /v3/auth/tokens``:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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{
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"auth": {
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"identity": {
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"methods": [
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"password"
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],
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"password": {
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"user": {
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"domain": {
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"id": "default"
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},
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"name": "my-username",
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"password": "my-password"
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}
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}
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},
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"scope": {
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"project": {
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"domain": {
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"id": "default"
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},
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"name": "project-x"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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Note a few key differences when compared to the v2.0 API:
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- A "tenant" in v2.0 became a "project" in v3.
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- The authentication method (``password``) is explicitly identified.
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- Both the user name (``my-username``) and project name (``project-x``) are
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namespaced by an owning domain (where ``id`` = ``default``). The "default"
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domain exists by default in Keystone, and automatically owns the namespace
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exposed by Identity API v2.0. Alternatively, you may reference users and
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projects that exist outside the namespace of the default domain, which are
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thus inaccessible to the v2.0 API.
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- In v3, your token is returned to you in an ``X-Subject-Token`` header,
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instead of as part of the request body. You should still authenticate
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yourself to other services using the ``X-Auth-Token`` header.
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@ -65,6 +65,7 @@ Developers Documentation
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developing
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architecture
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middlewarearchitecture
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http-api
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api_curl_examples
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apache-httpd
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external-auth
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