#!/usr/bin/env bash # # source openrc [username] [tenantname] # # Configure a set of credentials for $TENANT/$USERNAME: # Set OS_TENANT_NAME to override the default tenant 'demo' # Set OS_USERNAME to override the default user name 'demo' # Set ADMIN_PASSWORD to set the password for 'admin' and 'demo' # NOTE: support for the old NOVA_* novaclient environment variables has # been removed. if [[ -n "$1" ]]; then OS_USERNAME=$1 fi if [[ -n "$2" ]]; then OS_TENANT_NAME=$2 fi # Find the other rc files RC_DIR=$(cd $(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE:-$0}") && pwd) # Import common functions source $RC_DIR/functions # Load local configuration source $RC_DIR/stackrc # Load the last env variables if available if [[ -r $RC_DIR/.stackenv ]]; then source $RC_DIR/.stackenv fi # Get some necessary configuration source $RC_DIR/lib/tls # The introduction of Keystone to the OpenStack ecosystem has standardized the # term **tenant** as the entity that owns resources. In some places references # still exist to the original Nova term **project** for this use. Also, # **tenant_name** is preferred to **tenant_id**. export OS_TENANT_NAME=${OS_TENANT_NAME:-demo} # In addition to the owning entity (tenant), nova stores the entity performing # the action as the **user**. export OS_USERNAME=${OS_USERNAME:-demo} # With Keystone you pass the keystone password instead of an api key. # Recent versions of novaclient use OS_PASSWORD instead of NOVA_API_KEYs # or NOVA_PASSWORD. export OS_PASSWORD=${ADMIN_PASSWORD:-secrete} # Don't put the key into a keyring by default. Testing for development is much # easier with this off. export OS_NO_CACHE=${OS_NO_CACHE:-1} # Region export OS_REGION_NAME=${REGION_NAME:-RegionOne} # Set api HOST_IP endpoint. SERVICE_HOST may also be used to specify the endpoint, # which is convenient for some localrc configurations. HOST_IP=${HOST_IP:-127.0.0.1} SERVICE_HOST=${SERVICE_HOST:-$HOST_IP} SERVICE_PROTOCOL=${SERVICE_PROTOCOL:-http} KEYSTONE_AUTH_PROTOCOL=${KEYSTONE_AUTH_PROTOCOL:-$SERVICE_PROTOCOL} KEYSTONE_AUTH_HOST=${KEYSTONE_AUTH_HOST:-$SERVICE_HOST} # Some exercises call glance directly. On a single-node installation, Glance # should be listening on HOST_IP. If its running elsewhere, it can be set here GLANCE_HOST=${GLANCE_HOST:-$HOST_IP} # Identity API version export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=${IDENTITY_API_VERSION:-2.0} # Authenticating against an OpenStack cloud using Keystone returns a **Token** # and **Service Catalog**. The catalog contains the endpoints for all services # the user/tenant has access to - including nova, glance, keystone, swift, ... # We currently recommend using the 2.0 *identity api*. # export OS_AUTH_URL=$KEYSTONE_AUTH_PROTOCOL://$KEYSTONE_AUTH_HOST:5000/v${OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION} # Set OS_CACERT to a default CA certificate chain if it exists. if [[ ! -v OS_CACERT ]] ; then DEFAULT_OS_CACERT=$INT_CA_DIR/ca-chain.pem # If the file does not exist, this may confuse preflight sanity checks if [ -e $DEFAULT_OS_CACERT ] ; then export OS_CACERT=$DEFAULT_OS_CACERT fi fi # Currently novaclient needs you to specify the *compute api* version. This # needs to match the config of your catalog returned by Keystone. export NOVA_VERSION=${NOVA_VERSION:-1.1} # In the future this will change names: export COMPUTE_API_VERSION=${COMPUTE_API_VERSION:-$NOVA_VERSION} # Currently cinderclient needs you to specify the *volume api* version. This # needs to match the config of your catalog returned by Keystone. export CINDER_VERSION=${CINDER_VERSION:-2} export OS_VOLUME_API_VERSION=${OS_VOLUME_API_VERSION:-$CINDER_VERSION}