python-keystoneclient/doc/source/using-api-v3.rst
David Stanek b2e9caee38 Add Response class to return request-id to caller
This change is required to return 'request_id' from client
to log request_id mappings of cross-project requests.

Instantiating class 'keystoneclient.v3.client.Client' using
'include_metadata=True' will cause manager response to return
a new 'Response' class instead of just the data. This 'Response'
class is going to have additional metadata properties available
like 'request_ids' and the original data will be available as
property 'data' to it.

This change is backward compatible since user has to set a new
parameter 'include_metadata=True' to client in order to get the
request_id returned.

Co-author: Dinesh Bhor <dinesh.bhor@nttdata.com>
Partially Implements: blueprint return-request-id-to-caller
Change-Id: Ibefaa484158ff08bfcacc1e2802d87fc26fd76a5
2018-03-26 01:51:30 -07:00

6.4 KiB

Using the V3 Client API

Introduction

The main concepts in the Identity v3 API are:

  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.credentials
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.domain_configs
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.domains
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.endpoints
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.groups
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.policies
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.projects
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.regions
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.role_assignments
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.roles
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.services
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.tokens
  • :py~keystoneclient.v3.users

The :pykeystoneclient.v3.client API lets you query and make changes through managers. For example, to manipulate a project (formerly called tenant), you interact with a :pykeystoneclient.v3.projects.ProjectManager object.

You obtain access to managers through attributes of a :pykeystoneclient.v3.client.Client object. For example, the projects attribute of a Client object is a projects manager:

>>> from keystoneclient.v3 import client
>>> keystone = client.Client(...)
>>> keystone.projects.list() # List projects

While it is possible to instantiate a :pykeystoneclient.v3.client.Client object (as done above for clarity), the recommended approach is to use the discovery mechanism provided by the :pykeystoneclient.client.Client class. The appropriate class will be instantiated depending on the API versions available:

>>> from keystoneclient import client
>>> keystone =
...    client.Client(auth_url='http://localhost:5000', ...)
>>> type(keystone)
<class 'keystoneclient.v3.client.Client'>

One can force the use of a specific version of the API, either by using the version keyword argument:

>>> from keystoneclient import client
>>> keystone = client.Client(auth_url='http://localhost:5000',
                             version=(2,), ...)
>>> type(keystone)
<class 'keystoneclient.v2_0.client.Client'>
>>> keystone = client.Client(auth_url='http://localhost:5000',
                             version=(3,), ...)
>>> type(keystone)
<class 'keystoneclient.v3.client.Client'>

Or by specifying directly the specific API version authentication URL as the auth_url keyword argument:

>>> from keystoneclient import client
>>> keystone =
...     client.Client(auth_url='http://localhost:5000/v2.0', ...)
>>> type(keystone)
<class 'keystoneclient.v2_0.client.Client'>
>>> keystone =
...     client.Client(auth_url='http://localhost:5000/v3', ...)
>>> type(keystone)
<class 'keystoneclient.v3.client.Client'>

Upon successful authentication, a :pykeystoneclient.v3.client.Client object is returned (when using the Identity v3 API). Authentication and examples of common tasks are provided below.

You can generally expect that when the client needs to propagate an exception it will raise an instance of subclass of keystoneclient.exceptions.ClientException.

Authenticating Using Sessions

Instantiate a :pykeystoneclient.v3.client.Client using a :py~keystoneauth1.session.Session to provide the authentication plugin, SSL/TLS certificates, and other data:

>>> from keystoneauth1.identity import v3
>>> from keystoneauth1 import session
>>> from keystoneclient.v3 import client
>>> auth = v3.Password(auth_url='https://my.keystone.com:5000/v3',
...                    user_id='myuserid',
...                    password='mypassword',
...                    project_id='myprojectid')
>>> sess = session.Session(auth=auth)
>>> keystone = client.Client(session=sess)

For more information on Sessions refer to: Using Sessions.

Getting Metadata Responses

Instantiating :pykeystoneclient.v3.client.Client using include_metadata=True will cause manager response to return :pykeystoneclient.base.Response instead of just the data. The metadata property will be available directly to the :pykeystoneclient.base.Response and the response data will be available as property data to it.

>>> from keystoneauth1.identity import v3 >>> from keystoneauth1 import session >>> from keystoneclient.v3 import client >>> auth = v3.Password(auth_url='https://my.keystone.com:5000/v3', ... user_id='myuserid', ... password='mypassword', ... project_id='myprojectid') >>> sess = session.Session(auth=auth) >>> keystone = client.Client(session=sess, include_metadata=True) >>> resp = keystone.projects.list() >>> resp.request_ids[0] req-1234-5678-... >>> resp.data [<Project ...>, <Project ...>, ...]

Non-Session Authentication (deprecated)

The deprecated way to authenticate is to pass the username, the user's domain name (which will default to 'Default' if it is not specified), and a password:

>>> from keystoneclient import client
>>> auth_url = 'http://localhost:5000'
>>> username = 'adminUser'
>>> user_domain_name = 'Default'
>>> password = 'secreetword'
>>> keystone = client.Client(auth_url=auth_url, version=(3,),
...                          username=username, password=password,
...                          user_domain_name=user_domain_name)

A :py~keystoneauth1.session.Session should be passed to the Client instead. Using a Session you're not limited to authentication using a username and password but can take advantage of other more secure authentication methods.

You may optionally specify a domain or project (along with its project domain name), to obtain a scoped token:

>>> from keystoneclient import client
>>> auth_url = 'http://localhost:5000'
>>> username = 'adminUser'
>>> user_domain_name = 'Default'
>>> project_name = 'demo'
>>> project_domain_name = 'Default'
>>> password = 'secreetword'
>>> keystone = client.Client(auth_url=auth_url, version=(3,),
...                          username=username, password=password,
...                          user_domain_name=user_domain_name,
...                          project_name=project_name,
...                          project_domain_name=project_domain_name)