
* Adds tenant-list, tenant-get and tenant-update to keystone command * Removes tenant-enable and tenant-disable * Fixes more overlap in cli args, clean up command args, particularly removing nargs from arguments that are not optional. * Fixes bug 932235 Change-Id: I1aafec1b2a3943e0f6c86f0228ab29f181a7ffce
Python bindings to the OpenStack Keystone API
This is a client for the OpenStack Keystone API. There's a Python API
(the keystoneclient
module), and a command-line script
(keystone
). The Keystone 2.0 API is still a moving target,
so this module will remain in "Beta" status until the API is finalized
and fully implemented.
Development takes place on GitHub. Bug reports and patches may be filed there.
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:
Python API
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=KEYSTONE_URL)
>>> keystone.tenants.list()
>>> tenant = keystone.tenants.create(name="test", descrption="My new tenant!", enabled=True)
>>> tenant.delete()
Command-line API
Attention
COMING SOON
The CLI is not yet implemented, but will follow the pattern laid out below.
Installing this package gets you a shell command,
keystone
, that you can use to interact with Keystone's
API.
You'll need to provide your OpenStack username and API key. You can
do this with the --username
, --apikey
and
--projectid
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
--url
and the version of the API with
--version
. Or set them as an environment variables as
well:
export OS_AUTH_URL=http://example.com:5000/v2.0
export KEYSTONE_ADMIN_URL=http://example.com:35357/v2.0
Since Keystone can return multiple regions in the Service Catalog,
you can specify the one you want with --region_name
(or
export KEYSTONE_REGION_NAME
). It defaults to the first in
the list returned.
You'll find complete documentation on the shell by running
keystone help
:
usage: keystone [--username user] [--password password]
[--tenant_name tenant] [--auth_url URL]
<subcommand> ...
Command-line interface to the OpenStack Keystone API.
Positional arguments:
<subcommand>
add-fixed-ip Add a new fixed IP address to a servers network.
Optional arguments:
--username USER Defaults to env[OS_USERNAME].
--password PASSWORD Defaults to env[OS_PASSWORD].
--tenant_name TENANT_NAME Defaults to env[OS_TENANT_NAME].
--tenant_id TENANT_ID Defaults to env[OS_TENANT_ID].
--url AUTH_URL Defaults to env[OS_AUTH_URL] or
--version VERSION Defaults to env[KEYSTONE_VERSION] or 2.0.
--region_name NAME The region name in the Keystone Service
Catalog to use after authentication.
Defaults to env[KEYSTONE_REGION_NAME] or the
first item in the list returned.
See "keystone help COMMAND" for help on a specific command.