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yuyafei ef34175095 Add __ne__ built-in function
In Python 3 __ne__ by default delegates to __eq__ and inverts the
result, but in Python 2 they urge you to define __ne__ when you
define __eq__ for it to work properly [1].There are no implied
relationships among the comparison operators. The truth of x==y
does not imply that x!=y is false. Accordingly, when defining
__eq__(), one should also define __ne__() so that the operators
will behave as expected.
[1]https://docs.python.org/2/reference/datamodel.html#object.__ne__
Also fixes spelling errors:resoruces.

Change-Id: Iae4ce0fe84fae810711cc8c3fdb94eb9ca1d772e
Closes-Bug: #1586268
2016-08-11 11:19:30 +08:00
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Python bindings to the OpenStack Identity API (Keystone)

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This is a client for the OpenStack Identity API, implemented by the Keystone team; it contains a Python API (the keystoneclient module) for OpenStack's Identity Service. For command line interface support, use OpenStackClient.

Contents:

Python API

By way of a quick-start:

>>> from keystoneauth1.identity import v3
>>> from keystoneauth1 import session
>>> from keystoneclient.v3 import client
>>> auth = v3.Password(auth_url="http://example.com:5000/v3", username="admin",
...                     password="password", project_name="admin",
...                     user_domain_id="default", project_domain_id="default")
>>> sess = session.Session(auth=auth)
>>> keystone = client.Client(session=sess)
>>> keystone.projects.list()
    [...]
>>> project = keystone.projects.create(name="test", description="My new Project!", domain="default", enabled=True)
>>> project.delete()
Description
OpenStack Identity (Keystone) Client
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