![]() Looks like we end up with the following changes:
1a43566306cb8cebad8cae85c67b15b3c254f316 - Prevent Recursive BuildRequestBody
debc1adf8e41fb5c5b7e2021a1be0b4d0c78318a - Networking v2: Create Floating IP with Subnet
1db95d798aa72ec12a6e60e40749cea56073d2fb - Compute v2: Add unit tests for Ephemeral field
0b8b348f5ad19aa4513ad9f8ad24f766a6623ad9 - compute: flavors: add Ephemeral attribute
8a6dfa8264e8b64523272c7a205e5f08bb6c118f - Compute v2: Flavor Access Remove (#688)
35ab3f13f69349f99ba8b9c9c36a7031ae2963dd - Flavor Extra Spec Update
800a4c0d57fbe8403b0bb6f13a8340c8fc990ad5 - Flavor Extra Spec Delete
be3fd7845c1928cbc5bbe289f2e39f5dec2e7278 - Flavor Extra Specs Create
c2cafb46bb409768f420742757949fd05fb1d704 - Flavor Extra Specs: List / Get (#686)
7b1b87753c31d4900587840774a019bbfa770698 - Compute v2: Flavor Access Add (#687)
1a43566306cb8cebad8cae85c67b15b3c254f316 - Prevent Recursive BuildRequestBody
debc1adf8e41fb5c5b7e2021a1be0b4d0c78318a - Networking v2: Create Floating IP with Subnet
The full set of changes between the old and new SHA are here:
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||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
openstack | ||
pagination | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
.zuul.yaml | ||
auth_options.go | ||
BUILD | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
doc.go | ||
endpoint_search.go | ||
errors.go | ||
FAQ.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
MIGRATING.md | ||
params.go | ||
provider_client.go | ||
README.md | ||
results.go | ||
service_client.go | ||
STYLEGUIDE.md | ||
util.go |
Gophercloud: an OpenStack SDK for Go
Gophercloud is an OpenStack Go SDK.
Useful links
How to install
Before installing, you need to ensure that your GOPATH environment variable is pointing to an appropriate directory where you want to install Gophercloud:
mkdir $HOME/go
export GOPATH=$HOME/go
To protect yourself against changes in your dependencies, we highly recommend choosing a dependency management solution for your projects, such as godep. Once this is set up, you can install Gophercloud as a dependency like so:
go get github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud
# Edit your code to import relevant packages from "github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud"
godep save ./...
This will install all the source files you need into a Godeps/_workspace
directory, which is
referenceable from your own source files when you use the godep go
command.
Getting started
Credentials
Because you'll be hitting an API, you will need to retrieve your OpenStack credentials and either store them as environment variables or in your local Go files. The first method is recommended because it decouples credential information from source code, allowing you to push the latter to your version control system without any security risk.
You will need to retrieve the following:
- username
- password
- a valid Keystone identity URL
For users that have the OpenStack dashboard installed, there's a shortcut. If
you visit the project/access_and_security
path in Horizon and click on the
"Download OpenStack RC File" button at the top right hand corner, you will
download a bash file that exports all of your access details to environment
variables. To execute the file, run source admin-openrc.sh
and you will be
prompted for your password.
Authentication
Once you have access to your credentials, you can begin plugging them into Gophercloud. The next step is authentication, and this is handled by a base "Provider" struct. To get one, you can either pass in your credentials explicitly, or tell Gophercloud to use environment variables:
import (
"github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud"
"github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud/openstack"
"github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud/openstack/utils"
)
// Option 1: Pass in the values yourself
opts := gophercloud.AuthOptions{
IdentityEndpoint: "https://openstack.example.com:5000/v2.0",
Username: "{username}",
Password: "{password}",
}
// Option 2: Use a utility function to retrieve all your environment variables
opts, err := openstack.AuthOptionsFromEnv()
Once you have the opts
variable, you can pass it in and get back a
ProviderClient
struct:
provider, err := openstack.AuthenticatedClient(opts)
The ProviderClient
is the top-level client that all of your OpenStack services
derive from. The provider contains all of the authentication details that allow
your Go code to access the API - such as the base URL and token ID.
Provision a server
Once we have a base Provider, we inject it as a dependency into each OpenStack service. In order to work with the Compute API, we need a Compute service client; which can be created like so:
client, err := openstack.NewComputeV2(provider, gophercloud.EndpointOpts{
Region: os.Getenv("OS_REGION_NAME"),
})
We then use this client
for any Compute API operation we want. In our case,
we want to provision a new server - so we invoke the Create
method and pass
in the flavor ID (hardware specification) and image ID (operating system) we're
interested in:
import "github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud/openstack/compute/v2/servers"
server, err := servers.Create(client, servers.CreateOpts{
Name: "My new server!",
FlavorRef: "flavor_id",
ImageRef: "image_id",
}).Extract()
The above code sample creates a new server with the parameters, and embodies the
new resource in the server
variable (a
servers.Server
struct).
Advanced Usage
Have a look at the FAQ for some tips on customizing the way Gophercloud works.
Backwards-Compatibility Guarantees
None. Vendor it and write tests covering the parts you use.
Contributing
See the contributing guide.
Help and feedback
If you're struggling with something or have spotted a potential bug, feel free to submit an issue to our bug tracker.
Thank You
We'd like to extend special thanks and appreciation to the following:
OpenLab
OpenLab is providing a full CI environment to test each PR and merge for a variety of OpenStack releases.
VEXXHOST
VEXXHOST is providing their services to assist with the development and testing of Gophercloud.