getting_started.rst 7.8 KB

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  1. Getting Started
  2. ===============
  3. This getting started guide will provide a quick tour of some CloudBridge
  4. features. For more details on individual features, see the
  5. `Using CloudBridge <topics/overview.html>`_ section or the
  6. `API reference <api_docs/ref.html>`_.
  7. Installation
  8. ------------
  9. CloudBridge is available on PyPI so to install the latest available version,
  10. run::
  11. pip install --upgrade cloudbridge
  12. For common issues during setup, check the following section:
  13. `Common Setup Issues <topics/troubleshooting.html>`
  14. Create a provider
  15. -----------------
  16. To start, you will need to create a reference to a provider object. The provider
  17. object identifies the cloud you want to work with and supplies your credentials.
  18. The following code snippets show the needed configuration fields to setup a
  19. necessary provider object, for AWS, OpenStack, and Azure. For details on how to
  20. setup providers, take a look at the `Setup page <topics/setup.html>`_. The
  21. remainder of the code is the same for either provider.
  22. AWS:
  23. .. code-block:: python
  24. from cloudbridge.cloud.factory import CloudProviderFactory, ProviderList
  25. config = {'aws_access_key': 'AKIAJW2XCYO4AF55XFEQ',
  26. 'aws_secret_key': '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'}
  27. provider = CloudProviderFactory().create_provider(ProviderList.AWS, config)
  28. image_id = 'ami-2d39803a' # Ubuntu 14.04 (HVM)
  29. OpenStack (with Keystone authentication v2):
  30. .. code-block:: python
  31. from cloudbridge.cloud.factory import CloudProviderFactory, ProviderList
  32. config = {'os_username': 'username',
  33. 'os_password': 'password',
  34. 'os_auth_url': 'authentication URL',
  35. 'os_region_name': 'region name',
  36. 'os_project_name': 'project name'}
  37. provider = CloudProviderFactory().create_provider(ProviderList.OPENSTACK,
  38. config)
  39. image_id = 'c1f4b7bc-a563-4feb-b439-a2e071d861aa' # Ubuntu 14.04 @ NeCTAR
  40. OpenStack (with Keystone authentication v3):
  41. .. code-block:: python
  42. from cloudbridge.cloud.factory import CloudProviderFactory, ProviderList
  43. config = {'os_username': 'username',
  44. 'os_password': 'password',
  45. 'os_auth_url': 'authentication URL',
  46. 'os_project_name': 'project name',
  47. 'os_project_domain_name': 'project domain name',
  48. 'os_user_domain_name': 'domain name'}
  49. provider = CloudProviderFactory().create_provider(ProviderList.OPENSTACK,
  50. config)
  51. image_id = '97755049-ee4f-4515-b92f-ca00991ee99a' # Ubuntu 14.04 @ Jetstream
  52. Azure:
  53. .. code-block:: python
  54. from cloudbridge.cloud.factory import CloudProviderFactory, ProviderList
  55. config = {'azure_subscription_id': 'REPLACE WITH ACTUAL VALUE',
  56. 'azure_client_id': 'REPLACE WITH ACTUAL VALUE',
  57. 'azure_secret': 'REPLACE WITH ACTUAL VALUE',
  58. 'azure_tenant': ' REPLACE WITH ACTUAL VALUE',
  59. 'azure_resource_group' : 'REPLACE WITH ACTUAL VALUE'}
  60. provider = CloudProviderFactory().create_provider(ProviderList.AZURE, config)
  61. image_id = '/subscriptions/{subscription-id}/resourceGroups/{resource-group}/providers/Microsoft.Compute/images/{image-name}' #
  62. List some resources
  63. -------------------
  64. Once you have a reference to a provider, explore the cloud platform:
  65. .. code-block:: python
  66. provider.security.security_groups.list()
  67. provider.compute.vm_types.list()
  68. provider.storage.snapshots.list()
  69. provider.storage.buckets.list()
  70. This will demonstrate the fact that the library was properly installed and your
  71. provider object is setup correctly but it is not very interesting. Therefore,
  72. let's create a new instance we can ssh into using a key pair.
  73. Create a key pair
  74. -----------------
  75. We'll create a new key pair and save the private portion of the key to a file
  76. on disk as a read-only file.
  77. .. code-block:: python
  78. kp = provider.security.key_pairs.create('cloudbridge_intro')
  79. with open('cloudbridge_intro.pem', 'w') as f:
  80. f.write(kp.material)
  81. import os
  82. os.chmod('cloudbridge_intro.pem', 0o400)
  83. Create a network
  84. ----------------
  85. A cloudbridge instance should be launched into a private subnet. We'll create
  86. a private network and subnet, and make sure it has internet connectivity, by
  87. attaching an internet gateway to the subnet via a router.
  88. .. code-block:: python
  89. net = self.provider.networking.networks.create(
  90. name='my-network', cidr_block='10.0.0.0/16')
  91. sn = net.create_subnet(name='my-subnet', cidr_block='10.0.0.0/28')
  92. router = self.provider.networking.routers.create(network=net, name='my-router')
  93. router.attach_subnet(sn)
  94. gateway = net.gateways.get_or_create_inet_gateway(name)
  95. router.attach_gateway(gateway)
  96. Create a VM firewall
  97. --------------------
  98. Next, we need to create a VM firewall (also commonly known as a security group)
  99. and add a rule to allow ssh access. A VM firewall needs to be associated with
  100. a private network.
  101. .. code-block:: python
  102. net = provider.networking.networks.get('desired network ID')
  103. fw = provider.security.vm_firewalls.create(
  104. 'cloudbridge-intro', 'A VM firewall used by CloudBridge', net.id)
  105. fw.rules.create(TrafficDirection.INBOUND, 'tcp', 22, 22, '0.0.0.0/0')
  106. Launch an instance
  107. ------------------
  108. We can now launch an instance using the created key pair and security group.
  109. We will launch an instance type that has at least 2 CPUs and 4GB RAM. We will
  110. also add the network interface as a launch argument.
  111. .. code-block:: python
  112. img = provider.compute.images.get(image_id)
  113. vm_type = sorted([t for t in provider.compute.vm_types
  114. if t.vcpus >= 2 and t.ram >= 4],
  115. key=lambda x: x.vcpus*x.ram)[0]
  116. inst = provider.compute.instances.create(
  117. name='cloudbridge-intro', image=img, vm_type=vm_type,
  118. subnet=sn, key_pair=kp, vm_firewalls=[fw])
  119. # Wait until ready
  120. inst.wait_till_ready() # This is a blocking call
  121. # Show instance state
  122. inst.state
  123. # 'running'
  124. .. note ::
  125. Note that we iterated through provider.compute.vm_types directly
  126. instead of calling provider.compute.vm_types.list(). This is
  127. because we need to iterate through all records in this case. The list()
  128. method may not always return all records, depending on the global limit
  129. for records, necessitating that additional records be paged in. See
  130. :doc:`topics/paging_and_iteration`.
  131. Assign a public IP address
  132. --------------------------
  133. To access the instance, let's assign a public IP address to the instance. For
  134. this step, we'll first need to allocate a floating IP address for our account
  135. and then associate it with the instance. Note that floating IPs are associated
  136. with an Internet Gateway so we allocate the IP under the gateway we dealt with
  137. earlier.
  138. .. code-block:: python
  139. fip = gateway.floating_ips.create()
  140. inst.add_floating_ip(fip)
  141. inst.refresh()
  142. inst.public_ips
  143. # [u'54.166.125.219']
  144. From the command prompt, you can now ssh into the instance
  145. ``ssh -i cloudbridge_intro.pem ubuntu@54.166.125.219``.
  146. Cleanup
  147. -------
  148. To wrap things up, let's clean up all the resources we have created
  149. .. code-block:: python
  150. inst.delete()
  151. from cloudbridge.cloud.interfaces import InstanceState
  152. inst.wait_for([InstanceState.DELETED, InstanceState.UNKNOWN],
  153. terminal_states=[InstanceState.ERROR]) # Blocking call
  154. fip.delete()
  155. fw.delete()
  156. kp.delete()
  157. os.remove('cloudbridge_intro.pem')
  158. router.detach_gateway(gateway)
  159. router.detach_subnet(sn)
  160. gateway.delete()
  161. router.delete()
  162. sn.delete()
  163. net.delete()
  164. And that's it - a full circle in a few lines of code. You can now try
  165. the same with a different provider. All you will need to change is the
  166. cloud-specific data, namely the provider setup and the image ID.