Gophercloud is a Go SDK for OpenStack.
Join us on kubernetes slack, on #gophercloud. Visit slack.k8s.io for an invitation.
This is the development branch of Gophercloud; stable releases are cut from the branch v1
.
Reference a Gophercloud package in your code:
import "github.com/gophercloud/gophercloud"
Then update your go.mod
:
go mod tidy
Because you'll be hitting an API, you will need to retrieve your OpenStack
credentials and either store them in a clouds.yaml
file, 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:
- A valid Keystone identity URL
- Credentials. These can be a username/password combo, a set of Application Credentials, a pre-generated token, or any other supported authentication mechanism.
For users who have the OpenStack dashboard installed, there's a shortcut. If
you visit the project/api_access
path in Horizon and click on the
"Download OpenStack RC File" button at the top right hand corner, you can
download either a clouds.yaml
file or an openrc
bash file that exports all
of your access details to environment variables. To use the clouds.yaml
file,
place it at ~/.config/openstack/clouds.yaml
. To use the openrc
file, run
source openrc
and you will be prompted for your password.
Once you have access to your credentials, you can begin plugging them into Gophercloud. The next step is authentication, which is handled by a base "Provider" struct. There are number of ways to construct such a struct.
With gophercloud/utils
The github.com/gophercloud/utils
library provides the clientconfig
package to simplify authentication. It
provides additional functionality, such as the ability to read clouds.yaml
files. To generate a "Provider" struct using the clientconfig
package:
import (
"github.com/gophercloud/utils/openstack/clientconfig"
)
// You can also skip configuring this and instead set 'OS_CLOUD' in your
// environment
opts := new(clientconfig.ClientOpts)
opts.Cloud = "devstack-admin"
provider, err := clientconfig.AuthenticatedClient(opts)
A provider client is a top-level client that all of your OpenStack service clients 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.
Once we have a base Provider, we inject it as a dependency into each OpenStack service. For example, in order to work with the Compute API, we need a Compute service client. This can be created like so:
client, err := clientconfig.NewServiceClient("compute", opts)
Without gophercloud/utils
Note gophercloud doesn't provide support for
clouds.yaml
file so you need to implement this functionality yourself if you don't wish to usegophercloud/utils
.
You can also generate a "Provider" struct without using the clientconfig
package from gophercloud/utils
. To do this, 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"
)
// 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)
As above, you can then use this provider client to generate a service client for a particular OpenStack service:
client, err := openstack.NewComputeV2(provider, gophercloud.EndpointOpts{
Region: os.Getenv("OS_REGION_NAME"),
})
We can use the Compute service client generated above for any Compute API
operation we want. In our case, we want to provision a new server. To do this,
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).
Have a look at the FAQ for some tips on customizing the way Gophercloud works.
Gophercloud versioning follows semver.
Before v1.0.0
, there were no guarantees. Starting with v1, there will be no breaking changes within a major release.
See the Release instructions.
See the contributing guide.
If you're struggling with something or have spotted a potential bug, feel free to submit an issue to our bug tracker.