traefik/vendor/github.com/exoscale/egoscale/doc.go
Ludovic Fernandez 253060b4f3 Update Lego
2018-09-14 10:06:03 +02:00

178 lines
5.5 KiB
Go

/*
Package egoscale is a mapping for with the CloudStack API (http://cloudstack.apache.org/api.html) from Go. It has been designed against the Exoscale (https://www.exoscale.com/) infrastructure but should fit other CloudStack services.
Requests and Responses
To build a request, construct the adequate struct. This library expects a pointer for efficiency reasons only. The response is a struct corresponding to the data at stake. E.g. DeployVirtualMachine gives a VirtualMachine, as a pointer as well to avoid big copies.
Then everything within the struct is not a pointer. Find below some examples of how egoscale may be used to interact with a CloudStack endpoint, especially Exoscale itself. If anything feels odd or unclear, please let us know: https://github.com/exoscale/egoscale/issues
req := &egoscale.DeployVirtualMachine{
Size: 10,
ServiceOfferingID: "...",
TemplateID: "...",
ZoneID: "...",
}
fmt.Println("Deployment started")
resp, err := cs.Request(req)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
vm := resp.(*egoscale.VirtualMachine)
fmt.Printf("Virtual Machine ID: %s\n", vm.ID)
This example deploys a virtual machine while controlling the job status as it goes. It enables a finer control over errors, e.g. HTTP timeout, and eventually a way to kill it of (from the client side).
req := &egoscale.DeployVirtualMachine{
Size: 10,
ServiceOfferingID: "...",
TemplateID: "...",
ZoneID: "...",
}
vm := &egoscale.VirtualMachine{}
fmt.Println("Deployment started")
cs.AsyncRequest(req, func(jobResult *egoscale.AsyncJobResult, err error) bool {
if err != nil {
// any kind of error
panic(err)
}
// Keep waiting
if jobResult.JobStatus == egoscale.Pending {
fmt.Println("wait...")
return true
}
// Unmarshal the response into the response struct
if err := jobResult.Response(vm); err != nil {
// JSON unmarshaling error
panic(err)
}
// Stop waiting
return false
})
fmt.Printf("Virtual Machine ID: %s\n", vm.ID)
Debugging and traces
As this library is mostly an HTTP client, you can reuse all the existing tools around it.
cs := egoscale.NewClient("https://api.exoscale.ch/compute", "EXO...", "...")
// sets a logger on stderr
cs.Logger = log.Newos.Stderr, "prefix", log.LstdFlags)
// activates the HTTP traces
cs.TraceOn()
Nota bene: when running the tests or the egoscale library via another tool, e.g. the exo cli (or the cs cli), the environment variable EXOSCALE_TRACE=prefix does the above configuration for you. As a developer using egoscale as a library, you'll find it more convenient to plug your favorite io.Writer as it's Logger.
APIs
All the available APIs on the server and provided by the API Discovery plugin
cs := egoscale.NewClient("https://api.exoscale.ch/compute", "EXO...", "...")
resp, err := cs.Request(&egoscale.ListAPIs{})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for _, api := range resp.(*egoscale.ListAPIsResponse).API {
fmt.Printf("%s %s\n", api.Name, api.Description)
}
// Output:
// listNetworks Lists all available networks
// ...
Security Groups
Security Groups provide a way to isolate traffic to VMs. Rules are added via the two Authorization commands.
resp, err := cs.Request(&egoscale.CreateSecurityGroup{
Name: "Load balancer",
Description: "Opens HTTP/HTTPS ports from the outside world",
})
securityGroup := resp.(*egoscale.SecurityGroup)
resp, err = cs.Request(&egoscale.AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress{
Description: "SSH traffic",
SecurityGroupID: securityGroup.ID,
CidrList: []string{"0.0.0.0/0"},
Protocol: "tcp",
StartPort: 22,
EndPort: 22,
})
// The modified SecurityGroup is returned
securityGroup := resp.(*egoscale.SecurityGroup)
// ...
err = client.BooleanRequest(&egoscale.DeleteSecurityGroup{
ID: securityGroup.ID,
})
// ...
Security Group also implement the generic List, Get and Delete interfaces (Listable, Gettable and Deletable).
// List all Security Groups
sgs, err := cs.List(new(egoscale.SecurityGroup))
for _, s := range sgs {
sg := s.(egoscale.SecurityGroup)
// ...
}
// Get a Security Group
sg := &egoscale.SecurityGroup{Name: "Load balancer"}
if err := cs.Get(sg); err != nil {
...
}
// The SecurityGroup struct has been loaded with the SecurityGroup informations
if err := cs.Delete(sg); err != nil {
...
}
// The SecurityGroup has been deleted
See: http://docs.cloudstack.apache.org/projects/cloudstack-administration/en/stable/networking_and_traffic.html#security-groups
Zones
A Zone corresponds to a Data Center. You may list them. Zone implements the Listable interface, which let you perform a list in two different ways. The first exposes the underlying CloudStack request while the second one hide them and you only manipulate the structs of your interest.
// Using ListZones request
req := &egoscale.ListZones{}
resp, err := client.Request(req)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for _, zone := range resp.(*egoscale.ListZonesResponse) {
...
}
// Using client.List
zone := &egoscale.Zone{}
zones, err := client.List(zone)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for _, z := range zones {
zone := z.(egoscale.Zone)
...
}
Elastic IPs
An Elastic IP is a way to attach an IP address to many Virtual Machines. The API side of the story configures the external environment, like the routing. Some work is required within the machine to properly configure the interfaces.
See: http://docs.cloudstack.apache.org/projects/cloudstack-administration/en/latest/networking_and_traffic.html#about-elastic-ips
*/
package egoscale