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Python Interface for Cloud Foundry APIs

Project description

Python Cloud Foundry API Client

This module provides a pure Python interface to the Cloud Foundry APIs.

Installation

You can install from PIP

pip install cf-api

or view it on PyPI.

Documentation

See the docs at https://cf-api.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ or in the ./docs directory and the ./examples directory.

Versioning

Version 1.x

  • Support both Python 2.7/3.6-3.8
  • Remove cf_api.dropsonde module in favor of the dropsonde module.
  • Add CF API version 3 support
  • Add Dockerfile example

Version 0.x

  • Supports Python 2.7

Getting Started

The following examples should be enough to get you started using this library.

# Initializing the Cloud Controller client

from getpass import getpass
import cf_api
import json

cloud_controller = 'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com'
deploy_client_id = 'cf'
deploy_client_secret = ''
verify_ssl = True
username = 'youser'
password = getpass('Password: ').strip()

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller(
    cloud_controller,
    client_id=deploy_client_id,
    client_secret=deploy_client_secret,
    username=username,
    password=password,
).set_verify_ssl(verify_ssl)
    
    
# List all organizations
req = cc.organizations()
res = req.get()
orgs = res.resources
for r in orgs:
    print('org', r.guid, r.name)
    
    
# List all spaces
res = cc.spaces().get()
spaces = res.resources
for r in spaces:
    print('space', r.guid, r.name)


# List all applications

res = cc.apps().get()
apps = res.resources
for r in apps:
    print('app', r.guid, r.name)


# Find an app by it's org/space/name

org_name = 'your_org'
space_name = 'your_space'
app_name = 'your_app'

# find your org by name
res = cc.organizations().get_by_name(org_name)
# you can access the first array resource using the `resource` attribute
your_org = res.resource

# find your space by name within your org
res = cc.request(your_org.spaces_url).get_by_name(space_name)
your_space = res.resource

# find your app by name within your space
res = cc.request(your_space.apps_url).get_by_name(app_name)
your_app = res.resource
print('your_app', your_app)


# Find an app by it's GUID
# 
# Note that this same pattern applies to all Cloud Controller resources
#

res = cc.apps(your_app.guid).get()
# you can also use the `resource` attribute to access a response with a 
# non-array result
your_same_app = res.resource
print('your_same_app', your_same_app)


# Find a stack by name
your_stack = 'some_stack'
res = cc.stacks().get_by_name(your_stack)
stack = res.resource


# Create an app
your_buildpack = 'some_buildpack'
command = 'python server.py'
res = cc.apps().set_params(
    name=app_name,
    space_guid=your_space.guid,
    stack_guid=stack.guid,
    buildpack=your_buildpack,
    command=command,
    health_check_type='port',
    health_check_timeout=60,
    instances=2,
    memory=512,
    disk_quota=512
).post()
print('new app', res.data)


# Upload the bits for an app
my_zipfile = '/tmp/app.zip'
with open(my_zipfile, 'r') as f:
    res = cc.apps(your_app.guid, 'bits')\
        .set_query(async='true')\
        .add_field('resources', json.dumps([]))\
        .add_file('application', 'application.zip', f, 'application/zip')\
        .put()
    print(res.data)

Running in Docker

To get start running cf_api in Docker, just build the provided Dockerfile

you@yourhost:~/python-cf-api$ docker build -t python-cf-api:latest .

and run it using the following syntax.

you@yourhost:~/python-cf-api$ docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src python-cf-api:latest python3
Python 3.8.1
[GCC 9.2.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import cf_api
>>> # play with it here

Using CF API version 3

The following example shows how to use the Cloud Foundry version 3 API.

import cf_api

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller()
req = cc.v3.apps()
res = req.get()
print(res.resource.guid)
  • The cc.v3 attribute returns a CloudController instance that is configured to wrap requests and responses in V3 compatible classes, namely V3CloudControllerRequest and V3CloudControllerResponse. These objects work similarly to their v2 counterparts, CloudControllerRequest and CloudControllerResponse.
  • The V3CloudControllerResponse provides resource and resources which return an instance or list of instances of V3Resource objects which support the common API object keys such as name, guid, space_guid, and org_guid, etc.
  • The cc.v3.get_all_resources() function supports both v2 and v3 pagination.
  • The cc.v3.request() function supports both relative URLs and absolute URLs, for example /v3/apps and http://localhost/v3/apps, respectively. See request() function documentation for more information.

Environment Variables

The library is also configurable via environment variables.

Variable Description
PYTHON_CF_URL This is the cloud controller base URL. Do not include a trailing slash on the URL.
PYTHON_CF_CLIENT_ID This is the UAA client ID the library should use.
PYTHON_CF_CLIENT_SECRET This is the UAA client secret the library should use.
PYTHON_CF_IGNORE_SSL This indicates whether to verify SSL certs. Default is false. Set to true to ignore SSL verification.
CF_DOCKER_PASSWORD This variable optionally provides the Docker user's password if a docker image is being used. This variable is not necessarily required to use a docker image.

An example library usage with these variables set would look like this:

# env vars might be set as follows
# PYTHON_CF_URL=https://api.cloudfoundry.com
# PYTHON_CF_CLIENT_ID=my_client_id
# PYTHON_CF_CLIENT_SECRET=my_client_secret

import cf_api

# no args are required when the above env vars are detected
cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller()
res = cc.apps().get()
# ...

# the same principle applies to new_uaa()
uaa = cf_api.new_uaa()
# ...

Log in with Cloud Foundry Authorization Code

The following functions may be used to implement login with Cloud Foundry via Authorization Codes.

The function get_openid_connect_url() shows how to build UAA URL to which the user can be redirected in order to log in.

The function verify_code() can be used when the user successfully logs in and UAA redirects back to redirect_uri with the code attached. Pass the code and original redirect_uri into this function in order to get the OAuth2 Token and to also verify the signature of the JWT.

This particular example applies to OpenID Connect.

import cf_api

cc = 'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com'
client_id = 'yourclient'
client_secret = 'yoursecret'
response_type = 'code'

def get_openid_connect_url(redirect_uri):
    return cf_api\
        .new_uaa(cc=cc, client_id=client_id, client_secret=client_secret, no_auth=True)\
        .authorization_code_url(response_type, scope='openid', redirect_uri=redirect_uri)


def verify_code(code, redirect_uri):
    uaa = cf_api.new_uaa(cc=cc, client_id=client_id, client_secret=client_secret, no_auth=True)
    res = uaa.authorization_code(code, response_type, redirect_uri)
    data = res.data
    uaa.verify_token(data['id_token'], audience=uaa.client_id)
    return data

Deploy an Application

The cf_api.deploy_manifest module may be used to deploy a Cloud Foundry app. The following snippet demonstrates the usage for deploying an app.

cd path/to/your/project
python -m cf_api.deploy_manifest \
  --cloud-controller https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com \
  -u youser -o yourg -s yourspace \
  -m manifest.yml -v -w
# For the CLI usage of deploy_manifest, you may also set
#   the CF_REFRESH_TOKEN environment variable as a substitute
#   for collecting username and password

This module may also be used programmatically.

from __future__ import print_function
import cf_api
from getpass import getpass
from cf_api.deploy_manifest import Deploy

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller(
    'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com',
    username='youruser',
    password=getpass().strip(),
    client_id='cf',
    client_secret='',
    verify_ssl=True
)

manifest_filename = 'path/to/manifest.yml'

apps = Deploy.parse_manifest(manifest_filename, cc)

for app in apps:
    app.set_debug(True)
    app.set_org_and_space('yourorg', 'yourspace')
    print (app.push()) 
    # print (app.destroy(destroy_routes=True))

Deploy a Service

The cf_api.deploy_service module may be used to deploy a Cloud Foundry service to a space. The following snippet demonstrates the usage for deploying a service.

cd path/to/your/project
python -m cf_api.deploy_service \
  --cloud-controller https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com \
  -u youser -o yourg -s yourspace \
  --name your-custom-service-name --service-name cf-service-type \
  --service-plan cf-service-type-plan -v -w

This module may also be used programmatically.

from __future__ import print_function
import cf_api
from getpass import getpass
from cf_api.deploy_service import DeployService

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller(
    'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com',
    username='youruser',
    password=getpass().strip(),
    client_id='cf',
    client_secret='',
    verify_ssl=True
)

service = DeployService(cc)\
    .set_debug(True)\
    .set_org_and_space('yourorg', 'yourspace')
    
result = service.create('my-custom-db', 'database-service', 'small-database-plan')
print(result)

Query a Space

The cf_api.deploy_space module provides a convenience interface for working with Cloud Foundry spaces. The module provides read-only (i.e. GET requests only) support for the Cloud Controller API endpoints scoped to a specific space i.e. /v2/spaces/<space_guid>/(routes|service_instances|apps). The following snippet demonstrates the usage for listing apps for in a space.

cd path/to/your/project
python -m cf_api.deploy_space \
  --cloud-controller https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com \
  -u youser -o yourg -s yourspace apps

This module may also be used programmatically.

from __future__ import print_function
import cf_api
from getpass import getpass
from cf_api.deploy_space import Space

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller(
    'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com',
    username='youruser',
    password=getpass().strip(),
    client_id='cf',
    client_secret='',
    verify_ssl=True
)

space = Space(cc, org_name='yourorg', space_name='yourspace')

# create the space
space.create()

# destroy the space
space.destroy()

# make a Cloud Controller request within the space
apps_in_the_space = space.request('apps').get()

# deploys an application to this space
space.deploy_manifest('/path/to/manifest.yml') # push the app
space.wait_manifest('/path/to/manifest.yml') # wait for the app to start
space.destroy_manifest('/path/to/manifest.yml') # destroy the app

app = space.get_app_by_name('yourappname') # find an application by its name within the space

# deploy a service in this space
space.get_deploy_service().create('my-custom-db', 'database-service', 'small-database-plan')
service = space.get_service_instance_by_name('my-custom-db') # find a service by its name within the space

Tail Application Logs

The cf_api.logs_util module may be used to tail Cloud Foundry application logs. Both recentlogs and stream modes are supported. The following snippet demonstrates the usage for listing recent logs and tailing app logs simultaneously.

cd path/to/your/project
python -m cf_api.logs_util \
  --cloud-controller https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com \
  -u youser -o yourg -s yourspace -a yourapp \
  -r -t

This module may also be used programmatically.

from __future__ import print_function
import cf_api
from getpass import getpass
from cf_api import dropsonde_util

cc = cf_api.new_cloud_controller(
    'https://api.yourcloudfoundry.com',
    username='youruser',
    password=getpass().strip(),
    client_id='cf',
    client_secret='',
    verify_ssl=True,
    init_doppler=True
)

app_guid = 'your-app-guid'
app = cc.apps(app_guid).get().resource

# get recent logs
logs = cc.doppler.apps(app.guid, 'recentlogs').get().multipart

# convert log envelopes from protobuf to dict
logs = [dropsonde_util.parse_envelope_protobuf(log) for log in logs]

print(logs)

# stream logs
ws = cc.doppler.ws_request('apps', app.guid, 'stream')
try:
    ws.connect()
    ws.watch(lambda m: print(dropsonde_util.parse_envelope_protobuf(m)))
except Exception as e:
    print(e)
finally:
    ws.close()

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