The IM Squonk2 Admin Text-based UI (SquAd)
Project description
Squonk2 Admin
SquAd (Squonk2 Administration) is s Textual-UI (TUI) for the visualisation and administration of Squonk2 environments. SquAd is designed to be used by those with Squonk2 administrative privileges, it’s of little use to users who are not administrators.
SquAd uses the squonk2-python-client to interact with a Squonk2 environment and uses Will McGugan’s textual framework to provide the user with a simple, text-based user interface modelled on the popular k9s Kubernetes monitor. At the moment SquAd is provides non-destructive, read-only access to the chosen Squonk2 environment.
SquAd is NOT an alternative to (or replacement for) the existing Data Manager UI. The role of SquAd is to provide a simple and lightweight Data Manager (and Account Server) monitor, with administrator-only features not available in the UI.
Importantly SquAd should be a “rapid development” platform where we can add features quickly using a lightweight display framework. SquAd fails if we spend too much time battling with the UI.
We chose Textual because it…
has had some favorable reviews
works
is extremely lightweight
is under active development
Installation
SquAd is a Python application, written with Python 3.10 and published to PyPI and is easily installed using pip:
pip install im-squad
Execution
Before running SquAd you must have access to a Squonk2 environment. SquAd obtains details of the environment through a YAML-based environments file. An example file, environments, is located in the root of this project:
---
# An example SquAd environments file.
#
# It provides all the connection details for one or more Squonk2 environments.
# It is expected to be found in the user's home directory
# as '~/.squad/environments' or the user can 'point' to it by setting
# 'SQUAD_ENVIRONMENT_FILE', e.g. 'export SQUAD_ENVIRONMENT_FILE=~/my-env'
# The 'environments' block defines one or more environments.
# Each has a name. Here we define an environment called 'site-a'
# but environments can be called anything YAML accepts as a key,
# although it would aid consistency if you restrict your names to letters
# and hyphens.
environments:
site-a:
# The hostname of the keycloak server, without a 'http' prefix
# and without a '/auth' suffix.
keycloak-hostname: example.com
# The realm name used for the Squonk2 environment.
keycloak-realm: squonk2
# The Keycloak client IDs of the Account Server and Data Manager.
# The Account Server client ID is optional.
keycloak-as-client-id: account-server-api
keycloak-dm-client-id: data-manager-api
# The hostnames of the Account Server and Data Manager APIs,
# without a 'http' prefix and without an 'api' suffix.
# If you have not provided an Account Server client ID its
# hostname value is not required.
as-hostname: as.example.com
dm-hostname: dm.example.com
# The username and password of an admin user that has access
# to the Account Server and Data Manager.
# The user *MUST* have admin rights.
admin-user: dlister
admin-password: blob1234
# The final part of the file is a 'default' property,
# which SquAd uses to select the an environment from the block above
# when all else fails. It's simply the name of one of the environment
# declarations above.
default: site-a
When SquAd starts it will look for the environments file in your home directory, in the file ~/.squonk2/environments. If you place your populated environments file there you need do nothing else prior to running SquAd. If you prefer to put your environments file elsewhere, or have multiple files, set the path to your file using the environment variable SQUONK2_ENVIRONMENTS_FILE:
export SQUONK2_ENVIRONMENTS_FILE=~/my-squonk2-environments
With an environments file in place you can run SquAd:
squad
As an alternative to having separate environments files for each Squonk2 environment, you can populate the file with the details of more than one Squonk2 environment, giving each a unique name. If you do this you can select them when you launch SquAd by providing the the name of the environment on the command-line.
For example, if you have an environments file with details of two environments called site-a and site-b you can run SquAd with the command:
squad site-a
or:
squad site-b
One environment has be be named in the environments deafult property (maybe your go to environment) but using this technique you can quickly switch between environments, or have multiple SquAd applications running, using a single file.
Logging
You can enable logging from SquAd and the underlying textual framework by setting the environment variable SQUONK2_LOGFILE when running the application:
SQUONK2_LOGFILE=./squad.log squad
Debugging
Textual doesn’t like anything being written to the console so printing (even to stderr) will topple the display. That’s why stderr is diverted when the application is running and nothing is printed. There comes a time, though, when you need to see the error log. For these times you can run SquAd without stderr diverted:
squad --enable-stderr
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