What is cloudmonkey?

cloudmonkey is a command line interface (CLI) tool for CloudStack written in Python. cloudmonkey can be use both as an interactive shell and as a command line tool which simplifies CS configuration and management. It is unofficially distributed by community maintained distribution at the cheese shop http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cloudmonkey/ as well as within the git repository in tools/cli/. It can be used with Apache CloudStack 4.0-incubating and above.

Features

  • Usable as a command line tool and interactive shell
  • Management server profiles: select, customize and use different server profiles using 
  • All commands are lowercase unlike API
  • Api Discovery using sync feature, with build time api precaching for failsafe sync
  • Raw api execution support
  • Auto-completion via double <tab>
  • Reverse search using Ctrl+R
  • Emacs compatible keybindings
  • Pipeable output
  • Unix shell execution
  • Support to handle async jobs using user defined blocking or non-blocking way
  • Tabular or JSON output with filtering of table columns
  • Colored output
  • Unicode support
  • Api parameter value completion

NOTE: Version 6.x+ wiki has moved here https://github.com/apache/cloudstack-cloudmonkey/wiki, for usage see https://github.com/apache/cloudstack-cloudmonkey/wiki/Usage

Installation

Requirements

cloudmonkey 5.x requires Python 2.6 or above and has following dependencies:

readline
requests
Pygments
prettytable

argcomplete

Platform independent installation

For installing any Python package, pip is recommended: http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/installing.html

$ pip install cloudmonkey

To upgrade:

$ pip install --upgrade cloudmonkey

Thought a clean upgrade is recommended:

$ pip uninstall cloudmonkey
$ pip install cloudmonkey

RHEL/CentOS 6.x (internet access required for python eggs repository)

$ yum install python-setuptools
$ easy_install cloudmonkey

or if pip available (pip is recommended)

$ pip install cloudmonkey

Ubuntu/Debian

$ apt-get install python-pip
$ pip install cloudmonkey

Or, if pip is not available

$ apt-get install python-setuptools
$ easy_install cloudmonkey

Building from source code

cloudmonkey is moved to a separate git repo

more info @ https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=cloudstack.git;a=commit;h=6f84e74a68d78705a06fe58f7927f42f61453a16

$ git clone https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cloudstack-cloudmonkey.git
# Run mgmt server and run "cloudmonkey sync", this is only for build time cache generation using cachemaker.py
$ python setup.py build 
$ python setup.py install

Configuration

cloudmonkey reads configuration from ~/.cloudmonkey/config which is it's config file in user's home directory/.cloudmonkey.

Further it logs in ~/.cloudmonkey/log, stores history in ~/.cloudmonkey/history and caches discovered apis in ~/.cloudmonkey/cache. Only the log and history files can be custom paths and can be configured by setting appropriate file paths in ~/.cloudmonkey/config or by command:

$ cloudmonkey
> set history_file /usr/share/cloudmonkey_history
> set log_file /var/log/cloudmonkey

Typical ~/.cloudmonkey/config for version 5.2.0 and above:

[core]
profile = local
asyncblock = true
paramcompletion = true
history_file = /Users/bhaisaab/.cloudmonkey/history
log_file = /Users/bhaisaab/.cloudmonkey/log
cache_file = /Users/bhaisaab/.cloudmonkey/cache

[ui]
color = true
prompt = >
display = default

[local]
url = http://localhost:8080/client/api
username = admin
password = password
apikey =
secretkey =
timeout = 3600
expires = 600

The following configuration parameters can be configured by using the 'set' command in cloudmonkey:

Key

Purpose

Default

profileManagement server profile namelocal

url

Management server API url (it should contain full url with protocol, port etc and paths)

http://localhost:8080/client/api

timeout

Timeout interval for polling async commands

3600

apikey

User api key

""

secretkey

User secret key

""

verifysslcertEnables/Disables SSL certification verification when making HTTP calls (per server profile)true
usernameCloudStack user nameadmin
passwordCloudStack user passwordpassword

color

Enable coloured output, set to false to disable

true

prompt

cloudmonkey prompt

>

display

Line based, JSON, or tabular output, set to default or json or table

default

log_file

Log file

~/.cloudmonkey/log

history_file

History file

~/.cloudmonkey/history

asyncblock

Poll for async commands, making it false will cause cloudmonkey to return jobid

true

paramcompletion

Tries to predict api for listing a parameter value for an api, experimental may fail

true

Note: If both username/password and apikey/secretkey are set (i.e. have non-empty values), apikey and secretkey are used while making HTTP API calls.

Usage

Getting started

By default cloudmonkey will create 'local' server profile when it will start.

First set the management server API url, apikey and secretkey etc.

Api and Secret keys can be created via CloudStack management server UI, Accounts->Users->Generate keys. One can also use username and password though use of keys is recommended. CloudMonkey first tries to authenticate using apikey/secret key if provided, then if port specified in the URL is 8096 cloudmonkey assumes user is trying to use integration port and if both of them don't qualify i.e. keys are not provided and port is not 8096 we try to authenticate with username and password. 

> set url https://api.exoscale.ch:443/compute
> set apikey <put-your-api-key-for-your-user>
> set secretkey <put-your-secret-key-for-your-user>
> set prompt mycloudmonkey>

Make sure your management server is running, discover and sync/pull latest apis:

> sync
500 APIs discovered and cached

The sync command in cloudmonkey pull a list of apis which are accessible to your user role, along with help docs etc. and stores the cache in ~/.cloudmonkey/cache. This allows cloudmonkey to be adaptable to changes in mgmt server, so in case the sysadmin enables a plugin such as Nicira NVP for that user role, the users can get those changes. New verbs and grammar (DSL) rules are created on the fly. A failsafe precache is bundled with the distribution but users are

Note: This features requires ApiDiscovery plugin to be enabled at the management server and it is enabled by default starting ACS 4.1 version.

Try autocompletion using tabbing:

> <tab><tab>
> list <tab><tab>
> list users <tab><tab>

Getting help

Help for any command can be obtained using help <cmd> or ?<cmd> or <cmd> --help or <cmd> -h, examples:

> help list
> help list users
> ?list
> ?list users
> list users --help
> list users -h

A typical help doc for an api will list all available acceptable arguments and required arguments.

Example help for listUsers api:

> help list users
(listUsers) Lists user accounts
Parameters
==========
id = (uuid) List user by ID.
keyword = (string) List by keyword
accounttype = (long) List users by account type. Valid types include admin, domain-admin, read-only-admin, or user.
username = (string) List user by the username
domainid = (uuid) list only resources belonging to the domain specified
page = (integer)
pagesize = (integer)
listall = (boolean) If set to false, list only resources belonging to the command's caller; if set to true - list resources that the caller is authorized to see. Default value is false
state = (string) List users by state of the user account.
isrecursive = (boolean) defaults to false, but if true, lists all resources from the parent specified by the domainId till leaves.
account = (string) list resources by account. Must be used with the domainId parameter.

Management server profiles

CloudMonkey version 5.2.0 and above will support multiple (management) server profiles, so one can use the tool on the fly toggling between different CloudStack server in the interpreter mode. If cloudmonkey starts for the first time, it will create a default server profile by the name [local] and use the following default values which one can then override using the `set` command. The profile in use is set in the [core] section's profile parameter which is read at the time cloudmonkey loads.

[core]
profile = local
...
 
[local]
url = http://localhost:8080/client/api
username = admin
password = password
apikey =
secretkey =
timeout = 3600
expires = 600

 To create a new server profile, one can use: set profile <profile-name> and this will create a new server profile config section in ~/.cloudmonkey/config and use the above default values. Using set command on params such as url, username, password etc. will set these values for the currently selected profile only. Note: profile names cannot be whitespace/blank '', core or ui.

Tabular output

You may enable tabular listing and even choose set of column fields, this allows you to create your own field using the filter param which takes in comma separated argument. If argument has a space, put them under double quotes. The create table will have the same sequence of field filters provided. If your present cli does not have this, pl. upgrade cloudmonkey: pip install --upgrade cloudmonkey
To enable tabular output:

> set display table

Examples:

> list users account=admin username=admin filter=account,accountid,accounttype,created,domain
count = 1
user:
+---------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------+--------+
| account |              accountid               | accounttype |         created          | domain |
+---------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------+--------+
|  admin  | dc8ece35-9f03-401f-95f1-2db99c467e1c |      1      | 2013-04-03T02:13:25-0500 |  ROOT  |
+---------+--------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------+--------+

Tabular output comes with filtering, using filter parameter you can ask cloudmonkey to filter particular columns (like select field of mysql).

JSON output

JSON output formats cloudmonkey's output into pretty generated JSON documents. Filtering may also be used to limit the result set. Even with filtering, a valid JSON document is generated and may be saved into an external file and processed with your favorite programming language. If your present cli does not have this, pl. upgrade cloudmonkey: pip install --upgrade cloudmonkey
To enable json output:

> set display json

Examples:

> list users account=admin username=admin filter=account,accountid,accounttype,created,domain
{
  "count": 1,
  "user": [
    {
      "account": "admin",
      "accountid": "dc8ece35-9f03-401f-95f1-2db99c467e1c",
      "accounttype": 1,
      "created": "2013-04-03T02:13:25-0500",
      "domain": "ROOT"
    }
  ]
}

Filtering output

CloudMonkey can filter output based on keys. Starting 5.3.0, filter is supported for all display outputs (json, default and table) and autocompletion works as well.

> list users filter=<tab><tab>
account,             accounttype,         created,             domainid,            firstname,           iscallerchilddomain, lastname,            state,               username,           
accountid,           apikey,              domain,              email,               id,                  isdefault,           secretkey,           timezone,           
> list users filter=id,username,firstname,lastname,

id = ef33f4a0-e7cf-11e3-a8a4-005056867a67
firstname = admin
lastname = cloud
username = admin
================================================================================
id = d052dfb3-828c-4fa3-9e72-75f4795bb554
firstname = रोहित
lastname = यादव
username = रोहित

Emacs style key handling

Ctrl+a (start of the line)
Ctrl+e (end of the line)
Ctlr+w (remove one word from back)
Ctrl+u (remove whole line) etc.

Reverse Searching

Ctrl+R etc. If it does not work and also any issue with tab completion it's probably a readline issue on your env. If autocompletion using tabs does not work for you, pl. open an issue on jira, issues.a.o

Debug log

By default cloudmonkey logs in ~/.cloudmonkey_log which can be changed using the set command:

> set log_file /var/log/cloud-cli.log

One can tail the log to keep track on what's happening:

> tail -f ~/.cloudmonkey/log

Using as a command line tool

Use cloudmonkey as a command line tool, by passing args to cloudmonkey. Example:

$ cloudmonkey list users
$ cloudmonkey create domain name=mydomain

It can also take in list of commands from a file and interpret them, for example:

$ cat file-with-cmds
list users
list zones
$ cloudmonkey < file-with-cmds

The follow example illustrates how one can use cloudmonkey to automate their deployments, this one deploys a basic zone:

#!/bin/bash

cli=cloudmonkey
dns_ext=8.8.8.8
dns_int=10.147.28.6
gw=10.147.28.1
nmask=255.255.255.0
hpvr=XenServer
pod_start=10.147.28.225
pod_end=10.147.28.234
vlan_start=10.147.28.235
vlan_end=10.147.28.254

#Put space separated host ips in following
host_ips=10.147.28.60
host_user=root
host_passwd=password
sec_storage=nfs://10.147.28.7/export/home/rohit/secondary
prm_storage=nfs://10.147.28.7/export/home/rohit/primary

zone_id=`$cli create zone dns1=$dns_ext internaldns1=$dns_int name=MyZone networktype=Basic | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
echo "Created zone" $zone_id

phy_id=`$cli create physicalnetwork name=phy-network zoneid=$zone_id | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
echo "Created physical network" $phy_id
$cli add traffictype traffictype=Guest physicalnetworkid=$phy_id
echo "Added guest traffic"
$cli add traffictype traffictype=Management physicalnetworkid=$phy_id
echo "Added mgmt traffic"
$cli update physicalnetwork state=Enabled id=$phy_id
echo "Enabled physicalnetwork"

nsp_id=`$cli list networkserviceproviders name=VirtualRouter physicalnetworkid=$phy_id | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
vre_id=`$cli list virtualrouterelements nspid=$nsp_id | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
$cli api configureVirtualRouterElement enabled=true id=$vre_id
$cli update networkserviceprovider state=Enabled id=$nsp_id
echo "Enabled virtual router element and network service provider"

nsp_sg_id=`$cli list networkserviceproviders name=SecurityGroupProvider physicalnetworkid=$phy_id | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
$cli update networkserviceprovider state=Enabled id=$nsp_sg_id
echo "Enabled security group provider"

netoff_id=`$cli list networkofferings name=DefaultSharedNetworkOfferingWithSGService | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
net_id=`$cli create network zoneid=$zone_id name=guestNetworkForBasicZone displaytext=guestNetworkForBasicZone networkofferingid=$netoff_id | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
echo "Created network $net_id for zone" $zone_id

pod_id=`$cli create pod name=MyPod zoneid=$zone_id gateway=$gw netmask=$nmask startip=$pod_start endip=$pod_end | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
echo "Created pod"

$cli create vlaniprange podid=$pod_id networkid=$net_id gateway=$gw netmask=$nmask startip=$vlan_start endip=$vlan_end forvirtualnetwork=false
echo "Created IP ranges for instances"

cluster_id=`$cli add cluster zoneid=$zone_id hypervisor=$hpvr clustertype=CloudManaged podid=$pod_id clustername=MyCluster | grep ^id\ = | awk '{print $3}'`
echo "Created cluster" $cluster_id

#Put loop here if more than one
for host_ip in $host_ips;
do
  $cli add host zoneid=$zone_id podid=$pod_id clusterid=$cluster_id hypervisor=$hpvr username=$host_user password=$host_passwd url=http://$host_ip;
  echo "Added host" $host_ip;
done;

#$cli create storagepool zoneid=$zone_id podid=$pod_id clusterid=$cluster_id name=MyNFSPrimary url=$prm_storage
#echo "Added primary storage"

$cli add secondarystorage zoneid=$zone_id url=$sec_storage
echo "Added secondary storage"

$cli update zone allocationstate=Enabled id=$zone_id
echo "Basic zone deloyment completed!"

Argument passing

Arguments can be passed to an api command using the syntax; <cmd> <verb> key1=value1 etc.
By default cloudmonkey's lexical parser parses like shlex and split by spaces.

If values have spaces, one can put them under quotes, like:

> create project name="my unique name" displaytext="my lengthy description"

Some api accept array or maps as their arguments, in that case use arg0.key=value syntax. For example, while creating network offering:

> create networkoffering supportedservices=Dhcp,Dns serviceproviderlist[0].service=Dhcp serviceproviderlist[0].provider=VirtualRouter serviceproviderlist[1].service=Dns serviceproviderlist[1].provider=VirtualRouter

Text processing using pipes

Text processing is very easy, one can pipe the data and call their favourite text processors, be it awk, sed or grep.
Examples:

> list accounts listall=true | grep '^id ='
> list users | wc -l
> list routers | more

Automation using shell

Automation can be done using shell or ! followed by shell commands. For example:

> shell ls -lahi
> shell whoami
> shell ssh root@<ip>
> !date
> !ping google.com

For example if one has to create 100 users, one can execute cloudmonkey with args in a loop:

> !for((i=0;i<100;i++)); do cloudmonkey create user username=user$i account=admin firstname=user$i lastname=user$i password=password$i email=user$i@domain.org; done;

Raw API execution

Use the special command api to send a raw api. It does not do autocompletion and assumes the user knows what he's trying to do.
For example:

> api uploadVolume url=xxx format=yyy name=zzz zoneid=aaa

In latest version, we can directly call a raw api on the shell with parameters, example:

> uploadVolume url=xxx format=yyy name=zzz zoneid=aaa

Async Job execution

There are two kinds of apis in CloudStack, one are blocking or synchronous and other one is non-blocking or asynchronous. By default for async apis like deploying a vm ec. are polled by cloudmonkey, one can set cloudmonkey not to poll or wait till the api is finished using:

> set asyncblock false

This causes an async command in cloudmonkey to return a jobid which can be used to poll the completion of that command. This is particularly useful if one wants to starts a lot of VMs without having to wait for the commands to complete. The job can be polled using query async job command, like:

> query asyncjobresult jobid=<job-id>

Parameter completion

Starting 5.3.0 version, parameter implementation works well for api arguments which are of uuid and boolean types. It can be enabled by setting paramcompletion to true. To automatically find out how to get values for a api arg it uses two heuristics (list apis and most likely related list api) so it is quite possible there are corner cases where this may fail. Whenever a list api is called or when parameter completion calls a list api in background, those results (pair of uuid and name strings) are cached by CloudMonkey to speed up rendering. The cache is kept for next 10-15 mins, after which a list api is called again in the background.
Example:

> list users id=
cd58ff50-8642-11e2-9a8b-37057334a9b2 user1

About

cloudmonkey was named after the beloved mascot of Apache CloudStack.
Dev ML: The Apache CloudStack Team <dev@cloudstack.apache.org>
Maintainer: Rohit Yadav <bhaisaab@apache.org>

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