devstack/openrc
2011-10-24 16:31:19 -07:00

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Load local configuration
source ./stackrc
# Set api host endpoint
HOST_IP=${HOST_IP:-127.0.0.1}
# Nova original used project_id as the *account* that owned resources (servers,
# ip address, ...) With the addition of Keystone we have standardized on the
# term **tenant** as the entity that owns the resources. **novaclient** still
# uses the old deprecated terms project_id. Note that this field should now be
# set to tenant_name, not tenant_id.
export NOVA_PROJECT_ID=${TENANT:-demo}
# In addition to the owning entity (tenant), nova stores the entity performing
# the action as the **user**.
export NOVA_USERNAME=${USERNAME:-demo}
# With Keystone you pass the keystone password instead of an api key.
export NOVA_API_KEY=${ADMIN_PASSWORD:-secrete}
# With the addition of Keystone, to use an openstack cloud you should
# authenticate against keystone, which returns a **Token** and **Service
# Catalog**. The catalog contains the endpoint for all services the user/tenant
# has access to - including nova, glance, keystone, swift, ... We currently
# recommend using the 2.0 *auth api*.
#
# *NOTE*: Using the 2.0 *auth api* does not mean that compute api is 2.0. We
# will use the 1.1 *compute api*
export NOVA_URL=${NOVA_URL:-http://$HOST_IP:5000/v2.0/}
# Currently novaclient needs you to specify the *compute api* version. This
# needs to match the config of your catalog returned by Keystone.
export NOVA_VERSION=${NOVA_VERSION:-1.1}
# FIXME - why does this need to be specified?
export NOVA_REGION_NAME=${NOVA_REGION_NAME:-RegionOne}
# Set the ec2 url so euca2ools works
export EC2_URL=${EC2_URL:-http://$HOST_IP:8773/services/Cloud}
# Access key is set in the initial keystone data to be the same as username
export EC2_ACCESS_KEY=${USERNAME:-demo}
# Secret key is set in the initial keystone data to the admin password
export EC2_SECRET_KEY=${ADMIN_PASSWORD:-secrete}
# set log level to DEBUG (helps debug issues)
# export NOVACLIENT_DEBUG=1