This commit changes the get command to have users request vms by specifying the hosts they want and then the number of hosts rather than having to say each one separated by a comma. |
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| bin | ||
| lib | ||
| spec | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| Gemfile | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
| vmfloaty.gemspec | ||
| vmfloaty.yml.example | ||
vmfloaty
A CLI helper tool for Puppet Labs vmpooler to help you stay afloat.
Install
Grab the latest from ruby gems...
gem install vmfloaty
Usage
delete Schedules the deletion of a host or hosts
get Gets a vm or vms based on the os flag
help Display global or [command] help documentation
list Shows a list of available vms from the pooler
modify Modify a vms tags and TTL
query Get information about a given vm
revert Reverts a vm to a specified snapshot
snapshot Takes a snapshot of a given vm
status Prints the status of vmpooler
summary Prints the summary of vmpooler
token Retrieves or deletes a token
GLOBAL OPTIONS:
-h, --help
Display help documentation
-v, --version
Display version information
-t, --trace
Display backtrace when an error occurs
Example workflow
Grabbing a token for authenticated pooler requests:
floaty token get --user me --url https://vmpooler.mycompany.net
This command will then ask you to log in. If successful, it will return a token that you can save either in a dotfile or use with other cli commands.
Grabbing vms:
floaty get centos-7-x86_64=2 debian-7-x86_64=1 windows-10=3 --token mytokenstring --url https://vmpooler.mycompany.net
vmfloaty dotfile
If you do not wish to continuely specify various config options with the cli, you can have a dotfile in your home directory for some defaults. For example:
#file at /Users/me/.vmfloaty.yml
url: 'http://vmpooler.mycompany.net'
user: 'brian'
token: 'tokenstring'
Now vmfloaty will use those config files if no flag was specified.
Valid config keys
Here are the keys that vmfloaty currently supports:
- verbose
- true
- false
- token
- :token-string
- user
- :username
- url
- :pooler-url
vmpooler API
This cli tool uses the vmpooler API.
Using the Pooler class
If you want to write some ruby scripts around the vmpooler api, vmfloaty provides a Pooler and Auth class to make things easier. The ruby script below shows off an example of a script that gets a token, grabs a vm, runs some commands through ssh, and then destroys the vm.
require 'vmfloaty/pooler'
require 'vmfloaty/auth'
require 'io/console'
require 'net/ssh'
def aquire_token(verbose, url)
STDOUT.flush
puts "Enter username:"
user = $stdin.gets.chomp
puts "Enter password:"
password = STDIN.noecho(&:gets).chomp
token = Auth.get_token(verbose, url, user, password)
puts "Your token:\n#{token}"
token
end
def grab_vms(os_string, token, url, verbose)
response_body = Pooler.retrieve(verbose, os_string, token, url)
if response_body['ok'] == false
STDERR.puts "There was a problem with your request"
exit 1
end
response_body[os_string]
end
def run_puppet_on_host(hostname)
STDOUT.flush
puts "Enter 'root' password for vm:"
password = STDIN.noecho(&:gets).chomp
user = 'root'
# run puppet
run_puppet = "/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/bin/puppet agent -t"
begin
ssh = Net::SSH.start(hostname, user, :password => password)
output = ssh.exec!(run_puppet)
puts output
ssh.close
rescue
STDERR.puts "Unable to connect to #{hostname} using #{user}"
exit 1
end
end
if __FILE__ == $0
verbose = true
url = 'https://vmpooler.mycompany.net'
token = aquire_token(verbose, url)
os = ARGV[0]
hostname = grab_vm(os, token, url, verbose)
run_puppet_on_host(hostname)
end
ruby myscript.rb centos-7-x86_64