Aww I see, that would be cool
Marcelo Martins Openstack-swift [email protected] “Knowledge is the wings on which our aspirations take flight and soar. When it comes to surfing and life if you know what to do you can do it. If you desire anything become educated about it and succeed. “ On Nov 1, 2011, at 9:05 AM, Ziad Sawalha wrote: > We also need to consider the use case where a role may have rights over > multiple services. Cloud Admin for example. > > EndpointType would allow us to do this: > > endpointTemplate add [region] [service] [type=public|internal|admin…other] > [url] [enabled] [is_global] > > That would allow services to register as many endpoints and endpoint types as > they needed. > > Z > > From: Marcelo Martins <[email protected]> > Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 19:26:12 -0500 > To: Ziad Sawalha <[email protected]> > Cc: Joseph Heck <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" > <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: [Openstack] keystone Endpoint schema > > Hi Ziad, > > Sorry, that was my mistake. I meant to have "case service.name:" on that > pseudocode and not type. I wasn't proposing any EndpointType and don't see > how that would help. > > The way that I was thinking was, you can either have the "services" table > pre-populated during keystone install/setup or have the user do it. Also > provide information on the docs about the services that keystone currently > support. The documentation would provide information to the user on how to > add an endpointTemplate to a particular service. > > > Perhaps this is a bit more clear: > > > case service.name: > > openstack-swift) > try > endpointTemplate add [region] [service] [public_url] [internal_url] [enabled] > [is_global] > except > "Failed with improper number of arguments"swift) > show_some_help() > try > > openstack-compute) > endpointTemplate add [region] [service] [public_url] [admin_url] > [internal_url] [enabled] [is_global] > .... > > openstack-swift) > > > > If one needs to add a "generic/custom" service (one that keystone does not > know yet), perhaps keystone could be flexible enough to accept N numbers of > URLs for this "generic/custom" service. But I think this is something more > for the future. > > > > > > > Marcelo Martins > Openstack-swift > [email protected] > > “Knowledge is the wings on which our aspirations take flight and soar. When > it comes to surfing and life if you know what to do you can do it. If you > desire anything become educated about it and succeed. “ > > > > > On Oct 31, 2011, at 4:42 PM, Ziad Sawalha wrote: > >> The list of URLs comes from what we have historically done at Rackspace and >> the conversations had in OpenStack about a management/admin API. >> >> I agree that not all services need those three. And some may want to create >> additional ones. You mention "type" below. Not to be confused with the >> serviceType (like compute, identity, image-service, object-store, etc...). >> Are you proposing an EndpointType (maybe admin, public, private, etc..)? >> >> That does seem like a more flexible approach. >> >> It would help to have some well-known types, such as: >> - public: Internet-accessible >> - admin: private, with elevated-privilege calls available >> - internal: provides a high bandwidth, low latency, unmetered endpoint >> >> Thoughts? >> >> Z >> >> >> >> On Oct 31, 2011, at 2:17 PM, "Marcelo Martins" <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >>> >>> It should require/accept the number of URLs that is required by the type of >>> service one is adding. For example, swift only has public and localnet >>> storage URLs. No admin URL. >>> So, regardless if one is using keystone-manage or not (not sure what else >>> one can use, Rest calls maybe ? ), it should only accept what the service >>> type requires. >>> >>> >>> case type: >>> >>> swift) >>> try >>> endpointTemplate add [region] [service] [public_url] [internal_url] >>> [enabled] [is_global] >>> except >>> "Failed with improper number of arguments" >>> show_some_help() >>> >>> nova) >>> .... >>> >>> keystone) >>> ... >>> another-service) >>> .... >>> >>> whatever_else) >>> ... >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Marcelo Martins >>> Openstack-swift >>> [email protected] >>> >>> “Knowledge is the wings on which our aspirations take flight and soar. When >>> it comes to surfing and life if you know what to do you can do it. If you >>> desire anything become educated about it and succeed. “ >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Oct 31, 2011, at 1:52 PM, Joseph Heck wrote: >>> >>>> Can you provide an example? >>>> >>>> I think you're asserting that you'd like the keystone-manage command to >>>> not require 3 different URLs when they don't exist separately, is that >>>> correct? >>>> >>>> -joe >>>> >>>> On Oct 31, 2011, at 11:45 AM, Marcelo Martins wrote: >>>>> Well, If you need to specify a "type" when adding an endpointTemplate, >>>>> then keystone should be smart enough to identify the type given and only >>>>> accept the number of URLs needed for such type of service. >>>>> >>>>> Marcelo Martins >>>>> Openstack-swift >>>>> [email protected] >>>> >>>>> On Oct 31, 2011, at 1:40 PM, Joseph Heck wrote: >>>>>> That's just what it sees today - the only one of the service endpoints >>>>>> that uses all three (right now anyway) is Keystone itself. Can you share >>>>>> a different pattern that you're interested in seeing supported? >>>>>> >>>>>> -joe >>>>>> >>>>>> On Oct 31, 2011, at 9:46 AM, Marcelo Martins wrote: >>>>>>> What makes keystone assume that all types of services will have " >>>>>>> [public_url] [admin_url] [internal_url] "? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Marcelo Martins >>>>>>> Openstack-swift >>>>>>> [email protected] >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack >>> Post to : [email protected] >>> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack >>> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >
_______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

