I certainly use them daily. I actually use an interesting wrapper called 
Supernova (http://rackerhacker.github.com/supernova/) which allows for 
multi-user/multi-environment configurations. While the clients may not be as 
critical as the APIs themselves, they're something I certainly rely on heavily.

Daryl
________________________________
From: openstack-bounces+daryl.walleck=rackspace....@lists.launchpad.net 
[openstack-bounces+daryl.walleck=rackspace....@lists.launchpad.net] on behalf 
of David Kranz [[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, March 01, 2013 3:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Openstack] Are the Python APIs public or internal?

The Tempest (QA) team certainly considers them to be public and we just started 
getting some contributions that are testing novaclient. In other work I am also 
a consumer of several of these APIs so I really hope they don't break.

 -David

On 3/1/2013 8:50 AM, Dolph Mathews wrote:
I believe they should certainly be treated as public API's -- just like any 
other library. I'd also treat them as stable if they've ever been included in a 
versioned release. That said, I'm sure it would be easy to find examples of 
methods & attributes within the library that are not intended to be consumed 
externally, but perhaps either the naming convention or documentation doesn't 
sufficiently indicate that.

In keysoneclient, we're making backwards incompatible changes in a new 
subpackage (keystoneclient.v3) while maintaing compatibility in the common 
client code. For example, you should always be able to initialize the client 
with a tenant_id / tenant_name, even though the client will soon be using 
project_id / project_name internally to reflect our revised lingo.


-Dolph


On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 11:07 PM, Lorin Hochstein 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Here's an issue that came up in the operators doc sprint this week.

Let's say I wanted to write some Python scripts using the APIs exposed by the 
python-*client packages. As a concrete example, let's say I wrote a script that 
uses the keystone Python API that's exposed in the python-keystoneclient 
package:

https://github.com/lorin/openstack-ansible/blob/master/playbooks/keystone/files/keystone-init.py

Are these APIs "public" or "stable"  in some meaningful way? (i.e., can I count 
on this script still working across minor release upgrades)? Or should they be 
treated like "internal" APIs that could be changed at any time in the future? 
Or is this not defined at all?

Lorin


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