This project contains the ocm
command line tool that simplifies the use
of the OCM API available at api.openshift.com
.
The preferred way to install the tool in Fedora and CentOS is to use the RPM packages built in Fedora Copr. To enable that repository and install the tool use the following commands:
# dnf copr enable ocm/tools # dnf install ocm-cli
This will install the ocm
command and will keep it updated using the same
mechanism used to update all the other packages of the distribution.
If you are not using one of these distributions or you don’t want to use the RPM
packages then you can alternatively get the release binaries from the GitHub
releases page. For
example, to install version 0.1.30 to your personal bin
directory you can use
the following commands:
$ mkdir -p ~/bin $ curl -Lo ~/bin/ocm https://github.com/openshift-online/ocm-cli/releases/download/v0.1.30/ocm-linux-amd64 $ chmod +x ~/bin/ocm
Finally, if none of the installation options described above work for you then
you can install it using go get
:
$ go get -u github.com/openshift-online/ocm-cli/cmd/ocm
But take into account that the results of installing with go get
depend on the
version of Go that you use and on the values of certain environment variables.
It is particularly problematic to install with go get
if the version of Go
used doesn’t support modules, because the dependencies used may not be the ones
tested by the developers. In general installations done with go get
aren’t
supported or recommended.
Run the following to see instructions for various shells:
$ ocm completion --help
The first step to use the tool is to log-in with your OpenShift Cluster Manager offline access token which you can get below:
To do that use the login
command:
$ ocm login --token=eyJ...
This will use the provided token to request OpenID access and refresh tokens
to sso.redhat.com. The tokens will be saved to the .ocm.json
file in your
home directory, for future use.
The login
command has options to log-in to other environments. For example,
if you have a service running in your local environment and you want to use the
tool to test it, you can log-in like this:
$ ocm login \ --token=eyJ... \ --url=https://localhost:8000 \ --insecure
Note
|
The insecure option disables verification of TLS certificates and host
names, do not use it in production environments.
|
An .ocm.json
file stores login credentials for a single API gateway. Using
multiple gateways therefore requires having to log in and out a lot or the
ability to utilize multiple config files. The latter functionality is provided
with the OCM_CONFIG
environment variable. If running ocm login
was
successfull in both cases, the ocm whoami
commands will return different
results:
$ OCM_CONFIG=$HOME/.ocm.json.prod ocm login --url=production --token=... (…) $ OCM_CONFIG=$HOME/.ocm.json.stg ocm login --url=staging --token=... (…) $ OCM_CONFIG=$HOME/.ocm.json.prod ocm whoami (…) $ OCM_CONFIG=$HOME/.ocm.json.stg ocm whoami (…)
Note
|
Tokens for production and staging will differ. |
If you need the OpenID access token to use it with some other tool, you can
use the token
command:
$ ocm token
That will print the raw OpenID access token, which you can then use to send requests to the server with some other tool. For example, if you want to use curl to retrieve your list of clusters you can do the following:
$ curl \ --header "Authorization: Bearer $(ocm token)" \ https://api.openshift.com/api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters
The details of the OpenID access token, in JSON format, can be displayed using
the --payload
option:
$ ocm token --payload
That will display the JSON representation of the access token, which is useful to diagnose authentication issues.
If you’ve compromised your offline token, you can get it revoked like this:
-
Make sure you’re logged into OCM with your browser.
-
Go here.
-
Click REVOKE GRANT for the application cloud-services.
If you now follow the log in procedure new tokens will be generated.
To log out run the logout
command:
$ ocm logout
That will remove the .ocm.json
file, so next time you want to use the tool you
will need to log-in again. You can also remove that file manually; the effect is
exactly the same.
Once logged in you can use the get
command to retrieve objects. For example,
to retrieve the list of clusters with a name that starts with my
you can use
the following command:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters --parameter search="name like 'my%'"
The --parameter
option is used to specify query parameters. It is most useful
combined with the get
command, but it can be also used with any other command.
For detailed information about the query parameters supported by each resource
see the reference documentation.
The search
query parameter is specially useful to retrieve objects from
collections that support searching. The syntax of this parameter is similar to
the syntax of the where
clause of an SQL statement, but using the names of the
attributes of the object instead of the names of the columns of a table. For
example, in order to retrieve the clusters with a name starting with my
and
created in a DNS domain ending with example.com
the complete command can be
the following:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters \ --parameter search="name like 'my%' and dns.base_domain like '%.example.com'"
To find the AWS regions in the US:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/cloud_providers/aws/regions \ --parameter search="name like 'US %'"
To find the clusters created after March 1st 2019:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters \ --parameter search="creation_timestamp >= '2019-03-01'"
To find the clusters that are either ready or installing:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters \ --parameter search="state in ('ready', 'installing')"
The result of that will be a JSON document containing the description of those clusters, for example:
{
"kind": "ClusterList",
"page": 1,
"size": 6,
"total": 10
"items": [
{
"kind": "Cluster",
"id": "1GUAUWE3E1IS87Q99M0kxO1LpCG",
"href": "/api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/1GUAUWE3E1IS87Q99M0kxO1LpCG",
"name": "mycluster",
"api": {
"url": "https://mycluster-api.example.com:6443"
},
"console": {
"url": "https://console-openshift-console.apps.mycluster.example.com"
},
...
},
...
]
}
As the server will always return JSON documents it is very convenient to use the jq tool to extract the information that you need. For example, if you want to get the list of identifiers of your clusters you can do the following:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters | jq -r .items[].id
That will return something like this:
1FtmglZGw2byDzO8tb2cCtWxCNf 1FtRj13Fz2DIcm4zaDrcLvKAIyf ...
The get
command can also be used to retrieve information from sub-resources
associated to objects. For example, the credentials of a cluster (SSH keys,
administrator password and kubeconfig) are available in a credentials
sub-resource. So if your cluster identifier is 123
you can retrieve the
credentials with this command:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/123/credentials
Again the jq tool is very useful here. For
example, it can be used to extract the kubeconfig to a file that can then be
used directly with the oc
command:
$ # Get the file: $ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/123/credentials \ | jq -r .kubeconfig > mycluster.config $ # Use it: $ oc --config=mycluster.config get pods
For a complete definition of the types of objects, and their attributes, see the reference documentation.
To create objects use the post
command, and put the JSON representation of the
object either in the standard input or else in a file indicated by the --body
option. For example, to create a new managed cluster prepare a mycluster.json
file with this content:
{
"name": "mycluster",
"flavour": {
"id": "osd-4"
},
"region": {
"id": "us-east-1"
},
"managed": true
}
And then use the post
command:
$ ocm post /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters < mycluster.json
Or with the --body
option:
$ ocm post /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters --body=mycluster.json
That will send the request to the server, which will initiate the process of creating the object, and will return a JSON document containing the representation.
Complicated objects, like a cluster, are usually created asynchronously, so the
fact that the server returns a response doesn’t mean that the object is ready to
use. Clusters, for example, have a state
attribute to indicate that. So after
creating a cluster you will have to periodically check till the cluster is
ready. To do so first get the id
returned by the post
command:
$ ocm post /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters --body=mycluster.json | jq -r .id
Then use that identifier to check the value of the state
attribute, till it
is ready
:
$ ocm get /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/123 | jq -r .state
Objects can be deleted using the delete
command. For example to delete the
cluster with identifier 123
use the following command:
$ ocm delete /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/123
Some objects can be deleted in different ways. For example, a cluster can be
deleted completely, destroying all the virtual machines, disks and any other
resources it uses. But it can also just be deleted from the database while
preserving the virtual machines, disks, etc. To do so the server accepts a
deprovision
parameter, which can be true
or false
. To use it with the tool
add the --parameter
option. For example, to delete the cluster with identifier
123
only from the database, use the following command:
$ ocm delete /api/clusters_mgmt/v1/clusters/123 --parameter "deprovision=false"
Deletion, like creation, is a lengthy process for complicated objects like
clusters, and it happens asynchronously. After the delete
command finishes it
will take some time to actually delete the cluster. That can be checking using
the get
command till it returns a 404 Not Found
response.
The configuration variables can be read and set via the get
and set
commands.
These settings will be persisted in the .ocm.json
file in your home directory.
$ ocm config get url
$ ocm config set url https://api.openshift.com
Currently RPMs are built for Fedora and CentOS using Fedora Copr.
The mechanism selected to do the build is a the following custom script that
generates the RPM .spec
file:
# Check that the event payload exists:
if [[ ! -f hook_payload ]]; then
echo "Event payload file 'hook_payload' doesn't exist"
exit 1
fi
# Check that the event is the creation of a tag:
ref_type=$(cat hook_payload | jq -r .ref_type)
if [[ "${ref_type}" != "tag" ]]; then
echo "Expected reference type 'tag' but got '${ref_type}'"
exit 1
fi
# Check that the tag is well formed:
ref=$(cat hook_payload | jq -r .ref)
if [[ ! "${ref}" =~ ^v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+$ ]]; then
echo "Reference '${ref}' isn't well formed"
exit 1
fi
# Set the version to use:
version="${ref:1}"
# Generate the .spec file:
cat > ocm-cli.spec <<.
%global debug_package %{nil}
Name: ocm-cli
Version: ${version}
Release: 1%{?dist}
Summary: CLI for the Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager
License: ASL 2.0
URL: https://github.com/openshift-online/ocm-cli
Source: https://github.com/openshift-online/ocm-cli/archive/v${version}.tar.gz
BuildRequires: git
BuildRequires: golang-bin
%description
CLI for the Red Hat OpenShift Cluster Manager
%prep
%setup
%build
make
%install
install -m 0755 -d %{buildroot}%{_bindir}
install -m 0755 ocm %{buildroot}%{_bindir}
%files
%license LICENSE.txt
%doc README.adoc
%{_bindir}/*
.
# Bye:
exit 0
If this script needs to be changed you will need to go to the copr user interface and update it manually.
The GitHub repository is configured with a webhook that will trigger the copr build when a new tag is pushed to the repository.
The build dependencies section of the copr configuration should include the
jq
package is it is needed to extract the version number from the payload of
the event sent by the GitHub webhook.
Just like how
kubectl
plugins works, you can write your own ocm plugins and put the binary under the
$PATH directory, the plugin name should be named with prefix ocm-
, like
ocm-foo
.