OpenStack Ansible Modules¶
These are a set of modules for interacting with OpenStack as either an admin
or an end user. If the module does not begin with os_
, it’s either deprecated
or soon to be. This document serves as developer coding guidelines for
modules intended to be here.
Naming¶
- All module names should start with
os_
- Name any module that a cloud consumer would expect to use after the logical resource it manages:
os_server
notos_nova
. This naming convention acknowledges that the end user does not care which service manages the resource - that is a deployment detail. For example cloud consumers may not know whether their floating IPs are managed by Nova or Neutron. - Name any module that a cloud admin would expect to use with the service and the resource:
os_keystone_domain
. - If the module is one that a cloud admin and a cloud consumer could both use, the cloud consumer rules apply.
Interface¶
- If the resource being managed has an id, it should be returned.
- If the resource being managed has an associated object more complex than an id, it should also be returned.
Interoperability¶
- It should be assumed that the cloud consumer does not know a bazillion details about the deployment choices their cloud provider made, and a best effort should be made to present one sane interface to the Ansible user regardless of deployer insanity.
- All modules should work appropriately against all existing known public OpenStack clouds.
- It should be assumed that a user may have more than one cloud account that they wish to combine as part of a single Ansible-managed infrastructure.
Libraries¶
- All modules should use
openstack_full_argument_spec
to pick up the standard input such as auth and ssl support. - All modules should include
extends_documentation_fragment: openstack
. - All complex cloud interaction or interoperability code should be housed in the openstacksdk library.
- All OpenStack API interactions should happen via the openstacksdk and not via OpenStack Client libraries. The OpenStack Client libraries do no have end users as a primary audience, they are for intra-server communication.
Testing¶
- Integration testing is currently done in OpenStack’s CI system
- Testing in openstacksdk produces an obvious chicken-and-egg scenario. Work is under way to trigger from and report on PRs directly.