#!/usr/bin/env bash # To use an OpenStack cloud you need to authenticate against the Identity # service named keystone, which returns a **Token** and **Service Catalog**. # The catalog contains the endpoints for all services the user/tenant has # access to - such as Compute, Image Service, Identity, Object Storage, Block # Storage, and Networking (code-named nova, glance, keystone, swift, # cinder, and neutron). # # *NOTE*: Using the 2.0 *Identity API* does not necessarily mean any other # OpenStack API is version 2.0. For example, your cloud provider may implement # Image API v1.1, Block Storage API v2, and Compute API v2.0. OS_AUTH_URL is # only for the Identity API served through keystone. export OS_AUTH_URL=DCAE_OS_KEYSTONE_URL_HERE/v2.0 # With the addition of Keystone we have standardized on the term **tenant** # as the entity that owns the resources. export OS_TENANT_ID=DCAE_OS_TENANT_ID_HERE export OS_TENANT_NAME="DCAE_OS_TENANT_NAME_HERE" # unsetting v3 items in case set unset OS_PROJECT_ID unset OS_PROJECT_NAME unset OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME unset OS_INTERFACE # In addition to the owning entity (tenant), OpenStack stores the entity # performing the action as the **user**. export OS_USERNAME="DCAE_OS_USERNAME_HERE" # With Keystone you pass the keystone password. export OS_PASSWORD=DCAE_OS_PASSWORD_HERE # If your configuration has multiple regions, we set that information here. # OS_REGION_NAME is optional and only valid in certain environments. export OS_REGION_NAME="DCAE_OS_REGION_HERE" # Don't leave a blank variable, unset it if it was empty if [ -z "$OS_REGION_NAME" ]; then unset OS_REGION_NAME; fi export OS_ENDPOINT_TYPE=publicURL export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=2