openstack team mailing list archive
-
openstack team
-
Mailing list archive
-
Message #10553
Re: [Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
+1 for skipping the "metadata" container; seems superfluous.
The service type (compute, identity, etc) should definitely be distinct from the endpoint's type (public, admin, internal, etc). The endpoint type should also be more easily flexible than it is today -- we've had complaints about hard coding the three existing types (which is quite ugly, IMO), and not providing simple support for additional types (e.g. read-only feed endpoints).
The endpoint versioning attributes seem to confuse everyone as well (I'm not even sure I understand it myself), so there's certainly room for improvement there as well.
-Dolph Mathews
On Apr 25, 2012, at 11:37 AM, "Nguyen, Liem Manh" <liem_m_nguyen@xxxxxx> wrote:
> I would like to keep the service type and name under the service and not the endpoint, too. Make it easier to parse for a given service.
>
> One thing is that I am not sure if we need the metadata tag… In the Keystone XSD, we have the construct <anyAttribute namespace="##other" processContents="lax"/>, which allows any additional, implementation-specific attribute to be added. Those that do not support the specific attribute can simply ignore it. A couple of benefits I can see with not using the metadata tag, and just use the custom element directly like this: http://paste.openstack.org/show/13832/, which the anyAttribute supports, are:
>
> · Simplier parsing, one level less.
> · If that attribute becomes a core attribute later, no need to change the parser.
>
> Liem
>
> From: openstack-bounces+liem_m_nguyen=hp.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:openstack-bounces+liem_m_nguyen=hp.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Joe Savak
> Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2012 1:04 PM
> To: Joseph Heck; openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
> Cc: Adam Gandelman
> Subject: Re: [Openstack] [Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
>
> Having endpoints under the service construct is supposed to make it easier to programmatically find the endpoint(s) you are interested in.
>
> For example – as nova client I can parse the service catalog and identity nova by service-type “compute” in order to get the public, internal, and admin endpoints for nova.
>
> By having service type & name as attributes under the endpoint, I’ll have a harder time doing that (having to dive into each endpoint construct to identify the ones with service-type “compute”).
> Maybe it would be better to have each endpoint have its own construct inside of a service.
>
> So instead of http://paste.openstack.org/show/13678/
> Maybe http://paste.openstack.org/show/13682/
>
>
> From: openstack-bounces+joe.savak=rackspace.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:openstack-bounces+joe.savak=rackspace.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Joseph Heck
> Sent: Friday, April 20, 2012 4:16 PM
> To: openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
> Cc: Adam Gandelman
> Subject: [Openstack] [Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
>
> While I've been roaming about the summit and conference, I've been trying to figure out exactly what we're modeling with the current "service" and "endpoints" that are in the API today. After talking with a number of folks, it's getting clearer that how it's being used is very installation specific.
>
> I'd like to simplify this aspect of the API if at all possible, especially with a lot of the good ideas around describing the relationships between endpoints and and their installation.
>
> The use cases I'm hearing actively in use are:
>
> * (Horizon/UI/client) To indicate to a user where they can go to access their data
> * (Glance, Nova, Keystone client) to find the endpoint relevant to uploading images (current client implementations appear to assume there is only one image endpoint)
>
> The use case to indicate a geographic location for a datacenter or "cloud" is not consistent - some implementations I've learned of have that feature (and use "Region" for that sort of information), and others are load balancing a single endpoint to deploy to multiple datacenters and geographic regions from a single endpoint.
>
> At the summit and conference, I heard a desire to expose geographic information with the endpoints, but that is clearly an operator specific implementation/deployment detail. Likewise I heard a lot of "We could really..." if additional metadata was easily available on endpoints, again in fairly implementation/deployment specific detail.
>
> So looking forward towards a v.next API, what do you all think about having just "endpoints", with everything else being attributes on those endpoints (including what "service" and "type" it is), with some expected conventions (that there are a few well defined types - such as PublicURL and InternalURL, and relevant names for the rest API endpoints (ec2, compute, volume, image, identity...)
>
> Additional metadata can then float on the endpoints in deployment/implementation specific ways that don't lock in other systems to be deployed and implemented in the same fashion.
>
> -joe
>
>
> On Apr 20, 2012, at 1:47 PM, Lorin Hochstein wrote:
> On Apr 13, 2012, at 12:34 PM, Adam Gandelman wrote:
> On 04/13/2012 10:50 AM, Dolph Mathews wrote:
> While $(tenant_id)s is certainly the documented syntax, it appears that the SQL catalog backend (and *only* the SQL catalog backend, as far as I can tell) explicitly supports both $(tenant_id)s and %(tenant_id)s:
>
> https://github.com/openstack/keystone/blob/master/keystone/catalog/backends/sql.py#L163
>
> Perhaps Adam Gandelman has some insight?
>
> -Dolph
>
> Dolph-
>
> No, the same is supported in the case of templated catalog as well, which is what the SQL catalog was largely based off:
>
> https://github.com/openstack/keystone/blob/master/keystone/catalog/backends/templated.py#L115
>
> Just tested that "sed -i 's/\$/%/g' /etc/keystone/default_catalog.templates" still produces a functional service catalog when configured to use the templated backend.
>
> Seeing as both are supported, perhaps it would be better for docs to be updated to refer to the use of % instead of $ to avoid people running into problems with the $() sub-shell?
>
>
> The OpenStack Install and Deploy manual has some language about this (see last paragraph): http://docs.openstack.org/trunk/openstack-compute/install/content/elements-of-keystone-service-catalog-entry.html
>
> This hasn't made its way into the admin docs yet, though.
>
>
> Take care,
>
> Lorin
> --
> Lorin Hochstein
> Lead Architect - Cloud Services
> Nimbis Services, Inc.
> www.nimbisservices.com
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> Post to : openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> Post to : openstack@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
References
-
Endpoints problems
From: Guilherme Birk, 2012-04-12
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Anne Gentle, 2012-04-12
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Guilherme Birk, 2012-04-13
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: David Kranz, 2012-04-13
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Kiall Mac Innes, 2012-04-13
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Dolph Mathews, 2012-04-13
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Adam Gandelman, 2012-04-13
-
Re: Endpoints problems
From: Lorin Hochstein, 2012-04-20
-
[Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
From: Joseph Heck, 2012-04-20
-
Re: [Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
From: Joe Savak, 2012-04-24
-
Re: [Keystone] What exactly are we modeling with endpoints?
From: Nguyen, Liem Manh, 2012-04-25