http://novel.github.com/lc-tools/
lc-tools is a set of command line tools to control various clouds. It uses libcloud for cloud related stuff so should support as much cloud providers as libcloud does.
sudo python setup.py install
Tutorial for the latest version is available online:
http://novel.github.com/lc-tools/doc/latest/tutorial/
This README contains basic information how to get started.
We will use GoGrid as example.
First, create config file: ~/.lcrc
with the following content:
[default]
driver = gogrid
access_id = your_key_id
secret_key = your_password
It is self-explanatory. Don't forget to run chmod 600
on it to
keep your credentials secret.
When you're done with the configuration file, you can start managing your servers. To list the available image, fire up lc-image-list command in your shell:
$ lc-image-list|grep -i centos
image CentOS 5.2 (32-bit) w/ RightScale (id = 62)
image CentOS 5.2 (64-bit) w/ RightScale (id = 63)
image CentOS 5.3 (32-bit) w/ None (id = 1531)
image CentOS 5.3 (64-bit) w/ None (id = 1532)
Now, to get a list of available node sizes, do:
$ lc-sizes-list
size 512MB (id=512MB, ram=512, disk=30 bandwidth=None)
size 4GB (id=4GB, ram=4096, disk=240 bandwidth=None)
size 2GB (id=2GB, ram=2048, disk=120 bandwidth=None)
size 8GB (id=8GB, ram=8192, disk=480 bandwidth=None)
size 1GB (id=1GB, ram=1024, disk=60 bandwidth=None)
So now you know ids of the images and available sizes, you can use them to create a new node like that:
lc-node-add -i 62 -s 1GB -n mynewnode
It will create a centos node (id = 64) of size 1GB (id = '1GB') with name 'mynewnode'.
Now, to get a list of nodes, use:
$ lc-node-list
100xxx mynode1 173.204.xx.yy Running
100xxx mynode2 173.204.xx.zz Running
When you're done with the node, you can remove it:
$ lc-node-do -i node_id destroy
where node_id
is an id of the node you want to destroy. If
you want to reboot node, just pass 'reboot' argument to this
command instead of 'destroy'.
Any feedback is welcome! You can use github to contact me or plain old email: novel@FreeBSD.org