So pip comes with python 2.7 which is not available by default on CentOS 6.3

Any other method I could use, other than installing python 2.7?

Thanks
ilya

-----Original Message-----
From: Rohit Yadav [mailto:rohit.ya...@citrix.com] 
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 2:14 PM
To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
Subject: RE: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey

Oh, forgot to see that. Yes, now all the cmds are lowercase (except for few 
params liks isAsync=) and tab completion is advised.

Regards.
________________________________________
From: Kishan Kavala [kishan.kav...@citrix.com]
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 11:29 PM
To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
Cc: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey

Sebastian,
  Try set apikey in lower case. Same with set secretkey.

~kishan

On 08-Nov-2012, at 10:00 PM, "Sebastien Goasguen" <run...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Actually it does not work yet.
>
> Now I can type 'b' but it does not get passed properly:
>
> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey> set apiKey 
> KEbkKWtYIz_q_fnpOdwnHoZUJt5tiBNiHvf-oApytBd0adU-s-DRP3an1pqL6TutyUCzjR
> B9UNrBybVr3kcZ6Q
>
> Gives:
>
> INFO  [cloud.api.ApiServer] (92734721@qtp-1601733969-7:) apiKey does 
> not map to a valid user -- ignoring request, apiKey: 
> KEkKWtYIz_q_fnpOdwnHoZUJt5tiBNiHvf-oApytBd0adU-s-DRP3an1pqL6TutyUCzjRB
> 9UNrByVr3kcZ6Q
>
> On Nov 8, 2012, at 5:19 PM, Sebastien Goasguen <run...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> On Nov 8, 2012, at 3:28 PM, Rohit Yadav <rohit.ya...@citrix.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Sebastien,
>>>
>>> Are you using it from pypi/pip, if so do this:
>>> sudo pip uninstall cloudmonkey
>>> sudo pip install cloudmonkey
>>
>> no, I am doing: sudo python ./setup.py install from the source tree
>>
>>> I've had this bug on mac osx, fixed it:
>>> https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=incubator-cloudstack.git;a
>>> =commit;h=36e7a7884efef7c41ac369549b7bdb93e5122110
>>
>> pulled that and reinstalled…and it works.
>>
>> thanks
>>
>> -sebastien
>>
>>
>>> If it still persists for you, checkout  
>>> http://superuser.com/questions/297527/cant-type-the-b-letter-in-pyth
>>> on-shell-in-os-x
>>>
>>> Let me know if this still fails then.
>>>
>>> Regards.
>>>
>>> ________________________________________
>>> From: Sebastien Goasguen [run...@gmail.com]
>>> Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 5:37 PM
>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>> Subject: Re: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I am testing the cli and I have the weirdest issue. When I set the apikey 
>>> or secretkey, the lower case 'b' letter does not print at the prompt.
>>> So if my keys contain 'b' they don't work..
>>>
>>> I tried all the other letters and they work.
>>>
>>> Anyone seeing this,
>>>
>>> -Sebastien
>>>
>>> On Nov 7, 2012, at 7:25 PM, Rohit Yadav <rohit.ya...@citrix.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> yes, I think I'd mentioned in the thread or somewhere. Just use pip 
>>>> or easy_install (apt-get install python-setuptools on ubuntu, 
>>>> install python2.6 or above and pip if you don't have it);
>>>>
>>>> sudo pip install cloudmonkey
>>>>
>>>> or sudo easy_install cloudmonkey
>>>>
>>>> now start cloudmonkey:
>>>> $ cloudmonkey
>>>> ...
>>>>
>>>> Will post a blog/screencast this weekend and update doc so everyone can 
>>>> get help on its usage, though it's pretty intuitive.
>>>> ________________________________________
>>>> From: Musayev, Ilya [imusa...@webmd.net]
>>>> Sent: Wednesday, November 07, 2012 11:41 PM
>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>> Subject: RE: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>
>>>> Rohit,
>>>>
>>>> Can I get the CLI only without going through the whole source code maven 
>>>> install? Is it part of any RPM?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>> ilya
>>>>
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: Rohit Yadav [mailto:rohit.ya...@citrix.com]
>>>> Sent: Monday, November 05, 2012 11:35 AM
>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>> Subject: Re: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>
>>>> Checkout latest code. Few changes to share:
>>>>
>>>> - All lowercase now
>>>> - Tab tab over verbs to see list of params for that api, example 
>>>> list users <tab><tab>
>>>> - This needs improvement but help string, using --help: list user 
>>>> --help
>>>> - Caching to speedup runtime
>>>> - Color and Parsing fixes
>>>>
>>>> Last, I'm now able to get the doc strings for each attribute/param, will 
>>>> see this tomorrow.
>>>>
>>>> Need your help, just incase you want to contribute, these are the TODOs:
>>>>
>>>> - search over history
>>>> - fix parsing
>>>> - doc strings for parameters
>>>> - testing for various kinds of apis (I'm able to deploy a zone with 
>>>> this, but needs testing)
>>>> - unicode char monkey, used in prompt may mess up history searching 
>>>> and text display
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Regards.
>>>>
>>>> On 02-Nov-2012, at 4:58 AM, Edison Su <edison...@citrix.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>>> From: Rohit Yadav [mailto:rohit.ya...@citrix.com]
>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 2:23 PM
>>>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>>>> Subject: RE: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>>>
>>>>>> After you install the tool, so that cloudmonkey is in your 
>>>>>> /usr/local/bin or in $PATH...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Two ways;
>>>>>> 1. As command line tool, on bash/zsh, use the BNF grammar; 
>>>>>> <command line tool
>>>>>> name>:<separator>:<verb>:<separator>:<action>:<separator>:<params
>>>>>> name>>
>>>>>> <command line tool name>={'cloudmonkey'} <separator>={' '} 
>>>>>> <verb>={'list', 'create', 'delete', 'update'.... etc.} 
>>>>>> <action>={'Users'... etc.} <params>={'listall=#'... etc.} So; $ 
>>>>>> cloudmonkey list Users
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Got it, thanks!
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2. file redirector:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> $ cat test-file:
>>>>>> list Users
>>>>>> list <some other action>
>>>>>> <some verb> <some action>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> $ cloudmonkey < test-file
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Note, I'll change the actions (Users, VirtualMachine etc.) to 
>>>>>> lowercase (users, virtualmachine etc.) if that's okay?
>>>>>
>>>>> Please do, nobody wants to type extra keystroke, if it's not necessary.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Regards.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ________________________________________
>>>>>> From: Edison Su [edison...@citrix.com]
>>>>>> Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012 1:55 AM
>>>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>>>> Subject: RE: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Oh, it reminds me that how to use the CLI on the bash command line?
>>>>>> I think admin may want to call cloudstack API in a bash script, 
>>>>>> how can I do that?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>>>> From: Marcus Sorensen [mailto:shadow...@gmail.com]
>>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 1:11 PM
>>>>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>>>>> Subject: Re: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Yes, I look forward to using it instead of local curl calls on 
>>>>>>> the command line :-)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2012 at 2:02 PM, Edison Su <edison...@citrix.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>>>>>> From: Rohit Yadav [mailto:rohit.ya...@citrix.com]
>>>>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 11:45 AM
>>>>>>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>>>>>>> Subject: RE: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Hi Chip, please go ahead if we can fix the http/s issue. The 
>>>>>>>>> connection is based on marvin, I'm sure using CLI we'll find 
>>>>>>>>> out more bugs and fix anything in marvin thereby help maintain
>>>>>>>>> marvin->tests and
>>>>>>> CLI.
>>>>>>>>> Please hack that up on 
>>>>>>>>> tools/marvin/marvin/cloudstackConnection.py
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Edison, yes I'm working on the completedefault, I've figured a 
>>>>>>>>> solution to the parsing and tabbing issue to show params for 
>>>>>>>>> any api and added more verbs to the grammar like deploy, start etc.
>>>>>>>>> In the new approach doc strings and params needed for an api 
>>>>>>>>> are fetched and cached in the class locally to speed up the loading 
>>>>>>>>> process.
>>>>>>>>> Till it gets committed, cloudmonkey (now) will keep telling 
>>>>>>>>> the user what params they are missing until it gets all the required 
>>>>>>>>> ones.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Great! Thanks for your awesome CLI, people will like it.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> One more thing, for people who may not have unicode support 
>>>>>>>>> the prompt may appear weird and history search (up, down ) can 
>>>>>>>>> mess up the visuals. For example on Mac it appears as a 
>>>>>>>>> colorful emoji, but I found that it looks weird on other 
>>>>>>>>> platforms. Will probably remove it, or the user can custom set 
>>>>>>>>> their prompt, using: set prompt
>>>>>>>>> myprompt>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Regards.
>>>>>>>>> PS. the set command is full of (fun :)  hacks because of 
>>>>>>>>> funtional/generic programming, it basically can set any 
>>>>>>>>> attribute on the class, so one can do something like creating 
>>>>>>>>> something (var, func). For example set ruler # (so instead of 
>>>>>>>>> - you will have a #
>>>>>>>>> separator)
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> ________________________________________
>>>>>>>>> From: Chip Childers [chip.child...@sungard.com]
>>>>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 11:15 PM
>>>>>>>>> To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org
>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: CLI for CloudStack: cloudmonkey
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 2:10 PM, Rohit Yadav 
>>>>>>>>> <rohit.ya...@citrix.com>
>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I was working on a CLI for cloudstack, it's based on Marvin 
>>>>>>>>>> (the neglected robot) and called cloudmonkey after our 
>>>>>>>>>> beloved mascot :D
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I've committed that on master, please review:
>>>>>>>>>> https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=incubator-cloudstac
>>>>>>>>>> k.gi t; a=c ommit;h=2ceaa3911e792dbeb6c40dfb70961008a01f7e3c
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Features:
>>>>>>>>>> - it's a shell and also a terminal tool, accepts file 
>>>>>>>>>> redirection and pipes
>>>>>>>>>> - scalable to find and run old and new APIs
>>>>>>>>>> - intuitive grammar and verbs
>>>>>>>>>> - autocompletion (functional hack)
>>>>>>>>>> - shell execution using ! or shell
>>>>>>>>>> - cfg support: user defined variables, like prompt, ruler, host, 
>>>>>>>>>> port etc.
>>>>>>>>>> - history
>>>>>>>>>> - colors (disable using set color false)
>>>>>>>>>> - dynamic API loading and rule generation
>>>>>>>>>> - leverages Marvin to get latest autogenerated APIs
>>>>>>>>>> - emacs like shortcuts on prompt
>>>>>>>>>> - uses apiKey and secretKey to interact with mgmt server
>>>>>>>>>> - logs all client commands
>>>>>>>>>> - PEP-8 compliant code
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> FIXMEs:
>>>>>>>>>> - Reverse search over history
>>>>>>>>>> - Fix input and output processing
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> It requires python and clint; pip install clint (or if you 
>>>>>>>>>> have to easy_install clint) mvn clean install -P developer cd 
>>>>>>>>>> tools/cli/cloudmonkey python cloudmonkey.py
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> If you want to have the terminal tool installed; cd tools/cli 
>>>>>>>>>> python setup.py sdist cd dist pip install 
>>>>>>>>>> cloudmonkey-0.0.4.tar.gz (or easy_install etc.)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> You can do stuff like;
>>>>>>>>>> cloudmonkey < file-with-commands, or cloudmonkey list Users, 
>>>>>>>>>> or as shell;
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> (If you see unicode chars cloud and monkey below, yes they 
>>>>>>>>>> were put intentionally :)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> $ cloudmonkey
>>>>>>>>>> ☁ Apache CloudStack CLI. Type help or ? to list commands.
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  set apiKey <your key here>
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  set secretKey <your key here>
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  <tab><tab>
>>>>>>>>>> add      api      create   delete   disable  enable   help     list  
>>>>>>>>>>    quit
>>>>>> remove
>>>>>>>>> set      shell    update
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  list <tab><tab>
>>>>>>>>>> Accounts                   Alerts                     AsyncJobs      
>>>>>>>>>>             Capabilities
>>>>>>>>> Capacity                   Clusters                   Configurations
>>>>>>>>>> DiskOfferings              DomainChildren             Domains        
>>>>>>>>>>             Events
>>>>>>>>> EventTypes                 FirewallRules              Hosts
>>>>>>>>>> HypervisorCapabilities     Hypervisors                InstanceGroups
>>>>>>>>> IpForwardingRules          IsoPermissions             Isos
>>>>>>>>> LBStickinessPolicies
>>>>>>>>>> LoadBalancerRuleInstances  LoadBalancerRules          NetworkACLs
>>>>>>>>> NetworkDevice              NetworkOfferings           Networks
>>>>>>>>> NetworkServiceProviders
>>>>>>>>>> OsCategories               OsTypes                    
>>>>>>>>>> PhysicalNetworks           Pods
>>>>>>>>> PortForwardingRules        PrivateGateways            ProjectAccounts
>>>>>>>>>> ProjectInvitations         Projects                   
>>>>>>>>>> PublicIpAddresses
>>>>>>>>> RemoteAccessVpns           ResourceLimits             Routers
>>>>>>>>> SecurityGroups
>>>>>>>>>> ServiceOfferings           SnapshotPolicies           Snapshots
>>>>>>>>> SSHKeyPairs                StaticRoutes               
>>>>>>>>> StorageNetworkIpRange
>>>>>>>>> StoragePools
>>>>>>>>>> SupportedNetworkServices   Swifts                     SystemVms
>>>>>> Tags
>>>>>>>>> TemplatePermissions        Templates                  
>>>>>>>>> TrafficTypeImplementors
>>>>>>>>>> TrafficTypes               Users                      VirtualMachines
>>>>>>>>> VirtualRouterElements      VlanIpRanges               Volumes
>>>>>>>>> VPCOfferings
>>>>>>>>>> VPCs                       VpnConnections             
>>>>>>>>>> VpnCustomerGateways
>>>>>>>>> VpnGateways                VpnUsers                   Zones
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  list Users
>>>>>>>>>> …
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  !ls
>>>>>>>>>> # this give you a shell too and one can do things like
>>>>>>>>>> πŸ™‰ cloudmonkey>  !for i in Users Account; do echo 
>>>>>>>>>> `cloudmonkey list $i
>>>>>>>>>> | grep id`; done;
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Example commands to deploy a datacenter; (fill in dynamic ids
>>>>>>>>>> etc.) create Zone dns1=8.8.8.8 internaldns1=10.147.28.6
>>>>>>>>>> name=Zone1 networktype=Basic create PhysicalNetwork 
>>>>>>>>>> name=test-network
>>>>>>> zoneid=
>>>>>>>>> add
>>>>>>>>>> TrafficType traffictype=Guest physicalnetworkid= add 
>>>>>>>>>> TrafficType traffictype=Management physicalnetworkid= update 
>>>>>>>>>> PhysicalNetwork state=Enabled id= list 
>>>>>>>>>> NetworkServiceProviders name=VirtualRouter physicalNetworkId= 
>>>>>>>>>> list VirtualRouterElements nspid= api 
>>>>>>>>>> configureVirtualRouterElement enabled=true id= update 
>>>>>>>>>> NetworkServiceProvider state=Enabled id= list 
>>>>>>>>>> NetworkServiceProviders name=SecurityGroupProvider 
>>>>>>>>>> physicalNetworkId= update NetworkServiceProvider 
>>>>>>>>>> state=Enabled id= create Network zoneid= 
>>>>>>>>>> name=guestNetworkForBasicZone 
>>>>>>>>>> displaytext=guestNetworkForBasicZone
>>>>>>>>>> networkofferingid= create Pod zoneid= name=Pod1
>>>>>>> gateway=10.147.28.1
>>>>>>>>>> netmask=255.255.255.0 startip=10.147.28.220 
>>>>>>>>>> endip=10.147.28.235 create VlanIpRange podid= networkid= 
>>>>>>>>>> gateway=10.147.28.1
>>>>>>>>>> netmask=255.255.255.0 startip=10.147.28.236 
>>>>>>>>>> endip=10.147.28.250 forVirtualNetwork=false add Cluster 
>>>>>>>>>> zoneid= hypervisor=XenServer clustertype=CloudManaged podid= 
>>>>>>>>>> clustername=Cluster1 add Host
>>>>>>>>> zoneid=
>>>>>>>>>> podid= clusterid= hypervisor=XenServer 
>>>>>>>>>> clustertype=CloudManaged username=root password=password 
>>>>>>>>>> url=http://10.147.28.60 create StoragePool zoneid= clusterid= 
>>>>>>>>>> name=NFS1 url=nfs://10.147.28.7/export/home/rohit/primary
>>>>>>>>>> add SecondaryStorage zoneId=
>>>>>>>>>> url=nfs://10.147.28.7/export/home/rohit/secondary
>>>>>>>>>> update Zone allocationstate=Enabled id=
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> After some stabilisation, I can put it on pypi so any user 
>>>>>>>>>> can just do pip
>>>>>>>>> install cloudmonkey to get the CLI.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Regards.
>>>>>>>>>> PS. Marvin the neglected robot and hipster cloudmonkey should 
>>>>>>>>>> rule the world :D
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Rohit,
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> This is really really cool.  It puts the "fun" in managing 
>>>>>>>>> instances from a command line.  I've been testing it against a 
>>>>>>>>> production CloudStack environment, and it's working pretty well.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> If you don't mind, I might hack at the code a bit to fill in 
>>>>>>>>> some gaps that I'm seeing.  First example is that it assumes 
>>>>>>>>> http, which doesn't work in a public deployment where the endpoint is 
>>>>>>>>> over https.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> -chip
>

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