Without this patch the vm_clone requiest would not find a Managed Object
Reference when a UUID that is not a string is passed as the
instance_uuid option. This is a problem because an unhelpful "undefined
method `parent' for nil:NilClass" would be thrown to the application.
This patch throws a more helpful Fog::Compute::Vsphere::NotFound
exception if the Virtual Machine template is not found.
The tests have been updated to reflect this expectation.
Without this patch it was difficult to figure out from the outside what
vSphere server Fog connected to. The application using Fog should be
able to easily print out the connection information without breaking the
encapsulation Fog provides.
This patch makes the connected vSphere server hostname and API username
an attribute of the connection instance.
The tests have been updated to validate these attribute accessor
methods.
This massive commit refactors all of the request methods on the
Fog::Compute[:vsphere] instance to return simple hashes. The behavior
before this commit returned full vmware object references which was a
problem because it was difficult to unit test.
With this patch, it is much easier to add and maintain Mock
implementations of the request methods. This makes adding behavior
tests for the server model much easier.
In addition, test coverage using Shindo has been added. Previously
there was little test coverage of the behavior.
To run the tests:
shindont tests/vsphere/
Without this patch it is very difficult to reload the model of a VM in
the process of being cloned. All we have is the vmware managed object
reference ID string and the name of the VM.
This patch adds a number of improvements:
First, the model of a VM being cloned can reload itself after the VM
finishes cloning, even though we don't have an instance_uuid until the
clone completes.
Because the model can reload itself, it's now possible to do something
like:
c = Fog::Compute[:vsphere]
new_vm_name = "test"
c.vm_clone(:instance_uuid => "abc123", :name => new_vm_name)
my_new_vm = c.servers.find { |vm| vm.name == new_vm_name }
my_new_vm.wait_for { uuid }
puts "New VM is ready! (It has a UUID)"
my_new_vm.wait_for { ipaddress }
puts "New VM is on the network!"
Without this patch, a VM model could not reload itself with an id of
'vm-123', reloading the model only works if the ID is a UUID.
In addition, a number of the attributes of the server model have been
adjusted to be nil values when the VM is in the process of cloning.
This makes it easier to use wait_for conditionals in blocks.
Without this patch, we could not call the reload method
of a server model instance. This is because the Fog library
would try to call the get method using the existing identity
(instance_uuid) as the key.
This patch implements the get method by instantiating a new
model instance from a set of attributes obtained from the
vmware managed object instance.
The logic reflects that inside of the backspace servers
collection implementation.
As a side effect of this patch we also get wait_for.
For example:
server = Fog::Compute[:vsphere].servers.last
server.start
server.wait_for { ipaddress }
With the introduction of the vm_clone API request, a server
may be returned in the list which does not have a complete
configuration yet. This is because the system is still in
the process of being cloned.
This is a problem because Fog would throw an undefined
method error when calling the config method of the vm managed
object instance.
This patch fixes the problem by checking if the config method
returns something and only sets attributes that are known to be
available for a cloning VM.
Without this patch we have no way to clone a new VM
from a template. This patch adds the vm_clone request
which takes an instance uuid as the source template
to clone from an a name parameter which is the new VM's
name.
The clone operation is handled asynchronously as a vSphere
task object. The clone request does not return a handle
for this task, which may make it difficult to monitor
the progress of the clone operation from Fog. A future
enhancement may be to clone and return the task object
itself to monitor progress.
Without this patch we did not have a convenient way to find
a template by instance UUID. We could only find virtual
machines by instance UUID, which may or may not be a template.
This patch adds a specific request to obtain the VMware managed
object instance of of a specific template. This is necessary
plumbing for the clone request.
Without this patch we have no way to completely destroy
a server instance. This patch adds a vm_destroy API request
and implements the destroy method on the server model.
The vSphere API requires the server to be in a poweredOff state.
The model action and the request do not verify this is the case
before issuing the command.
This patch implements the start, stop and reboot methods for the Server
model instances.
These server model methods share common names with the AWS server model.
This patch also implements the API requests required to control the
power state of a VMware Virtual Machine.
The requests default to issuing shutdown and reboot commands to the
guest operating system itself. However, if force is set to true for
power_off and reboot, then the VM is powered off or reset at the virtual
hardware layer.
This patch adds two request methods to the compute service for VMware.
First, finding a VM by it's own UUID (from the vmx file) is supported.
This UUID is not guaranteed to be unique so this patch also implements
finding by instance UUID which is guaranteed to be unique.
The server models will primarily use these requests to obtain VM
managed objects to issue commands against.
Without this patch the change set currently has no framework for testing
the Vsphere provider. This patch doesn't actually test anything, but
does add the skeleton code to being testing mocked versions of other
code.
Particularly, we're going to take the approach of completely mocking the
@connection instance variable of the Compute instance. This will allow
us to set expectations and return things from the underlying vmware API
library.
This patch adds a request list_virtual_machines which is responsible for
making an API connection and returning a raw "response" object from the
API.
Model instances of a Server (compute resource) are returned as a
collection through the "all" method. The Fog framework calls all on the
instance of the collection.
Without this patch, no actual API calls are being made through the Fog
layer to the underlying rbvmobi later and ultimately to the vSphere
target API.
This patch adds a simple current_time request which is similar to a
"ping" The layers and API are exercised fully using this simple API
call to retrieve the current time on the remote system.
This provides:
>> Fog::Compute[:vsphere].current_time
Tue Aug 30 20:46:27 UTC 2011
>> Fog::Compute[:vsphere].requests
[:current_time]
Without this patch we were blindly trusting the remote end of our API
connection is who they claim to be. This is an insecure state because
we leave ourselves open to a man in the middle attack.
This patch adds a vsphere_expected_pubkey_hash setting for the Vsphere
provider. This setting is expected to be the SHA256 hex digest string
of the PEM encoded text of the RSA public key.
The first time an end user connects this string is displayed to them in
the error message. They need simply copy and paste it into ~/.fog to
securely connect to the remote end.
For example:
:vspherebadpw:
:vsphere_server: vc01.acme.lan
:vsphere_username: api_login
:vsphere_password: badpassword
:vsphere_expected_pubkey_hash: 431dd...
This patch adds a compute service to fog setting the stage to model
VMware virtual machines using Fog. The patch adds support for:
rdebug -- fog vsphere
>>> connection = Fog::Compute.new(:provider => :vsphere)
The connection to the VMware API is implemented along with
authentication using an username and password. The connection is not
fully secured with this patch because no validation of the SSL
certificate is implemented.
Raw API requests are working with this patch, but none of the API
requests have associated Fog models or collections.