| # Using the Cloud Client Libraries for Python |
| |
| This document demonstrates how to use the Cloud Client Libraries for Python for Compute Engine. |
| It describes how to authorize requests and how to create, list, and delete instances. |
| This exercise discusses how to use the `google-api-python-client` library to access Compute Engine |
| resources. You can run this sample from your local machine or on a VM instance, provided that |
| you have authorized the sample correctly. |
| |
| For a full list of available client libraries, including other Google client libraries and |
| third-party open source libraries, see the [client libraries page](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/api/libraries). |
| |
| To view the full code example with all of the necessary imports, see the [create_instance.py file](create_instance.py). |
| |
| ## Objectives |
| |
| * Perform OAuth 2.0 authorization using the `oauth2client` library |
| * Create, list and delete instances using the `google-api-python-client` library |
| |
| ## Costs |
| |
| This tutorial uses billable components of Google Cloud including Compute Engine. |
| |
| ## Before you begin |
| |
| 1. In the Google Cloud Console, on the project selector page, select or create a Google Cloud project. |
| [Go to project selector](https://console.cloud.google.com/projectselector2/home/dashboard). |
| 1. Make sure that billing is enabled for your cloud project. |
| [Learn how to confirm that billing is enabled for your project.](https://cloud.google.com/billing/docs/how-to/modify-project) |
| 1. [Install Google Cloud SDK and `gcloud`](https://cloud.google.com/sdk) |
| 1. After the SDK is installed, run `gcloud auth application-default login`. |
| 1. Install the [google-api-python-client](http://github.com/googleapis/google-api-python-client) library. Typically, you can run: |
| |
| ```bash |
| pip install --upgrade google-api-python-client |
| ``` |
| |
| 1. Enable the Cloud Storage API. |
| ```bash |
| gcloud services enable storage.googleapis.com |
| ``` |
| 1. [Create a Cloud Storage bucket](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/creating-buckets) and note the bucket name for later. |
| |
| ## Authorizing requests |
| |
| This sample uses OAuth 2.0 authorization. There are many ways to authorize requests using OAuth 2.0, |
| but for the example use [application default credentials](https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/application-default-credentials). This lets you reuse the credentials from |
| the `gcloud` tool if you are running the sample on a local workstation or reuse credentials from a |
| service account if you are running the sample from within Compute Engine or App Engine. You should |
| have installed and authorized the `gcloud` tool in the "Before you begin" section. |
| |
| Application default credentials are provided in Google API Client Libraries automatically. |
| You just have to build and initialize the API: |
| |
| ```python |
| import googleapiclient |
| compute = googleapiclient.discovery.build('compute', 'v1') |
| ``` |
| |
| See the `main()` method in the [create_instance.py](create_instance.py) script, to see how an API |
| client is built and used. |
| |
| ## Listing instances |
| |
| Using `google-api-python-client`, you can list instances by using the `compute.instances().list()` method. |
| You need to provide the project ID and the zone for which you want to list instances. For example: |
| |
| ```python |
| def list_instances(compute, project, zone): |
| result = compute.instances().list(project=project, zone=zone).execute() |
| return result['items'] if 'items' in result else None |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Adding an instance |
| |
| To add an instance, use the `compute.instances().insert()` method and specify the properties of the new |
| instance. These properties are specified in the request body; for details about each property see |
| the [API reference for `instances.insert`](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/reference/latest/instances/insert). |
| |
| At a minimum, your request must provide values for the following properties when you create a new |
| instance: |
| |
| * Instance name |
| * Root persistent disk |
| * Machine type |
| * Zone |
| * Network Interfaces |
| |
| This sample starts an instance with the following properties in a zone of your choice: |
| |
| * Machine type: e2-standard-2 |
| * Root persistent disk: a new persistent disk based on the latest Debian 8 image |
| * The Compute Engine default service account with the following scopes: |
| * https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_write, so the instance can read and write files in Cloud Storage |
| * https://www.googleapis.com/auth/logging.write, so the instances logs can upload to Cloud Logging |
| * Metadata to specify commands that the instance should execute upon startup |
| |
| You can see an example of instance creation in the `create_instance` method in [create_instance.py](create_instance.py) file. |
| |
| ### Root persistent disks |
| |
| All instances must boot from a [root persistent disk](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/disks/create-root-persistent-disks). |
| The root persistent disk contains all of the necessary files required for starting an instance. |
| When you create a root persistent disk you must select a public image or a custom image to apply to |
| the disk. In the example above, a new root persistent disk is created based on Debian 8 at the same |
| time as the instance. However, it is also possible to create a disk beforehand and attach it to the |
| instance. |
| |
| To create an instance using your own custom OS image, you need to provide a different URL than |
| the one included in the example. For more information about starting an instance with your own |
| images, see [Creating an instance from a custom image](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/instances/create-start-instance#creating_an_instance_from_a_custom_image). |
| |
| |
| |
| ### Instance metadata |
| |
| When you create your instance, you might want to include instance metadata such as a [startup script](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/startupscript), |
| configuration variables, and SSH keys. In the example above, you used the `metadata` field in your |
| request body to specify a startup script for the instance and some configuration variables as |
| key/values pairs. The [startup-script.sh](startup-script.sh) shows how to read these variables and use them |
| to apply text to an image and upload it to [Cloud Storage](https://cloud.google.com/storage). |
| |
| ## Deleting an Instance |
| |
| To delete an instance, you need to call the `compute.instances().delete()` method and provide the name, |
| zone, and project ID of the instance to delete. When the `autoDelete` parameter is set to `true` for the |
| boot disk it is also deleted with the instance. This setting is off by default but is |
| useful when your use case calls for disks and instances to be deleted together. |
| |
| ```python |
| def delete_instance(compute, project, zone, name): |
| return compute.instances().delete( |
| project=project, |
| zone=zone, |
| instance=name).execute() |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Running the sample |
| |
| You can run the full sample by downloading the code and running it on the command line. Make sure |
| to download the `create_instance.py` file and the `startup-script.sh` file. To run the sample: |
| |
| ```bash |
| python create_instance.py --name [INSTANCE_NAME] --zone [ZONE] [PROJECT_ID] [CLOUD_STORAGE_BUCKET] |
| ``` |
| |
| where: |
| |
| * `[INSTANCE_NAME]` is the name of the instance to create. |
| * `[ZONE]` is the desired zone for this request. |
| * `[PROJECT_ID]` is our project ID. |
| * `[CLOUD_STORAGE_BUCKET]` is the name of the bucket you initially set up but without the `gs://` prefix. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| ```bash |
| python python-example.py --name example-instance --zone us-central1-a example-project my-gcs-bucket |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Waiting for operations to complete |
| |
| Requests to the Compute Engine API that modify resources such as instances immediately return a |
| response acknowledging your request. The acknowledgement lets you check the status of the requested |
| operation. Operations can take a few minutes to complete, so it's often easier to wait for the |
| operation to complete before continuing. This helper method waits until the operation completes |
| before returning: |
| |
| ```python |
| def wait_for_operation(compute, project, zone, operation): |
| print('Waiting for operation to finish...') |
| while True: |
| result = compute.zoneOperations().get( |
| project=project, |
| zone=zone, |
| operation=operation).execute() |
| |
| if result['status'] == 'DONE': |
| print("done.") |
| if 'error' in result: |
| raise Exception(result['error']) |
| return result |
| |
| time.sleep(1) |
| ``` |
| |
| When you query per-zone operations, use the `compute.zoneOperations.get()` method. When you query global |
| operations, use the `compute.globalOperations.get()` method. For more information, see zone resources. |
| |
| ## Cleaning up |
| |
| To avoid incurring charges to your Google Cloud account for the resources used in this tutorial, |
| either delete the project that contains the resources, or keep the project and delete the |
| individual resources. |
| |
| ### Delete your Cloud Storage bucket |
| |
| To delete a Cloud Storage bucket: |
| 1. In the Cloud Console, go to the Cloud Storage [Browser page](https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser). |
| 1. Click the checkbox for the bucket that you want to delete. |
| 1. To delete the bucket, click `Delete`, and then follow the instructions. |