Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: azure-servicemanagement-legacy
Version: 0.20.6
Summary: Microsoft Azure Legacy Service Management Client Library for Python
Home-page: https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python
Author: Microsoft Corporation
Author-email: ptvshelp@microsoft.com
License: Apache License 2.0
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Requires-Dist: azure-common (>=1.1.5)
Requires-Dist: azure-nspkg (>=2.0.0)
Requires-Dist: requests
Provides-Extra: get_certificate_from_publish_settings
Requires-Dist: pyopenssl; extra == 'get_certificate_from_publish_settings'

Microsoft Azure SDK for Python
==============================

This is the Microsoft Azure Service Management Legacy Client Library.

All packages in this bundle have been tested with Python 2.7, 3.3, 3.4 and 3.5.

For the newer Azure Resource Management (ARM) libraries, see `azure-mgmt <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/azure-mgmt>`__.

For a more complete set of Azure libraries, see the `azure <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/azure>`__ bundle package.


Compatibility
=============

**IMPORTANT**: If you have an earlier version of the azure package
(version < 1.0), you should uninstall it before installing this package.

You can check the version using pip:

.. code:: shell

    pip freeze

If you see azure==0.11.0 (or any version below 1.0), uninstall it first:

.. code:: shell

    pip uninstall azure


Features
========

-  Cloud Service management (Virtual Machines, VM Images, OS Images)
-  Storage accounts management
-  Scheduler management
-  Service Bus management
-  Affinity Group management
-  Management certificate management
-  Web Apps (Website) management


Installation
============

Download Package
----------------

To install via the Python Package Index (PyPI), type:

.. code:: shell

    pip install azure-servicemanagement-legacy


Download Source Code
--------------------

To get the source code of the SDK via **git** type:

.. code:: shell

    git clone https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python.git
    cd azure-sdk-for-python
    cd azure-servicemanagement-legacy
    python setup.py install


Usage
=====

Authentication
--------------

Set-up certificates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You will need two certificates, one for the server (a .cer file) and one for
the client (a .pem file).

Using the Azure .PublishSettings certificate
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You can download your Azure publish settings file and use the certificate that
is embedded in that file to create the client certificate. The server
certificate already exists, so you won't need to upload one.

To do this, download your `publish settings <http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=301775>`__
then use this code to create the .pem file.

.. code:: python

    from azure.servicemanagement import get_certificate_from_publish_settings

    subscription_id = get_certificate_from_publish_settings(
        publish_settings_path='MyAccount.PublishSettings',
        path_to_write_certificate='mycert.pem',
        subscription_id='00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000',
    )

The subscription id parameter is optional. If there are more than one
subscription in the publish settings, the first one will be used.

Creating and uploading new certificate with OpenSSL
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To create the .pem file using `OpenSSL <http://www.openssl.org>`__, execute this:

.. code:: shell

    openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout mycert.pem -out mycert.pem

To create the .cer certificate, execute this:

.. code:: shell

    openssl x509 -inform pem -in mycert.pem -outform der -out mycert.cer

After you have created the certificate, you will need to upload the .cer
file to Microsoft Azure via the "Upload" action of the "Settings" tab of
the `management portal <http://manage.windows.com>`__.


ServiceManagementService
------------------------

Initialization
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To initialize the management service, pass in your subscription id and
the path to the .pem file.

.. code:: python

    from azure.servicemanagement import ServiceManagementService
    subscription_id = '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
    cert_file = 'mycert.pem'
    sms = ServiceManagementService(subscription_id, cert_file)

List Available Locations
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. code:: python

    locations = sms.list_locations()
    for location in locations:
        print(location.name)

Create a Storage Service
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To create a storage service, you need a name for the service (between 3
and 24 lowercase characters and unique within Microsoft Azure), a label
(up to 100 characters, automatically encoded to base-64), and either a
location or an affinity group.

.. code:: python

    name = "mystorageservice"
    desc = name
    label = name
    location = 'West US'

    result = sms.create_storage_account(name, desc, label, location=location)
    sms.wait_for_operation_status(result.request_id, timeout=30)

Create a Cloud Service
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A cloud service is also known as a hosted service (from earlier versions
of Microsoft Azure). The **create\_hosted\_service** method allows you
to create a new hosted service by providing a hosted service name (which
must be unique in Microsoft Azure), a label (automatically encoded to
base-64), and the location *or* the affinity group for your service.

.. code:: python

    name = "myhostedservice"
    desc = name
    label = name
    location = 'West US'

    result = sms.create_hosted_service(name, label, desc, location=location)
    sms.wait_for_operation_status(result.request_id, timeout=30)

Create a Virtual Machine
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To create a virtual machine, you first need to create a cloud service.
Then create the virtual machine deployment using the
create_virtual_machine_deployment method.

.. code:: python

    from azure.servicemanagement import LinuxConfigurationSet, OSVirtualHardDisk

    name = "myhostedservice"

    # Name of an os image as returned by list_os_images
    image_name = 'OpenLogic__OpenLogic-CentOS-62-20120531-en-us-30GB.vhd'

    # Destination storage account container/blob where the VM disk
    # will be created
    media_link = 'url_to_target_storage_blob_for_vm_hd'

    # Linux VM configuration, you can use WindowsConfigurationSet
    # for a Windows VM instead
    linux_config = LinuxConfigurationSet(
        'myhostname',
        'myuser',
        'mypassword',
        disable_ssh_password_authentication=True,
    )

    os_hd = OSVirtualHardDisk(image_name, media_link)

    result = sms.create_virtual_machine_deployment(
        service_name=name,
        deployment_name=name,
        deployment_slot='production',
        label=name,
        role_name=name,
        system_config=linux_config,
        os_virtual_hard_disk=os_hd,
        role_size='Small',
    )
    sms.wait_for_operation_status(result.request_id, timeout=600)


Need Help?
==========

Be sure to check out the Microsoft Azure `Developer Forums on Stack
Overflow <http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=234489>`__ if you have
trouble with the provided code.


Contribute Code or Provide Feedback
===================================

If you would like to become an active contributor to this project please
follow the instructions provided in `Microsoft Azure Projects
Contribution
Guidelines <http://azure.github.io/guidelines.html>`__.

If you encounter any bugs with the library please file an issue in the
`Issues <https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python/issues>`__
section of the project.


Learn More
==========

`Microsoft Azure Python Developer
Center <http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/develop/python/>`__


