zhmccli - A CLI for the IBM Z HMC, written in pure Python¶
Introduction¶
What this package provides¶
The zhmccli package provides a CLI written in pure Python that interacts with the Hardware Management Console (HMC) of IBM Z or LinuxONE machines. The goal of this package is to provide an easy-to-use command line interface for operators.
The zhmccli package uses the API provided by the zhmcclient package, which interacts with the Web Services API of the HMC. It supports management of the lifecycle and configuration of various platform resources, such as partitions, CPU, memory, virtual switches, I/O adapters, and more.
Supported environments¶
The zhmccli package is supported in these environments:
- Operating systems: Linux, Windows, OS-X
- Python versions: 2.7, 3.5, and higher 3.x
- HMC versions: 2.11.1 and higher
Installation¶
The easiest way to install the zhmccli package is by using Pip. Pip ensures that any dependent Python packages also get installed.
Pip will install the packages into your currently active Python environment (that is, your system Python or a virtual Python environment you have set up).
It is beneficial to set up a virtual Python environment for your project,
because that leaves your system Python installation unchanged, it does not
require sudo
rights, and last but not least it gives you better control
about the installed packages and their versions.
Installation of latest released version¶
The following command installs the latest released version of the zhmccli package from Pypi into the currently active Python environment:
$ pip install zhmccli
Installation of latest development version¶
If you want to install the latest development level of the zhmccli package
instead for some reason, you can install directly from the master
branch
of its Git repository.
The following command installs the latest development level of the zhmccli package into the currently active Python environment:
$ pip install git+https://github.com/zhmcclient/zhmccli.git@master
Installation on a system without Internet access¶
In both cases described above, Internet access is needed to access these repositories.
If you want to install the zhmccli package on a system that does not have Internet access, you can do this by first downloading the zhmccli package and its dependent packages on a download system that does have Internet access, making these packages available to the target system, and installing on the target system from the downloaded packages.
For simplicity, the following example uses a shared file system between the download and target systems (but that is not a requirement; you can also copy the downloaded files to the target system):
[download]$ pip download zhmccli
[download]$ ls zhmccli*
zhmccli-0.18.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
[target]$ ls zhmccli*
zhmccli-0.18.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
[target]$ pip install -f . --no-index zhmccli-0.18.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Verification of the installation¶
You can verify that the zhmccli package and its dependent packages are installed correctly by invoking:
$ zhmc --version
0.18.0
Setting up the HMC¶
Usage of the zhmccli package requires that the HMC in question is prepared accordingly:
The Web Services API must be enabled on the HMC.
The HMC user ID that will be used by the zhmccli package must be authorized for the following tasks:
- Use of the Web Services API.
When using CPCs in DPM mode:
- Start (a CPC in DPM mode)
- Stop (a CPC in DPM mode)
- New Partition
- Delete Partition
- Partition Details
- Start Partition
- Stop Partition
- Dump Partition
- PSW Restart (a Partition)
- Create HiperSockets Adapter
- Delete HiperSockets Adapter
- Adapter Details
- Manage Adapters
- Export WWPNs
When using CPCs in classic mode (or ensemble mode):
- Activate (an LPAR)
- Deactivate (an LPAR)
- Load (an LPAR)
- Customize/Delete Activation Profiles
- CIM Actions ExportSettingsData
(Optional) If desired, the HMC user ID that will be used by the zhmccli can be restricted to accessing only certain resources managed by the HMC. To establish such a restriction, create a custom HMC user role, limit resource access for that role accordingly, and associate the HMC user ID with that role.
The zhmccli package needs object-access permission for the following resources:
- CPCs to be accessed
For CPCs in DPM mode:
- Partitions to be accessed
- Adapters to be accessed
For CPCs in classic mode (or ensemble mode):
- LPARs to be accessed
For details, see the HMC Operations Guide.
A step-by-step description for a similar use case can be found in chapter 11, section “Enabling the System z HMC to work the Pacemaker STONITH Agent”, in the KVM for IBM z Systems V1.1.2 System Administration book.
Examples¶
The following example lists the machines (CPCs) managed by an HMC:
$ hmc_host="<IP address or hostname of the HMC>"
$ hmc_userid="<userid on that HMC>"
$ zhmc -h $hmc_host -u $hmc_userid cpc list
Enter password (for user ... at HMC ...): .......
+----------+------------------+
| name | status |
|----------+------------------|
| P000S67B | service-required |
+----------+------------------+
Versioning¶
This documentation applies to version 1.0.0 of the zhmccli package. You can also see that version in the top left corner of this page.
The zhmccli package uses the rules of Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 for its version.
The package version can be shown using:
$ zhmc --version
0.18.0
This documentation may have been built from a development level of the package. You can recognize a development version of this package by the presence of a “.devD” suffix in the version string. Development versions are pre-versions of the next assumed version that is not yet released. For example, version 0.18.1.dev25 is development pre-version #25 of the next version to be released after 0.18.0. Version 0.18.1 is an assumed next version, because the actually released next version might as well be 0.19.0 or even 1.0.0.
Compatibility¶
In this package, compatibility is always seen from the perspective of the user of the CLI. Thus, a backwards compatible new version of this package means that the user can safely upgrade to that new version without encountering compatibility issues in the CLI that is invoked.
This package uses the rules of Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 for compatibility between package versions, and for deprecations.
The public API of this package that is subject to the semantic versioning rules (and specificically to its compatibility rules) is the API described in this documentation.
Violations of these compatibility rules are described in section Change log.
Deprecations¶
TODO: Verify how deprecation warnings are shown in the CLI.
Deprecated functionality is marked accordingly in this documentation and in the
Change log, and is made visible at runtime by issuing Python warnings of
type DeprecationWarning
(see warnings
for
details).
Since Python 2.7, DeprecationWarning
warnings are
suppressed by default. They can be shown for example in any of these ways:
by specifying the Python command line option:
-W default
by invoking Python with the environment variable:
PYTHONWARNINGS=default
by issuing in your Python program:
warnings.filterwarnings(action='default', category=DeprecationWarning)
It is recommended that users of this package run their test code with
DeprecationWarning
warnings being shown, so they become
aware of any use of deprecated functionality.
It is even possible to raise an exception instead of issuing a warning message
upon the use of deprecated functionality, by setting the action to 'error'
instead of 'default'
.
Reporting issues¶
If you encounter any problem with this package, or if you have questions of any kind related to this package (even when they are not about a problem), please open an issue in the zhmccli issue tracker.
License¶
This package is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
Command line interface¶
This package provides a command line interface (CLI) that utilizes the API of the zhmcclient package in order to support shell scripting or simply manual command use in a terminal session.
Modes of operation¶
The zhmc CLI supports two modes of operation:
- Interactive mode: Invoking an interactive zhmc shell for typing zhmc sub-commands.
- Command mode: Using it as a standalone non-interactive command.
Interactive mode¶
In interactive mode, an interactive shell environment is brought up that allows typing zhmc commands, internal commands (for operating the zhmc shell), and external commands (that are executed in the standard shell for the user).
This zhmc shell is started when the zhmc
command is invoked without
specifying any (sub-)commands:
$ zhmc [GENERAL-OPTIONS]
> _
Alternatively, the zhmc shell can also be started by specifying the repl
(sub-)command:
$ zhmc [GENERAL-OPTIONS] repl
> _
The zhmc shell uses the >
prompt, and the cursor is shown in the examples
above as an underscore _
.
General options may be specified on the zhmc
command, and they serve as
defaults for the zhmc commands that can be typed in the zhmc shell.
The zhmc commands that can be typed in the zhmc shell are simply the command
line arguments that would follow the zhmc
command when used in
command mode:
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com -u hmcuser
Enter password: <password>
> cpc list
. . . <list of CPCs managed by this HMC>
> partition list JLSE1
. . . <list of partitions in CPC JLSE1>
> :q
For example, the zhmc shell command cpc list
in the example above has the
same effect as the standalone command:
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com -u hmcuser cpc list
Enter password: <password>
. . . <list of CPCs managed by this HMC>
However, the zhmc shell will prompt for a password only once during its invocation, while the standalone command will prompt for a password every time. See also Environment variables and avoiding password prompts.
The internal commands :?
, :h
, or :help
display general help
information for external and internal commands:
> :help
REPL help:
External Commands:
prefix external commands with "!"
Internal Commands:
prefix internal commands with ":"
:?, :h, :help displays general help information
:exit, :q, :quit exits the repl
In this help text, “REPL” stands for “Read-Execute-Print-Loop” which is a term that denotes the approach used in the zhmc shell (or in any shell, for that matter).
In addition to using one of the internal shell commands shown in the help text above, you can also exit the zhmc shell by typing Ctrl-D.
Typing --help
in the zhmc shell displays general help information for the
zhmc commands, which includes global options and a list of the supported
commands:
> --help
Usage: zhmc [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Command line interface for the IBM Z HMC.
. . .
Options:
-h, --host TEXT Hostname or IP address of the HMC (Default:
ZHMC_HOST environment variable).
-u, --userid TEXT Username for the HMC (Default: ZHMC_USERID
environment variable).
-p, --password TEXT Password for the HMC (Default: ZHMC_PASSWORD
environment variable).
-n, --no-verify Do not verify the HMC certificate. (Default:
ZHMC_NO_VERIFY environment variable, or
verify the HMC certificate).
-c, --ca-certs TEXT Path name of certificate file or directory
with CA certificates to be used for
verifying the HMC certificate. (Default:
Path name in ZHMC_CA_CERTS environment
variable, or path name in REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE
environment variable, or path name in
CURL_CA_BUNDLE environment variable, or the
'certifi' Python package which provides the
Mozilla CA Certificate List).
-o, --output-format [[table|plain|simple|psql|rst|mediawiki|html|latex|
json]]
Output format (Default: table).
-x, --transpose Transpose the output table for metrics.
-e, --error-format [msg|def] Error message format (Default: msg).
-t, --timestats Show time statistics of HMC operations.
--log COMP=LEVEL,... Set a component to a log level
(COMP: [api|hmc|console|all],
LEVEL: [error|warning|info|debug],
Default: all=warning).
--log-dest [stderr|syslog|none]
Log destination for this command (Default:
stderr).
--syslog-facility [user|local0|local1|local2|local3|local4|local5|local6|local7]
Syslog facility when logging to the syslog
(Default: user).
--version Show the versions of this command and of the
zhmcclient package and exit.
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
adapter Command group for managing adapters (DPM mode only).
capacitygroup Command group for managing capacity groups.
cpc Command group for managing CPCs.
hba Command group for managing HBAs (DPM mode only).
help Show help message for interactive mode.
info Show information about the HMC.
lpar Command group for managing LPARs (classic mode only).
metrics Command group for reporting metrics.
nic Command group for managing NICs (DPM mode only).
partition Command group for managing partitions (DPM mode only).
port Command group for managing adapter ports (DPM mode only).
repl Enter interactive (REPL) mode (default).
session Command group for managing sessions.
storagegroup Command group for managing storage groups (DPM mode only).
storagevolume Command group for managing storage volumes (DPM mode only).
vfunction Command group for managing virtual functions (DPM mode only).
vstorageresource Command group for managing virtual storage resources (DPM mode only).
vswitch Command group for managing virtual switches (DPM mode only).
The usage line in this help text show the standalone command use. Within the
zhmc shell, the zhmc
word is ommitted and the remainder is typed in.
Typing COMMAND --help
in the zhmc shell displays help information for the
specified zhmc command, for example:
> cpc --help
Usage: zhmc cpc [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Command group for managing CPCs.
Options:
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
list List the CPCs.
show Show details of a CPC.
The zhmc shell supports popup help text while typing, where the valid choices
are shown based upon what was typed so far, and where an item from the popup
list can be picked with <TAB> or with the cursor keys. In the following
examples, an underscore _
is shown as the cursor:
> --_
--host Hostname or IP address of the HMC (Default: ZHMC_HOST environment variable).
--userid Username for the HMC (Default: ZHMC_USERID environment variable).
--password Password for the HMC (Default: ZHMC_PASSWORD environment variable).
--no-verify Do not verify the HMC certificate. (Default: ZHMC_NO_VERIFY ...
--ca-certs Path name of certificate file or directory with CA certificates ...
--output-format Output format (Default: table).
--transpose Transpose the output table for metrics.
--error-format Error message format (Default: msg).
--timestats Show time statistics of HMC operations.
--log Set a component to a log level (COMP: [api|hmc|console|all], LEVEL: [error|warning|info|debug], Default: all=warning).
--log-dest Log destination for this command (Default: stderr).
--syslog-facility Syslog facility when logging to the syslog (Default: user).
--version Show the version of this command and exit.
> c_
cpc Command group for managing CPCs.
The zhmc shell supports history (within one invocation of the shell, not persisted across zhmc shell invocations).
Command mode¶
In command mode, the zhmc
command performs its task and terminates, like any
other standalone non-interactive command.
This mode is used when the zhmc
command is invoked with a (sub-)command:
$ zhmc [GENERAL-OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS...] [COMMAND-OPTIONS]
Examples:
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com -u hmcuser cpc list
Enter password: <password>
. . . <list of CPCs managed by this HMC>
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com info
Enter password: <password>
. . . <information about this HMC>
In command mode, bash tab completion is also supported, but must be enabled first as follows (in a bash shell):
$ eval "$(_ZHMC_COMPLETE=source zhmc)"
Bash tab completion for zhmc is used like any other bash tab completion:
$ zhmc --<TAB><TAB>
... <shows the global options to select from>
$ zhmc <TAB><TAB>
... <shows the commands to select from>
$ zhmc cpc <TAB><TAB>
... <shows the cpc sub-commands to select from>
Environment variables and avoiding password prompts¶
The zhmc CLI has command line options for specifying the HMC host, userid and password to be used.
If the HMC operations performed by a particular zhmc command require a password, and the password is not specified otherwise, the password is prompted for (in both modes of operation):
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com -u hmcuser cpc list
Enter password: <password>
. . . <list of CPCs managed by this HMC>
If the HMC operations performed by a particular zhmc command do not require a password, no password is prompted for:
$ zhmc -h zhmc.example.com info
. . . <information about this HMC>
For script integration, it is important to have a way to avoid the interactive password prompt, and still not being forced to specify the password on the command line. This can be done in either of two ways:
by storing the session-id string returned by the HMC when logging on, in an environment variable.
The
zhmc
command supports asession create
(sub-)command that outputs the (bash) shell commands to set all needed environment variables:$ zhmc -n -h zhmc.example.com -u acsadmin session create Enter password: <password> export ZHMC_HOST=zhmc.example.com export ZHMC_USERID=acsadmin export ZHMC_SESSION_ID=<session-id> export ZHMC_NO_VERIFY=TRUE unset ZHMC_CA_CERTS
Note that the
-n
option is used to make this command work for demonstration purposes regardless of the actual HMC certificate setup. It is not recommended to use this option in production environments. See HMC certificate for details.This ability can be used to set those environment variables and thus to persist the session-id in the shell environment, from where it will be used in any subsequent zhmc commands:
$ eval $(zhmc -n -h zhmc.example.com -u acsadmin session create) Enter password: <password> $ env |grep ZHMC ZHMC_HOST=zhmc.example.com ZHMC_USERID=acsadmin ZHMC_SESSION_ID=<session-id> ZHMC_NO_VERIFY=TRUE $ zhmc cpc list . . . <list of CPCs managed by this HMC>
As you can see from this example, the password is only prompted for when creating the session, and the session-id stored in the shell environment is utilized in the
zhmc cpc list
command, avoiding another password prompt.Using the session-id from the environment is also a performance improvement, because it avoids the HMC Logon operation that otherwise would take place.
by storing the HMC password in the
ZHMC_PASSWORD
environment variable.
The ZHMC_HOST
, ZHMC_USERID
, ZHMC_PASSWORD
, ZHMC_NO_VERIFY
, and
ZHMC_CA_CERTS
environment variables act as defaults for the corresponding
command line options.
HMC certificate¶
By default, the HMC is configured with a self-signed certificate. That is the X.509 certificate presented by the HMC as the server certificate during SSL/TLS handshake at its Web Services API.
Starting with version 0.22, the ‘zhmc’ command will reject self-signed certificates by default.
The HMC should be configured to use a CA-verifiable certificate. This can be done in the HMC task “Certificate Management”. See also the HMC Security book and Chapter 3 “Invoking API operations” in the HMC API book.
Starting with version 0.22, the zhmc command provides control knobs for the
verification of the HMC certificate via the -c
/ --ca-certs
and
-n
/ --no-verify
command line options, as follows:
- None of the two options specified (default): Verify the HMC certificate using
the CA certificates from the first of these locations:
- The certificate file or directory in the
ZHMC_CA_CERTS
environment variable, if set - The certificate file or directory in the
REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE
environment variable, if set - The certificate file or directory in the
CURL_CA_BUNDLE
environment variable, if set - The Python ‘certifi’ package (which contains the Mozilla Included CA Certificate List).
- The certificate file or directory in the
-c
/--ca-certs
specified: Verify the HMC certificate using the CA certificates in the specified certificate file or directory.-n
/--no-verify
specified orZHMC_NO_VERIFY
environment variable set: Do not verify the HMC certificate. Not verifying the HMC certificate means that hostname mismatches, expired certificates, revoked certificates, or otherwise invalid certificates will not be detected. Since this mode makes the connection vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks, it is insecure and should not be used in production environments.
If a certificate file is specified (using any of the ways listed above), that file must be in PEM format and must contain all CA certificates that are supposed to be used. Usually they are in the order from leaf to root, but that is not a hard requirement. The single certificates are concatenated in the file.
If a certificate directory is specified (using any of the ways listed above),
it must contain PEM files with all CA certificates that are supposed to be used,
and copies of the PEM files or symbolic links to them in the hashed format
created by the OpenSSL command c_rehash
.
An X.509 certificate in PEM format is base64-encoded, begins with the line
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
, and ends with the line
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
.
More information about the PEM format is for example on this
www.ssl.com page
or in this serverfault.com answer.
Note that setting the REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE
or CURL_CA_BUNDLE
environment
variables influences other programs that use these variables, too.
For more information, see the Security section in the documentation of the ‘zhmcclient’ package.
CLI commands¶
For a description of the commands supported by the zhmc CLI, consult its help system. For example:
$ zhmc --help
. . . <general help, listing the general options and possible commands>
$ zhmc cpc --help
. . . <help for cpc command, listing its arguments and command-specific options>
Note that the help text for any zhmc (sub-)commands (such as cpc
) will
not show the general options again. This is caused by flaws in the tooling
environment used for the zhmc CLI.
The general options (listed by zhmc --help
) can still be specified together
with (sub-)commands even though they are not listed in their help text, but
they must be specified before the (sub-)command, and any command-specific
options (listed by zhmc COMMAND --help
) must be specified after the
(sub-)command, like shown here:
$ zhmc [GENERAL-OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS...] [COMMAND-OPTIONS]
Resource properties¶
The properties of any resources (e.g. CPC or partition) are shown in any output using the names and units documented in the HMC WS API book.
Some of the commands have additional help options to explain output that is not
documented in the HMC WS API book. For example, partition list
command
has a --help-usage
option that explains the output of the usage-related
options --memory-usage
, --ifl-usage
and --cp-usage
.
Output formats¶
The zhmc CLI supports various output formats for the results. The output format
can be selected with the -o
or --output-format
option. The following
output formats are supported:
-o table
: Tables with a single-line border. This is the default:+----------+------------------+ | name | status | |----------+------------------| | P0000P27 | operating | | P0000P28 | service-required | | P0ZGMR12 | no-power | +----------+------------------+
-o psql
: Same as ‘table’.-o simple
: Tables with a line between header row and data rows, but otherwise without borders:name status -------- ---------------- P0000P27 operating P0000P28 service-required P0ZGMR12 no-power
-o plain
: Tables without borders:name status P0000P27 operating P0000P28 service-required P0ZGMR12 no-power
-o rst
: Simple tables in reStructuredText markup:======== ================ name status ======== ================ P0000P27 operating P0000P28 service-required P0ZGMR12 no-power ======== ================
-o mediawiki
: Tables in Mediawiki markup:{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;" |+ <!-- caption --> |- ! name !! status |- | P0000P27 || operating |- | P0000P28 || service-required |- | P0ZGMR12 || no-power |}
-o html
: Tables in HTML markup:<table> <thead> <tr><th>name </th><th>status </th></tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr><td>P0000P27</td><td>operating </td></tr> <tr><td>P0000P28</td><td>service-required</td></tr> <tr><td>P0ZGMR12</td><td>no-power </td></tr> </tbody> </table>
-o latex
: Tables in LaTeX markup:\begin{tabular}{ll} \hline name & status \\ \hline P0000P27 & operating \\ P0000P28 & service-required \\ P0ZGMR12 & no-power \\ \hline \end{tabular}
-o json
: JSON objects:[{"name": "P0000P28", "status": "service-required"}, {"name": "P0ZGMR12", "status": "no-power"}, {"name": "P0000P27", "status": "operating"}]
Error message formats¶
In order to be able to programmatically process errors, the zhmc CLI supports multiple formats for its error messages.
Error messages are always printed to stderr, and the zhmc command always ends with a non-zero return code in case of errors.
The format of error messages can be selected with the -e
or
--error-format
option. The following error message formats are supported:
-e msg
: Human-readable message. This is the default. This format should not be parsed by scripts, because it may change. Example:Error: ConnectTimeout: Connection to 9.152.150.86 timed out. (connect timeout=30)
-e def
: Definition-style (e.g. “name: value”). In this format, the instance variables of the exception object causing the error are shown as variables. This format is meant for parsing by scripts that invoke the zhmc CLI and that need to handle specific error situations.The format of each error message is:
Error: {str-def-result}
where
{str-def-result}
is the return value of thestr_def()
method of the exception causing the error message (or rather its implementations in derived exception classes). Example:Error: classname='ConnectTimeout'; connect_timeout=30; connect_retries=3; message=u'Connection to 9.152.150.86 timed out. (connect timeout=30)';
The variables for any particular exception is documented in the
str_def()
method of the exception class, in this casezhmcclient.ConnectTimeout.str_def()
:classname={}; connect_timeout={}; connect_retries={}; message={};
The
{}
sequences contain the Python representations for the values (usingrepr()
).With the exception of the initial “Error:”, this is in fact Python syntax for setting variables. Therefore, it is best to use Python for parsing it from within a shell script that invokes the zhmc CLI, for example as follows:
err_file=$(mktemp) cpc_list=$(zhmc -o json -e def cpc list 2>$err_file) rc=$? err=$(tail -n 1 <$err_file | sed -e 's/^Error: //') rm $err_file if [[ $rc != 0 ]]; then if [[ "$err" =~ "classname='ConnectTimeout';" ]]; then ct=$(python -c "$err print(connect_timeout)") echo "connect-timeout: $ct" fi msg=$(python -c "$err print(message)") echo "message: $msg" exit 1 fi echo "$cpc_list"
CLI logging¶
The zhmc CLI supports logging to the standard error stream, and to the system log.
By default, the zhmc CLI logs to the standard error stream. This can be changed
via the global option --log-dest
which specifies the log destination:
stderr
- Standard error stream of the zhmc command.syslog
- System log of the local system.none
- No logging.
The global option --log
allows specifying one or more combinations of log
component and log level. For example, the command:
$ zhmc --log hmc=debug,api=info ...
sets log level debug
for the hmc
component, and log level info
for
the api
component.
Valid log levels are: error
, warning
, info
, debug
. In case of
logging to the system log, this will also set the syslog priority accordingly.
Valid log components are:
api
- Enable thezhmcclient.api
Python logger, which logs any API calls into the zhmcclient library that are made from the zhmc CLI.hmc
- Enable thezhmcclient.hmc
Python logger, which logs the interactions with the HMC.console
- Enable thezhmccli.console
Python logger, which logs the interactions with the console of the operating system running in a partition or LPAR.all
- Enable the root Python logger, which logs anything that is propagated up to it. In case of the zhmc CLI, this will mostly be therequests
package, plus theapi
andhmc
components.
Logging to the system log¶
When specifying the syslog
log destination, the enabled Python loggers
log to the system log of the local system.
In order to see something in the system log, one has to understand how the log records are marked in terms of facility and priority and the corresponding matching of these markers in the syslog demon, and the mechanism that is used to write a record to the syslog needs to be enabled.
The write mechanism used by the zhmc CLI depends on the platform, as follows:
- On Linux: Via a Unix socket to
/dev/log
, or if that fails via a UDP socket tolocalhost
port 514 - On OS-X: Via a Unix socket to
/var/run/syslog
, or if that fails via a UDP socket tolocalhost
port 514 - On Windows (native): Via a UDP socket to
localhost
port 514 - On CygWin: Via a Unix socket to
/dev/log
, or if that fails via a UDP socket tolocalhost
port 514
The respective mechanism must be enabled on the platform for logging to work. If the required mechanism is not enabled on a system, the log record will simply be dropped silently.
The facility used for each log record can be specified with the global option
--syslog-facility
, to be one of: user
(default), local<N>
with
N=[0..7].
This facility marker can be used in the configuration of the syslog demon on the local system to direct log records into different files.
For example, on RHEL 7 and CentOS 7, the syslog demon’s config file is
/etc/rsyslog.conf
and may contain this:
#### RULES ####
*.info;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
The first string is a semicolon-separated list of <facility>.<priority>
markers, where *
can be used for wildcarding. The first list item
*.info
means that any facility with priority info
or higher will match
this line and will thus go into the /var/log/messages
file.
Because the zhmc CLI uses the debug
log level, one can see that only
if its corresponding priority is enabled in the syslog configuration:
#### RULES ####
*.debug;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
Development¶
This section only needs to be read by developers of the zhmccli package. People that want to make a fix or develop some extension, and people that want to test the project are also considered developers for the purpose of this section.
Code of Conduct¶
Help us keep the zhmccli package open and inclusive. Please read and follow our Code of Conduct.
Repository¶
The source code repository for the zhmccli package is on GitHub:
Setting up the development environment¶
The development environment is pretty easy to set up.
Besides having a supported operating system with a supported Python version (see Supported environments), it is recommended that you set up a virtual Python environment.
Then, with a virtual Python environment active, clone the Git repo of this
project and prepare the development environment with make develop
:
$ git clone git@github.com:zhmcclient/zhmccli.git
$ cd zhmccli
$ make develop
This will install all prerequisites the package needs to run, as well as all prerequisites that you need for development.
Generally, this project uses Make to do things in the currently active
Python environment. The command make help
(or just make
) displays a
list of valid Make targets and a short description of what each target does.
Building the documentation¶
The ReadTheDocs (RTD) site is used to publish the documentation for the zhmccli package at http://zhmccli.readthedocs.io/
This page automatically gets updated whenever the master
branch of the
Git repo for this package changes.
In order to build the documentation locally from the Git work directory, issue:
$ make builddoc
The top-level document to open with a web browser will be
build_doc/html/docs/index.html
.
Testing¶
To run unit tests in the currently active Python environment, issue one of
these example variants of make test
:
$ make test # Run all unit tests
$ TESTCASES=test_resource.py make test # Run only this test source file
$ TESTCASES=TestInit make test # Run only this test class
$ TESTCASES="TestInit or TestSet" make test # py.test -k expressions are possible
To run the unit tests and some more commands that verify the project is in good shape in all supported Python environments, use Tox:
$ tox # Run all tests on all supported Python versions
$ tox -e py27 # Run all tests on Python 2.7
$ tox -e py27 test_resource.py # Run only this test source file on Python 2.7
$ tox -e py27 TestInit # Run only this test class on Python 2.7
$ tox -e py27 TestInit or TestSet # py.test -k expressions are possible
The positional arguments of the tox
command are passed to py.test
using
its -k
option. Invoke py.test --help
for details on the expression
syntax of its -k
option.
Contributing¶
Third party contributions to this project are welcome!
In order to contribute, create a Git pull request, considering this:
- Test is required.
- Each commit should only contain one “logical” change.
- A “logical” change should be put into one commit, and not split over multiple commits.
- Large new features should be split into stages.
- The commit message should not only summarize what you have done, but explain why the change is useful.
- The commit message must follow the format explained below.
What comprises a “logical” change is subject to sound judgement. Sometimes, it makes sense to produce a set of commits for a feature (even if not large). For example, a first commit may introduce a (presumably) compatible API change without exploitation of that feature. With only this commit applied, it should be demonstrable that everything is still working as before. The next commit may be the exploitation of the feature in other components.
For further discussion of good and bad practices regarding commits, see:
Format of commit messages¶
A commit message must start with a short summary line, followed by a blank line.
Optionally, the summary line may start with an identifier that helps identifying the type of change or the component that is affected, followed by a colon.
It can include a more detailed description after the summary line. This is where you explain why the change was done, and summarize what was done.
It must end with the DCO (Developer Certificate of Origin) sign-off line in the format shown in the example below, using your name and a valid email address of yours. The DCO sign-off line certifies that you followed the rules stated in DCO 1.1. In short, you certify that you wrote the patch or otherwise have the right to pass it on as an open-source patch.
We use GitCop during creation of a pull request to check whether the commit messages in the pull request comply to this format. If the commit messages do not comply, GitCop will add a comment to the pull request with a description of what was wrong.
Example commit message:
cookies: Add support for delivering cookies
Cookies are important for many people. This change adds a pluggable API for
delivering cookies to the user, and provides a default implementation.
Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.org>
Use git commit --amend
to edit the commit message, if you need to.
Use the --signoff
(-s
) option of git commit
to append a sign-off
line to the commit message with your name and email as known by Git.
If you like filling out the commit message in an editor instead of using
the -m
option of git commit
, you can automate the presence of the
sign-off line by using a commit template file:
Create a file outside of the repo (say,
~/.git-signoff.template
) that contains, for example:<one-line subject> <detailed description> Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.org>
Configure Git to use that file as a commit template for your repo:
git config commit.template ~/.git-signoff.template
Releasing a version¶
This section shows the steps for releasing a version to PyPI.
It covers all variants of versions that can be released:
- Releasing a new major version (Mnew.0.0) based on the master branch
- Releasing a new minor version (M.Nnew.0) based on the master branch
- Releasing a new update version (M.N.Unew) based on the stable branch of its minor version
This description assumes that you are authorized to push to the remote repo
at https://github.com/zhmcclient/zhmc-ansible-modules and that the remote repo
has the remote name origin
in your local clone.
Any commands in the following steps are executed in the main directory of your local clone of the zhmc-ansible-modules Git repo.
Set shell variables for the version that is being released and the branch it is based on:
MNU
- Full version M.N.U that is being releasedMN
- Major and minor version M.N of that full versionBRANCH
- Name of the branch the version that is being released is based on
When releasing a new major version (e.g.
1.0.0
) based on the master branch:MNU=1.0.0 MN=1.0 BRANCH=master
When releasing a new minor version (e.g.
0.9.0
) based on the master branch:MNU=0.9.0 MN=0.9 BRANCH=master
When releasing a new update version (e.g.
0.8.1
) based on the stable branch of its minor version:MNU=0.8.1 MN=0.8 BRANCH=stable_${MN}
Create a topic branch for the version that is being released:
git checkout ${BRANCH} git pull git checkout -b release_${MNU}
Edit the version file:
vi zhmccli/_version.py
and set the
__version__
variable to the version that is being released:__version__ = 'M.N.U'
Edit the change log:
vi docs/changes.rst
and make the following changes in the section of the version that is being released:
- Finalize the version.
- Change the release date to today’s date.
- Make sure that all changes are described.
- Make sure the items shown in the change log are relevant for and understandable by users.
- In the “Known issues” list item, remove the link to the issue tracker and add text for any known issues you want users to know about.
- Remove all empty list items.
When releasing based on the master branch, edit the GitHub workflow file
test.yml
:vi .github/workflows/test.yml
and in the
on
section, increase the version of thestable_*
branch to the new stable branchstable_M.N
created earlier:on: schedule: . . . push: branches: [ master, stable_M.N ] pull_request: branches: [ master, stable_M.N ]
Commit your changes and push the topic branch to the remote repo:
git status # Double check the changed files git commit -asm "Release ${MNU}" git push --set-upstream origin release_${MNU}
On GitHub, create a Pull Request for branch
release_M.N.U
. This will trigger the CI runs.Important: When creating Pull Requests, GitHub by default targets the
master
branch. When releasing based on a stable branch, you need to change the target branch of the Pull Request tostable_M.N
.On GitHub, close milestone
M.N.U
.On GitHub, once the checks for the Pull Request for branch
start_M.N.U
have succeeded, merge the Pull Request (no review is needed). This automatically deletes the branch on GitHub.Add a new tag for the version that is being released and push it to the remote repo. Clean up the local repo:
git checkout ${BRANCH} git pull git tag -f ${MNU} git push -f --tags git branch -d release_${MNU}
When releasing based on the master branch, create and push a new stable branch for the same minor version:
git checkout -b stable_${MN} git push --set-upstream origin stable_${MN} git checkout ${BRANCH}
Note that no GitHub Pull Request is created for any
stable_*
branch.On GitHub, edit the new tag
M.N.U
, and create a release description on it. This will cause it to appear in the Release tab.You can see the tags in GitHub via Code -> Releases -> Tags.
On ReadTheDocs, activate the new version
M.N.U
:Go to https://readthedocs.org/projects/zhmccli/versions/ and log in.
Activate the new version
M.N.U
.This triggers a build of that version. Verify that the build succeeds and that new version is shown in the version selection popup at https://zhmccli.readthedocs.io/
Upload the package to PyPI:
make upload
This will show the package version and will ask for confirmation.
Attention! This only works once for each version. You cannot release the same version twice to PyPI.
Verify that the released version arrived on PyPI at https://pypi.python.org/pypi/zhmccli/
Starting a new version¶
This section shows the steps for starting development of a new version.
This section covers all variants of new versions:
- Starting a new major version (Mnew.0.0) based on the master branch
- Starting a new minor version (M.Nnew.0) based on the master branch
- Starting a new update version (M.N.Unew) based on the stable branch of its minor version
This description assumes that you are authorized to push to the remote repo
at https://github.com/zhmcclient/zhmc-ansible-modules and that the remote repo
has the remote name origin
in your local clone.
Any commands in the following steps are executed in the main directory of your local clone of the zhmc-ansible-modules Git repo.
Set shell variables for the version that is being started and the branch it is based on:
MNU
- Full version M.N.U that is being startedMN
- Major and minor version M.N of that full versionBRANCH
- Name of the branch the version that is being started is based on
When starting a new major version (e.g.
1.0.0
) based on the master branch:MNU=1.0.0 MN=1.0 BRANCH=master
When starting a new minor version (e.g.
0.9.0
) based on the master branch:MNU=0.9.0 MN=0.9 BRANCH=master
When starting a new minor version (e.g.
0.8.1
) based on the stable branch of its minor version:MNU=0.8.1 MN=0.8 BRANCH=stable_${MN}
Create a topic branch for the version that is being started:
git checkout ${BRANCH} git pull git checkout -b start_${MNU}
Edit the version file:
vi zhmccli/_version.py
and update the version to a draft version of the version that is being started:
__version__ = 'M.N.U.dev1'
Edit the change log:
vi docs/changes.rst
and insert the following section before the top-most section:
Version M.N.U.dev1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This version contains all fixes up to version M.N-1.x. Released: not yet **Incompatible changes:** **Deprecations:** **Bug fixes:** **Enhancements:** **Cleanup:** **Known issues:** * See `list of open issues`_. .. _`list of open issues`: https://github.com/zhmcclient/zhmccli/issues
Commit your changes and push them to the remote repo:
git status # Double check the changed files git commit -asm "Start ${MNU}" git push --set-upstream origin start_${MNU}
On GitHub, create a Pull Request for branch
start_M.N.U
.Important: When creating Pull Requests, GitHub by default targets the
master
branch. When starting a version based on a stable branch, you need to change the target branch of the Pull Request tostable_M.N
.On GitHub, create a milestone for the new version
M.N.U
.You can create a milestone in GitHub via Issues -> Milestones -> New Milestone.
On GitHub, go through all open issues and pull requests that still have milestones for previous releases set, and either set them to the new milestone, or to have no milestone.
On GitHub, once the checks for the Pull Request for branch
start_M.N.U
have succeeded, merge the Pull Request (no review is needed). This automatically deletes the branch on GitHub.Update and clean up the local repo:
git checkout ${BRANCH} git pull git branch -d start_${MNU}
Appendix¶
This section contains information that is referenced from other sections, and that does not really need to be read in sequence.
Glossary¶
This documentation uses a few special terms:
- HMC
- Hardware Management Console; the node the zhmcclient talks to.
- session-id
- an opaque string returned by the HMC as the result of a successful logon, for use by subsequent operations instead of credential data. The HMC gives each newly created session-id a lifetime of 10 hours, and expires it after that.
Bibliography¶
- HMC API
- The Web Services API of the z Systems Hardware Management Console, described in the following books:
- HMC API 2.11.1
- IBM SC27-2616, z Systems Hardware Management Console Web Services API (Version 2.11.1)
- HMC API 2.12.0
- IBM SC27-2617, z Systems Hardware Management Console Web Services API (Version 2.12.0)
- HMC API 2.12.1
- IBM SC27-2626, z Systems Hardware Management Console Web Services API (Version 2.12.1)
- HMC API 2.13.0
- IBM SC27-2627, z Systems Hardware Management Console Web Services API (Version 2.13.0)
- HMC API 2.13.1
- IBM SC27-2634, z Systems Hardware Management Console Web Services API (Version 2.13.1)
- HMC Operations Guide
- The operations guide of the z Systems Hardware Management Console, described in the following books:
- HMC Operations Guide 2.11.1
- IBM SC28-6905, System z Hardware Management Console Operations Guide (Version 2.11.1)
- HMC Operations Guide 2.13.1
- IBM z Systems Hardware Management Console Operations Guide (Version 2.13.1)
- HMC Security
- Hardware Management Console Security
- KVM for IBM z Systems V1.1.2 System Administration
- IBM SC27-8237, KVM for IBM z Systems V1.1.2 System Administration
Change log¶
Version 1.0.0¶
Released: 2021-08-18
Incompatible changes:
- Dropped support for Python 3.4. Python 3.4 has had its last release as 3.4.10 on March 18, 2019 and has officially reached its end of life as of that date. Current Linux distributions no longer support Python 3.4. (issue #185)
- Changed default for option ‘–usage’ of ‘storagevolume update’ command to not be changed. Prior default was to set usage to ‘data’, which required specifying it with the old value if it was supposed not to be changed. (part of issue #125)
Bug fixes:
- Fixed HTTP errors raised as traceback during various ‘list’ commands. These errors are now shown as proper error messages. (issue #215)
Enhancements:
- Increased minimum version of zhmcclient to 1.0.0.
- Added defaults to help text of command options with value, where missing. (issue #125)
- Added a ‘–secure-boot’ option to the ‘lpar scsi-dump’ and ‘partition update’ commands. It had already been supported by the ‘lpar scsi-load’ command. (issue #206)
- Added support for setting some properties of lpar, partition and nic resources to null when specifying an empty string as the option value in create and update commands. The option help text has been updated accordingly. (issue #2)
- Clarified in help text of ‘–ssc-dns-servers’ option of the ‘partition create’ and ‘partition update’ commands that multiple DNS servers are specified using a comma-separated list. (issue #216)
Version 0.22.0¶
This version contains all fixes up to version 0.21.2.
Released: 2021-07-02
Incompatible changes:
- The zhmc command now verifies HMC server certificates by default, using the CA certificates in the ‘certifi’ Python package. This verification will reject the self-signed certificates the HMC is set up with initially. To deal with this, install a CA-verifiable certificate in the HMC and specify the correct CA certificates with the new ‘-c / –ca-certs’ option. As a temporary quick fix, you can disable the verification with the new ‘-n / –no-verify’ option.
Bug fixes:
- Fixed install error on Python>=3.6 caused by click-repl being incompatible with click 8.0.
- Fixed the issue that some commands (e.g. cpc list) stopped the spinner too early. (issue #142)
- Docs: Added statement that the command group for HBAs can be used only on z13 and earlier. (issue #199)
- Docs: Clarified which command groups can only be used in DPM mode or in classic mode. (issue #200)
Enhancements:
- The zhmc command now supports verification of the HMC server certificate. There are two new command line options ‘-n / –no-verify’ and ‘-c / –ca-certs’ that control the verification behavior.
- Increased the minimum version of zhmcclient to 0.32.0. Adjusted code to accomodate the immutable properties of resource objects.
- Added a ‘-T’ / ‘–operation-timeout’ general option to the following commands,
that specifies the operation timeout when waiting for completion of
asynchronous HMC operations. (issue #126)
- lpar activate
- lpar deactivate
- lpar load
- lpar stop
- lpar psw_restart
- lpar scsi-load
- lpar scsi-dump
- partition start
- partition stop
- partition dump
- storagegroup discover-fcp
- Partition commands: On HMC 2.14.0 and later, the partition commands now use the “List Permitted Partitions” operation instead of going through the CPC, which improves the response time, and no longer requires that the user has object access permission to the targeted CPC. In addition, the CPC on the ‘partition list’ command is now optional. If not specified, permitted partitions on all managed CPCs are listed. (issue #192)
- Lpar commands: On HMC 2.14.0 and later, the lpar commands now use the “List Permitted Logical Partitions” operation instead of going through the CPC, which improves the response time. In addition, on HMC API version 3.6 or later (an update to HMC 2.15.0), the lpar commands no longer require that the user has object access permission to the targeted CPC. In addition, the CPC on the ‘lpar list’ command is now optional. If not specified, permitted LPARs on all managed CPCs are listed. (issue #192)
- The ‘nic create’ and ‘nic update’ commands can now specify the backing port with the –adapter and –port options for all types of network adapters. Previously, they could be used only for OSA and Hipersocket adapters. The –virtual-switch option has been deprecated but for compatibility reasons is still supported for OSA and Hipersocket adapters. (issues #201, #198)
Cleanup:
- Added the missing closing of the image file in the ‘partition mount-iso’ command.
- Disabled a Pylint ‘consider-using-with’ issue on a Popen in test code that was properly terminated again.
Version 0.21.0¶
Released: 2021-04-06
Enhancements:
- Increased minimum version of zhmcclient to 0.30.0.
- Added an option –secure-boot to lpar scsi-load command (issue #148).
- Added an option –force to lpar scsi-dump command (issue #148).
- Added support for DPM capacity groups with a new ‘capacitygroup’ command group. (issue #157)
Version 0.20.0¶
Released: 2021-03-25
Incompatible changes:
- In the ‘cpc list’ command, removed the output of the ‘iml-mode’ and ‘is-ensemble-member’ properties, because ensemble support has been removed from the HMC by now.
Deprecations:
- Deprecated several property control options in ‘list’ commands because the
corresponding properties are now always shown:
--type
option in the ‘adapter list’ command--type
option in the ‘cpc list’ command--mach
option in the ‘cpc list’ command--type
option in the ‘lpar list’ command--type
option in the ‘nic list’ command--type
option in the ‘partition list’ command--adapter
option in the ‘vswitch list’ command
- Deprecated the options
--boot-storage-hba/wwpn/lun
of the ‘partition update’ command for booting from an FCP storage volume. Use the new--boot-storage-volume
option instead with the “HBA/WWPN/LUN” format. (part of issue #130)
Bug fixes:
- Fixed a log test failure in zhmccli caused by a change in logging output in zhmcclient 0.23.0.
- Fixed an exception “No formatted text” on python 2.7 by pinning ‘prompt-toolkit’ to <2.0 on Python 2.7 (issue #53).
- Mitigated the coveralls HTTP status 422 by pinning coveralls-python to <3.0.0.
- Pinned Pygments to <2.4.0 on Python 3.4.
- Pinned readme-renderer to <25.0 on Python 3.4.
- Fixed AttributeError when listing hbas on CPCs that have the storage mgmt feature (z14 and later) (issue #113).
- Fixed a KeyError when accessing the email-related options in the ‘storagegroup create’ and ‘storagegroup update’ commands. (issue #129)
- Fixed a KeyError when accessing a no longer existing option in the ‘storagevolume create’ command. (issue #137)
- Test: Fixed GitHub Actions test workflow failure by increasing the version of the ‘readme-renderer’ package to a minimum of 0.23.0 which moved the failing ‘cmarkgfm’ dependent package to an extra we are not using.
Enhancements:
Increased minimum version of zhmcclient package from 0.19.0 to 0.25.0 due to new LPAR related functions being used.
Added a ‘dump’ command for ‘zhmc partition’ that works for CPCs with and without the DPM storage management feature.
Added more ‘zhmc lpar’ commands for logical partitions in CPCs in classic mode:
- zhmc lpar stop
- zhmc lpar psw-restart
- zhmc lpar scsi-load
- zhmc lpar scsi-dump
Added support for usage related command line options to the partition list command that include additional fields in the output: –memory-usage for showing memory allocation to the partitions, –ifl-usage and –cp-usage for showing IFL and CP allocation, weighted capacity and actual usage.
Added more
lpar load
command options:- Added
--clear-indicator
and--no-clear-indicator
flags to thelpar load
command. It controls whether the memory should be cleared before performing the load operation or not. - Added
--store-status-indicator
flag to thelpar load
command. It controls whether the status should be stored before performing the load operation or not.
- Added
Added
os-ipl-token
option to thelpar scsi-dump
command.Added support for the storage management feature, by adding new command groups
storagegroup
,storagevolume
, andvstorageresource
and by adding new storage management related sub-commands to thepartition
command group (issue #56).Added support for Python 3.7.
Migrated from Travis and Appveyor to GitHub Actions. This required several changes in package dependencies for development.
Dropped the use of the pbr package. The package version is now managed in zhmccli/_version.py. (See issue #64)
Added Python 3.9 to the set of versions that is tested in the CI.
Test: Ensured that dependent packages are upgraded to their latest versions in ‘make install’ and ‘make develop’ by invoking Pip with ‘–upgrade-strategy eager’.
Added some more resource properties to ‘list’ commands, including name properties of the parent resources. All ‘list’ commands now support these options for controlling the properties shown (issue #93):
--names-only
: Restrict properties shown to only the names of the resource and its parents--uri
: Add the resource URI to the properties shown--all
: Show all properties
Increased minimum version of Click from 6.6. to 7.0 to get support for ‘hidden’ property of options (related to issue #93).
Added support for setting a storage volume in a storage group as the boot volume for a partition, by adding an option
--boot-storage-volume
to the ‘partition update’ command (issue #130)Conflicting boot options specified for the ‘partition update’ and ‘partition create’ command are now detected instead of silently applying an undocumented preference scheme. (part of issue #130)
Changed CPC and LPAR properties that were always hidden in the output of the
cpc show
andlpar show
commands due to their length or object nesting depth, to now be hidden only in certain cases.Changed Partition properties in the output of the
partition show
command that have a significant length or object nesting depth to now be hidden in certain cases.The hidden properties are now always shown in the JSON output format, and they are shown in the table output formats if a newly added
--all
option is used on theseshow
commands.Hidden CPC properties: - auto-start-list - available-features-list - cpc-power-saving-state - ec-mcl-description - network1-ipv6-info - network2-ipv6-info - stp-configuration
Hidden LPAR properties: - program-status-word-information
Hidden Partition properties: - crypto-configuration
(related to issue #56, also issue #144).
Increased minimum version of zhmcclient to 0.29.0.
Docs: Changed documentation theme to Sphinx RTD Theme. (issue #155)
Cleanup:
- Changed old-style string formatting to new-style (issue #89).
- Removed build tools no longer needed on GitHub Actions.
Version 0.19.0¶
Released: 2019-02-20
Incompatible changes:
- The
lpar deactivate
command is now non-forceful by default, but can be made to behave like previously by specifying the new--force
option. In force mode, the deactivation operation is permitted when the LPAR status is “operating”.
Bug fixes:
- Aligned the check for when to use pyreadline instead of readline in zhmcclient/_helper.py to be consistent with the platform check in requirements.txt: By checking for the win32 platform. Related to issue #47.
Enhancements:
Fixes and improvements in Makefile.
Added initial set of function tests for zhmc command.
Improved the table output of complex properties (arrays or nested objects), to use nested tables, where possible. See issue #9.
Added support for a
--force
option in thelpar activate
,lpar deactivate
, andlpar load
commands. It controls whether the operation is permitted when the LPAR status is “operating”.Note that this changes
lpar deactivate
to be non-forceful by default (force=True was hard coded for deactivate, before this change).Added support for a
--activation-profile-name
option in LPAR activate.Added support for
cpc set-power'save
,cp set-power-capping
andcpc get-em-data
operations.
- Improved support for logging to the system log in zhmccli.py: Added support for retrying multiple addresses if creating a Python system log handler fails. Added localhost:514 as a second choice for Linux and OS-X. This fixes the system log issue on the Travis CI with Ubuntu 14.04 (Issue 35). Added support for system log in CygWin, using /dev/log and localhost:514 as the addresses to try.
- Removed the assertions in zhmccli.reset_logger() that verified the result of resetting the log handlers. It turned out that recently, a log capture logger is present that is caused by the test environment. These assertions were probably a bit overkill anyway (Issue #35).
Version 0.18.0¶
Released: 2017-10-19
This is the base version for this change log. The zhmccli project was split off of the python-zhmcclient project based upon its released version 0.17.0. For prior changes, see the change log of the python-zhmcclient project.
Additional changes:
- Fixed the issue that the readline module is not available in standard python on Windows, by using the pyreadline module in that case.
- Fixed a flawed setup of setuptools in Python 2.7 on the Travis CI, where the metadata directory of setuptools existed twice, by adding a script remove_duplicate_setuptools.py that removes the moot copy of the metadata directory (python-zhmcclient issue #434).
- Added the version of the zhmcclient package to the output of
zhmc --version
.