koalalorenzo / python-digitalocean

🐍🐳 Python module to manage Digital Ocean droplets

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python-digitalocean

Easy access to Digital Ocean APIs to deploy droplets, images and more.

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Table of Contents

How to install

You can install python-digitalocean using pip

pip install -U python-digitalocean

or via sources:

python setup.py install

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Configurations

Specify a custom provider using environment variable

export DIGITALOCEAN_END_POINT=http://example.com/

Specify the DIGITALOCEAN_ACCESS_TOKEN using environment variable

export DIGITALOCEAN_ACCESS_TOKEN='xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'

Note: Probably want to add the export line above to your .bashrc file.

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Features

python-digitalocean support all the features provided via digitalocean.com APIs, such as:

  • Get user's Projects
  • Assign a resource to a user project
  • List the resources of user's project
  • Get user's Droplets
  • Get user's Images (Snapshot and Backups)
  • Get public Images
  • Get Droplet's event status
  • Create and Remove a Droplet
  • Create or Delete Reserve IP
  • Create, Add and Remove Tags from Droplets
  • Resize a Droplet
  • Shutdown, restart and boot a Droplet
  • Power off, power on and "power cycle" a Droplet
  • Perform Snapshot
  • Enable/Disable automatic Backups
  • Restore root password of a Droplet

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## Examples

Listing the Projects

This example shows how to list all the projects:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
print(my_projects)

Assign a resource for specific project

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
my_projects[0].assign_resource(["do:droplet:<Droplet Number>"])

List all the resources of a project

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
resources = my_projects[0].get_all_resources()
print(resources)

Listing the droplets

This example shows how to list all the active droplets:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_droplets = manager.get_all_droplets()
print(my_droplets)

This example shows how to specify custom provider's end point URL:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake", end_point="http://example.com/")

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Listing the droplets by tags

This example shows how to list all the active droplets:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_droplets = manager.get_all_droplets(tag_name="awesome")
print(my_droplets)

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Add a tag to a droplet

This example shows how to add a tag to a droplet:

import digitalocean
tag = digitalocean.Tag(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake", name="tag_name")
tag.create() # create tag if not already created
tag.add_droplets(["DROPLET_ID"])

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Shutdown all droplets

This example shows how to shutdown all the active droplets:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_droplets = manager.get_all_droplets()
for droplet in my_droplets:
    droplet.shutdown()

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Creating a Droplet and checking its status

This example shows how to create a droplet and how to check its status

import digitalocean
droplet = digitalocean.Droplet(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake",
                               name='Example',
                               region='nyc2', # New York 2
                               image='ubuntu-20-04-x64', # Ubuntu 20.04 x64
                               size_slug='s-1vcpu-1gb',  # 1GB RAM, 1 vCPU
                               backups=True)
droplet.create()

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Create or Delete Reserved IP

This example shows how to create a reserved ip in specific region and delete it

import digitalocean

floating_ip = digitalocean.FloatingIP(region_slug='nyc2', token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
         
# To Create IP
static_ip = floating_ip.reserve()
print(static_ip)

# To Delete IP
release_static_ip = floating_ip.destroy()
print(release_static_ip) # returns True on success
        

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Checking the status of the droplet

actions = droplet.get_actions()
for action in actions:
    action.load()
    # Once it shows "completed", droplet is up and running
    print(action.status)

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Listing the Projects

This example shows how to list all the projects:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
print(my_projects)

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Assign a resource for specific project

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
my_projects[0].assign_resource(["do:droplet:<Droplet Number>"])

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List all the resources of a project

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
my_projects = manager.get_all_projects()
resources = my_projects[0].get_all_resources()
print(resources)

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Add SSHKey into DigitalOcean Account

from digitalocean import SSHKey

user_ssh_key = open('/home/<$USER>/.ssh/id_rsa.pub').read()
key = SSHKey(token='secretspecialuniquesnowflake',
             name='uniquehostname',
             public_key=user_ssh_key)
key.create()

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Creating a new droplet with all your SSH keys

manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
keys = manager.get_all_sshkeys()

droplet = digitalocean.Droplet(token=manager.token,
                               name='DropletWithSSHKeys',
                               region='ams3', # Amster
                               image='ubuntu-20-04-x64', # Ubuntu 20.04 x64
                               size_slug='s-1vcpu-1gb',  # 1GB RAM, 1 vCPU
                               ssh_keys=keys, #Automatic conversion
                               backups=False)
droplet.create()

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Creating a Firewall

This example creates a firewall that only accepts inbound tcp traffic on port 80 from a specific load balancer and allows outbound tcp traffic on all ports to all addresses.

from digitalocean import Firewall, InboundRule, OutboundRule, Destinations, Sources

inbound_rule = InboundRule(protocol="tcp", ports="80",
                           sources=Sources(
                               load_balancer_uids=[
                                   "4de7ac8b-495b-4884-9a69-1050c6793cd6"]
                               )
                           )

outbound_rule = OutboundRule(protocol="tcp", ports="all",
                             destinations=Destinations(
                               addresses=[
                                   "0.0.0.0/0",
                                   "::/0"]
                                 )
                             )

firewall = Firewall(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake",
                    name="new-firewall",
                    inbound_rules=[inbound_rule],
                    outbound_rules=[outbound_rule],
                    droplet_ids=[8043964, 8043972])
firewall.create()

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Listing the domains

This example shows how to list all the active domains:

import digitalocean
TOKEN="secretspecialuniquesnowflake"
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token=TOKEN)
my_domains = manager.get_all_domains()
print(my_domains)

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Listing records of a domain

This example shows how to list all records of a domain:

import digitalocean
TOKEN="secretspecialuniquesnowflake"
domain = digitalocean.Domain(token=TOKEN, name="example.com")
records = domain.get_records()
for r in records:
    print(r.name, r.domain, r.type, r.data)

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Creating a domain record

This example shows how to create new domain record (sub.example.com):

import digitalocean
TOKEN="secretspecialuniquesnowflake"
domain = digitalocean.Domain(token=TOKEN, name="example.com")
new_record =  domain.create_new_domain_record(
                type='A',
                name='sub',
                data='93.184.216.34'
                )
print(new_record)

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Update a domain record

This example shows how to modify an existing domain record (sub.example.com):

import digitalocean
TOKEN="secretspecialuniquesnowflake"
domain = digitalocean.Domain(token=TOKEN, name="example.com")
records = domain.get_records()
id = None
for r in records:
    if r.name == 'sub':
        r.data = '1.1.1.1'
        r.save()

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Getting account requests/hour limits status

Each request will also include the rate limit information:

import digitalocean
account = digitalocean.Account(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake").load()
# or
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
account = manager.get_account()

Output:

droplet_limit: 25
email: 'name@domain.me'
email_verified: True
end_point: 'https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/'
floating_ip_limit: 3
ratelimit_limit: '5000'
ratelimit_remaining: '4995'
ratelimit_reset: '1505378973'
status: 'active'
status_message: ''
token:'my_secret_token'
uuid: 'my_id'

When using the Manager().get_all.. functions, the rate limit will be stored on the manager object:

import digitalocean
manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
domains = manager.get_all_domains()

print(manager.ratelimit_limit)

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Session customization

You can take advantage of the requests library and configure the HTTP client under python-digitalocean.

Configure retries in case of connection error

This example shows how to configure your client to retry 3 times in case of ConnectionError:

import digitalocean
import requests
from requests.adapters import HTTPAdapter
from requests.packages.urllib3.util.retry import Retry

manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
retry = Retry(connect=3)
adapter = HTTPAdapter(max_retries=retry)
manager._session.mount('https://', adapter)

See Retry object reference to get more details about all retries options.

Configure a hook on specified answer

This example shows how to launch custom actions if a HTTP 500 occurs:

import digitalocean

def handle_response(response, *args, **kwargs):
    if response.status_code == 500:
        # Make a lot things from the raw response
        pass
    return response

manager = digitalocean.Manager(token="secretspecialuniquesnowflake")
manager._session.hooks['response'].append(handle_response)

See event hooks documentation to get more details about this feature.

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Testing

Test using Docker

To test this python-digitalocean you can use docker to have a clean environment automatically. First you have to build the container by running in your shell on the repository directory:

docker build -t "pdo-tests" .

Then you can run all the tests (for both python 2 and python 3)

docker run pdo-tests

Note: This will use Ubuntu 14.04 as base and use your repository to run tests. So every time you edit some files, please run these commands to perform tests on your changes.

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Testing using pytest manually

Use pytest to perform testing. It is recommended to use a dedicated virtualenv to perform tests, using these commands:

$ virtualenv /tmp/digitalocean_env
$ source /tmp/digitalocean_env/bin/activate
$ pip install -r requirements.txt

To run all the tests manually use py.test command:

$ python -m pytest

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Links

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🐍🐳 Python module to manage Digital Ocean droplets

License:GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0


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