- Abstract
- Supported vCenter Releases
- Supported NSX-T Releases
- VMware Cloud on AWS Support
- Quick Start Guide
- Run SDK Samples
- API Documentation
- Repository Administrator Resources
- VMware Resources
This document describes the vSphere Automation Python SDK samples that use the vSphere Automation python client library. Additionally, some of the samples demonstrate the combined use of the vSphere Automation and vSphere APIs. To support this combined use, the vSphere Automation Python SDK samples require the vSphere Management SDK packages (pyVmomi) to be installed on the client. The samples have been developed to work with python 2.7.x and 3.3+
vCenter 6.0, 6.5 and 6.7. Certain APIs and samples that are introduced in 6.5 release, such as vCenter, Virtual Machine and Appliance Management. Please refer to the notes in each sample for detailed compatibility information.
NSX-T 2.2
The VMware Cloud on AWS API and samples are currently available as a preview and are subject to change in the future.
We recommend you to install latest Python and pip on your system.
A Python virtual environment is also highly recommended.
git clone https://github.com/vmware/vsphere-automation-sdk-python.git
cd vsphere-automation-sdk-python
- Linux/Mac:
pip install --upgrade --force-reinstall -r requirements.txt --extra-index-url file://`pwd`/lib
- Windows:
pip install --upgrade --force-reinstall -r requirements.txt --extra-index-url file:///absolute_dir_to_sdk/lib
NOTE: The SDK also requires OpenSSL 1.0.1+ if you want to connect to vSphere 6.5+ in order to support TLS1.1 & 1.2
import requests
import urllib3
from vmware.vapi.vsphere.client import create_vsphere_client
session = requests.session()
# Disable cert verification for demo purpose.
# This is not recommended in a production environment.
session.verify = False
# Disable the secure connection warning for demo purpose.
# This is not recommended in a production environment.
urllib3.disable_warnings(urllib3.exceptions.InsecureRequestWarning)
# Connect to a vCenter Server using username and password
vsphere_client = create_vsphere_client(server='<vc_ip>', username='<vc_username>', password='<vc_password>', session=session)
# List all VMs inside the vCenter Server
vsphere_client.vcenter.VM.list()
Output in a Python Interpreter:
(venv) het-m03:vsphere-automation-sdk-python het$ python
Python 3.6.3 (v3.6.3:2c5fed86e0, Oct 3 2017, 00:32:08)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5666) (dot 3)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import requests
>>> import urllib3
>>> from vmware.vapi.vsphere.client import create_vsphere_client
>>> session = requests.session()
>>> session.verify = False
>>> urllib3.disable_warnings(urllib3.exceptions.InsecureRequestWarning)
>>> vsphere_client = create_vsphere_client(server='<vc_ip>', username='<vc_username>', password='<vc_password>', session=session)
>>> vsphere_client.vcenter.VM.list()
[Summary(vm='vm-58', name='standalone-20e4bd3af-esx.0-vm.0', power_state=State(string='POWERED_OFF'), cpu_count=1, memory_size_mib=256),
...]
from vmware.vapi.vmc.client import create_vmc_client
# Connect to VMware Cloud on AWS using refresh token
vmc_client = create_vmc_client('<refresh_token>')
# Get organizations associated with calling user.
vmc_client.Orgs.list()
Output in a Python Interpreter:
(venv) het-m03:vsphere-automation-sdk-python het$ python
Python 3.6.3 (v3.6.3:2c5fed86e0, Oct 3 2017, 00:32:08)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5666) (dot 3)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from vmware.vapi.vmc.client import create_vmc_client
>>> vmc_client = create_vmc_client('<refresh_token>')
>>> vmc_client.Orgs.list()
[Organization(updated=datetime.datetime(2018, 3, 2, 16, 57, 46), user_id='77aa6e6f-3257-3637-9cd9-14fae3a25b9d', updated_by_user_id='2021b5ae-890b-3472-ba9a-bc8cff776ca7', created=datetime.datetime(2017, 4, 4, 11, 57, 48, 861), version=15, updated_by_user_name='mdreyer@vmware.com', user_name='pgifford@vmware.com', id='2a8ac0ba-c93d-4748-879f-7dc9918beaa5', display_name='VMC-SET', name='j13hqg73', sla='VMC_INTERNAL', project_state='CREATED', properties=OrgProperties(values={'defaultAwsRegions': 'US_WEST_2,US_EAST_1', 'sddcLimit': '5', 'planVersion': '3.0', 'defaultHostsPerSddc': '4', 'invitationCode': '/csp/gateway/slc/api/service-invitations/aa7203c3617bbe755597b8b0ad652', 'enableAWSCloudProvider': 'true', 'enableZeroCloudCloudProvider': 'true', 'accountLinkingOptional': 'false', 'defaultPDXDatacenter': 'pdx2', 'skipSubscriptionCheck': 'true', 'minHostsPerSddc': '4', 'maxHostsPerSddc': '8', 'hostLimit': '16', 'maxHostsPerSddcOnCreate': '4', 'isAllAccess': 'true', 'enabledAvailabilityZones': '{"us-east-1":["iad6","iad7","iad12"],"us-west-2":["pdx1", "pdx4", "pdx2"]}'}), cloud_configurations={'AWS': AwsOrgConfiguration(provider='AWS')})
...]
In this section we will walk you through the steps to run the sample code for vSphere and VMware Cloud on AWS APIs.
-
Linux/Mac:
export PYTHONPATH=${PWD}:$PYTHONPATH
-
Windows:
set PYTHONPATH=%cd%;%PYTHONPATH%
$ python samples/vmc/orgs/organization_operations.py -r <refresh_token>
A vSphere test environment is required with the following configuration:
- 1 vCenter Server
- 2 ESX hosts
- 1 NFS Datastore with at least 3GB of free capacity
Note Please have the details of these available but do not have any configuration pre-created on vCenter server or ESXi Hosts, for example there should be no existing datacenters, clusters or attached hosts on the vCenter server.
Before executing the samples we'll need to setup the vSphere test environment using one of the sample scripts (samples/vsphere/vcenter/setup/main.py). The script will perform the following:
- Create 2 test Datacenters
- Create a test Cluster
- Create Test Folders for VM Storage
- Attach the hosts
- Create a Distributed Switch
- Create a Distributed Portgroup
- Attach the NFS datastore (if Selected) to the hosts
- Copy the Photon OS ISO image downloaded from VMware's bintray server to the datastore
- Create directories to add sample ports
First, edit settings in samples/vsphere/vcenter/setup/testbed.py and replace everything in < > brackets with your environment information. Leave the rest of the settings in this file at their default values.
config["SERVER"] = "<vcenter_hostname_or_ip>"
config["USERNAME"] = "<vsphere_username>"
config["PASSWORD"] = "<vsphere_password>"
config["ESX_HOST1"] = "<ESX_host1_ipaddress>"
config["ESX_HOST2"] = "<ESX_host2_ipaddress>"
config["ESX_USER"] = "<esx_username>"
config["ESX_PASS"] = "<esx_password>"
config["USE_NFS"] = True
config["NFS_HOST"] = "<nfs_ipaddress>"
config["NFS_REMOTE_PATH"] = "/store1"
At this point, we're ready to run the setup script:
$ python samples/vsphere/vcenter/setup/main.py -sv
After completion you will see from the output and also the vSphere Client that the environment has now been fully setup and is ready to easily run further samples.
To view other available command-line options:
$ python samples/vsphere/vcenter/setup/main.py -h
$ python samples/vsphere/vcenter/setup/main.py -riv
$ python samples/vsphere/vcenter/vm/list_vms.py -v
Board members are volunteers from the SDK community and VMware staff members, board members are not held responsible for any issues which may occur from running of samples from this repository.
Members:
- Tianhao He (VMware)
- Steve Trefethen (VMware)
- vSphere Automation SDK Overview
- VMware Sample Exchange It is highly recommended to add any and all submitted samples to the VMware Sample Exchange
- VMware Code
- VMware Developer Community
- VMware vSphere REST API Reference documentation.
- VMware Python forum