Metadata-Version: 1.2
Name: chaostoolkit-azure
Version: 0.2.0
Summary: Chaos Toolkit Extension for Microsoft Azure
Home-page: http://chaostoolkit.org
Author: chaostoolkit Team
Author-email: contact@chaostoolkit.org
License: Apache License Version 2.0
Description: # Chaos Toolkit Extension for Azure
        
        [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/chaostoolkit-incubator/chaostoolkit-azure.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/chaostoolkit-incubator/chaostoolkit-azure)
        [![Python versions](https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/chaostoolkit-azure.svg)](https://www.python.org/)
        
        This project is a collection of [actions][] and [probes][], gathered as an
        extension to the [Chaos Toolkit][chaostoolkit]. It targets the
        [Microsoft Azure][azure] platform.
        
        [actions]: http://chaostoolkit.org/reference/api/experiment/#action
        [probes]: http://chaostoolkit.org/reference/api/experiment/#probe
        [chaostoolkit]: http://chaostoolkit.org
        [azure]: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/
        
        ## Install
        
        This package requires Python 3.5+
        
        To be used from your experiment, this package must be installed in the Python
        environment where [chaostoolkit][] already lives.
        
        ```
        $ pip install -U chaostoolkit-azure
        ```
        
        ## Usage
        
        To use the probes and actions from this package, add the following to your
        experiment file:
        
        ```json
        {
            "type": "action",
            "name": "start-service-factory-chaos",
            "provider": {
                "type": "python",
                "module": "chaosazure.factory.actions",
                "func": "start_chaos",
                "secrets": ["azure"],
                "arguments": {
                    "parameters": {
                        "TimeToRunInSeconds": 45
                    }
                }
            }
        },
        {
            "type": "action",
            "name": "stop-service-factory-chaos",
            "provider": {
                "type": "python",
                "module": "chaosazure.factory.actions",
                "func": "stop_chaos",
                "secrets": ["azure"]
            }
        }
        ```
        
        That's it!
        
        Please explore the code to see existing probes and actions.
        
        
        
        ## Configuration
        
        ### Credentials
        
        This extension uses the [requests][] and [Azure SDK][sdk] libraries under the hood. The requests library
        expects that you have a PFX certificate, converted as to the PEM format, that allows you to 
        authenticate with the [Service Factory][sf] endpoint.
        
        [sf]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/service-fabric/service-fabric-controlled-chaos
        [creds]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/service-fabric/service-fabric-connect-to-secure-cluster
        [requests]: http://docs.python-requests.org/en/master/
        [sdk]: https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python
        
        Generally speaking, there are two ways of doing this:
        
        * you have [created][creds] a configuration file where you will run the
          experiment from (so with a `~/.sfctl/config` file)
        * you explicitly pass the correct environment variables to the experiment
          definition as follows:
        
            Configuration section:
        
            ```json
            {
                "endpoint": "https://XYZ.westus.cloudapp.azure.com:19080",
                "verify_tls": false,
                "use_ca": false
            }
            ```
        
            Secrets section:
        
            ```json
            {
                "azure": {
                    "security": "pem",
                    "pem_path": "./cluster-client-cert.pem"
                }
            }
            ```
        
            The PEM can also be passed as an environment variable:
        
            ```json
            {
                "azure": {
                    "security": "pem",
                    "pem_content": {
                        "type": "env",
                        "key": "AZURE_PEM"
                    }
                }
            }
            ```
        
            The environment variable name can be anything.
            
        The Azure SDK library on the other hand expects that you have set up a service principal and provide 
        its credentials. With those credentials you are able to authenticate with the Azure infrastructure 
        and to spread Chaos on e.g. virtual machines.
        
        There are two ways of doing this:
        
        * you can either explicitly pass the environment variables to the experiment definition as follows (recommended):
        
            Secrets section:
        
            ```json
            {
                "azure": {
                    "client_id": "AZURE_CLIENT_ID",
                    "client_secret": "AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET",
                    "tenant_id": "AZURE_TENANT_ID"
                }
            }
            ```
            
        * or you pass the secrets directly into the experiment definition:
        
            Secrets section:
        
            ```json
            {
                "azure": {
                    "client_id": "your-super-secret-client-id",
                    "client_secret": "your-even-more-super-secret-client-secret",
                    "tenant_id": "your-tenant-id"
                }
            }
            ```
            
            In both cases you must provide the Azure subscription id, so the Azure extension picks
            the correct resources from the Azure infrastructure.
            
            Configuration section:
        
            ```json
            {
                "azure": {
                    "subscription_id": "your-azure-subscription-id",
                    "resource_groups": "resourcegroup1,resourcegroup2"
                }
            }
            ```
            
            You optionally can provide the resource groups where the Chaos shall be spread. If you have multiple
            resource groups to pick from separate them with a comma. If you omit the resource groups one machine
            will be randomly picked from your Azure subscription id.
        
        ### Putting it all together
        
        Here is a full example:
        
        ```json
        {
            "version": "1.0.0",
            "title": "...",
            "description": "...",
            "configuration": {
                "endpoint": "https://XYZ.westus.cloudapp.azure.com:19080",
                "verify_tls": false,
                "use_ca": false
            },
            "secrets": {
                "azure": {
                    "security": "pem",
                    "pem_path": "./cluster-client-cert.pem"
                }
            },
            "steady-state-hypothesis": {
                "title": "Services is healthy",
                "probes": [
                    {
                        "type": "probe",
                        "name": "application-must-respond",
                        "tolerance": 200,
                        "provider": {
                            "type": "http",
                            "verify_tls": false,
                            "url": "https://some-url-in-cluster/"
                        }
                    }
                ]
            },
            "method": [
                {
                    "type": "action",
                    "name": "start-service-factory-chaos",
                    "provider": {
                        "type": "python",
                        "module": "chaosazure.factory.actions",
                        "func": "start_chaos",
                        "secrets": ["azure"],
                        "arguments": {
                            "parameters": {
                                "TimeToRunInSeconds": 45
                            }
                        }
                    },
                    "pauses": {
                        "after": 30
                    }
                },
                {
                    "type": "probe",
                    "ref": "application-must-respond"
                },
                {
                    "type": "action",
                    "name": "stop-service-factory-chaos",
                    "provider": {
                        "type": "python",
                        "module": "chaosazure.factory.actions",
                        "func": "stop_chaos",
                        "secrets": ["azure"]
                    },
                    "pauses": {
                        "after": 5
                    }
                },
                {
                    "type": "probe",
                    "name": "get-service-factory-chaos-report",
                    "provider": {
                        "type": "python",
                        "module": "chaosazure.factory.probes",
                        "func": "chaos_report",
                        "secrets": ["azure"],
                        "arguments": {
                            "start_time_utc": "1 minute ago",
                            "end_time_utc": "now"
                        }
                    }
                }
            ]
        }
        ```
        
        ## Contribute
        
        If you wish to contribute more functions to this package, you are more than
        welcome to do so. Please, fork this project, make your changes following the
        usual [PEP 8][pep8] code style, sprinkling with tests and submit a PR for
        review.
        
        [pep8]: https://pycodestyle.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
        
        The Chaos Toolkit projects require all contributors must sign a
        [Developer Certificate of Origin][dco] on each commit they would like to merge
        into the master branch of the repository. Please, make sure you can abide by
        the rules of the DCO before submitting a PR.
        
        [dco]: https://github.com/probot/dco#how-it-works
        
        ### Develop
        
        If you wish to develop on this project, make sure to install the development
        dependencies. But first, [create a virtual environment][venv] and then install
        those dependencies.
        
        [venv]: http://chaostoolkit.org/reference/usage/install/#create-a-virtual-environment
        
        ```console
        $ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt -r requirements.txt 
        ```
        
        Then, point your environment to this directory:
        
        ```console
        $ python setup.py develop
        ```
        
        Now, you can edit the files and they will be automatically be seen by your
        environment, even when running from the `chaos` command locally.
        
        ### Test
        
        To run the tests for the project execute the following:
        
        ```
        $ pytest
        ```
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 2 - Pre-Alpha
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: Freely Distributable
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Requires-Python: >=3.5.*
