The knife-oci plugin allows users to interact with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure through Chef Knife.
The project is open source and maintained by Oracle Corp. The home page for the project is here.
Breaking Change Notice: Information about the recent name change from knife-bmcs to knife-oci can be found here.
- Launch an OCI instance and bootstrap it as a Chef node:
knife oci server create
- List OCI compartments.
knife oci compartment list
- Delete an OCI instance:
knife oci server delete
- List OCI instances in a given compartment. Note: All instances in the compartment are returned, not only those that are Chef nodes:
knife oci server list
- List the images in a compartment:
knife oci image list
- List the VCNs in a compartment:
knife oci vcn list
- List the subnets in a VCN:
knife oci subnet list
- List the shapes that may be used for a particular image type:
knife oci shape list
- List the availability domains for your tenancy:
knife oci ad list
Install from RubyGems with:
chef gem install knife-oci
Or:
gem install knife-oci
Note: The plugin depends on the OCI Ruby SDK. Information about that SDK can be found here.
A config file is required to use Oracle Cloud Infrastructure commands. See the instructions for creating a config file here.
By default, the config file will be loaded from ~/.oci/config. Alternate locations can be provided as an argument to each command using --oci-config-file
, or as an entry in your knife.rb file. You can also specify a profile with --oci-profile
.
Most OCI commands require a compartment ID, which will default to the root compartment. If you do not have the correct permissions and you do not specify a different compartment, then you will receive an authorization error.
A compartment ID can be provided with each OCI command using --compartment-id
, or it can be provided in your knife.rb. If a compartment ID is set in both places, then the ID specified in the command will take precedence.
The following example shows the available knife.rb settings for the OCI Knife Plugin. All of these are optional.
knife[:oci_config_file] = '~/.oci/my_alternate_config'
knife[:oci_profile] = 'MY_ALTERNATE_PROFILE'
knife[:compartment_id] = 'ocid1.compartment.oc1..aaaaaaaalsyenka3grgpvvmqwjshig5abzx3jnbvixxxzx373ehwdj7o5arc'
The following example shows how to launch and bootstrap an Oracle Linux image:
knife oci server create
--availability-domain 'kIdk:PHX-AD-1'
--compartment-id 'ocidv1:tenancy:oc1:phx:1460406592660:aaaaaaaab4faofrfkxecohhjuivjq26a13'
--image-id 'ocid1.image.oc1.phx.aaaaaaaaqutj4qjxihpl4mboabsa27mrpusygv6gurp47katabcvljmq3puq'
--shape 'VM.Standard1.1'
--subnet-id 'ocid1.subnet.oc1.phx.aaaaaaaaxlc5cv7ewqr343ms4lvcpxr4lznsf4cbs2565abcm23d3cfebrex'
--ssh-authorized-keys-file ~/.keys/instance_keys.pub
--display-name myinstance
--identity-file ~/.keys/instance_keys
--run-list 'recipe[my_cookbook::my_recipe]'
--region us-phoenix-1
When using the knife oci server create
command, you must specify a public key using --ssh-authorized-keys-file
and the corresponding private key using --identity-file
. For more information, see Managing Key Pairs on Linux Instances.
Notes about the knife oci server create
command:
- All Oracle-provided Linux images are supported. Windows images are not supported at this time.
- Bootstrapping is done through SSH only, and uses the public IP address.
- For Ubuntu images, the user is usually 'ubuntu' instead of 'opc'.
See the “Questions or Feedback?” section here.
See CHANGELOG.
This project welcomes contributions from the community. Before submitting a pull request, please review our contribution guide
Please consult the security guide for our responsible security vulnerability disclosure process
You can find information on any known issues with the SDK here and under the “Issues” tab of this GitHub repository.
Copyright (c) 2017, 2023 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
This SDK and sample is dual licensed under the Universal Permissive License 1.0 and the Apache License 2.0.
See LICENSE for more details.