diff options
-rw-r--r-- | docs/configguide/configguide.rst | 24 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | testcases/functest_utils.py | 6 |
2 files changed, 30 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/configguide/configguide.rst b/docs/configguide/configguide.rst index 7f4ac86c..b7a25c7d 100644 --- a/docs/configguide/configguide.rst +++ b/docs/configguide/configguide.rst @@ -231,6 +231,30 @@ If still the OpenStack command does not show anything or complains about connectivity issues, it could be due to an incorrect url given to the OS_AUTH_URL environment variable. Check the deployment settings. +SSL Support +----------- + +If the OpenStack deployment is defined to use HTTPS endpoints, a certificate +will be needed in the container in order to launch any command. + +The OS variable will point to that file. For example:: + + echo $OS_CACERT + /etc/ssl/certs/ca.crt + +However, this certificate does not exist in the container by default. It has to +be copied manually from the OpenStack deployment. This can be done in 2 ways: + + #. Create manually that file and copy the contents from the OpenStack controller. + + #. (recommended) Add the file using a Docker volume when starting the container:: + + -v <path_to_your_cert_file>:/etc/ssl/certs/ca.cert + + + + + Additional Options ------------------ diff --git a/testcases/functest_utils.py b/testcases/functest_utils.py index 7849782c..f7b83279 100644 --- a/testcases/functest_utils.py +++ b/testcases/functest_utils.py @@ -67,6 +67,12 @@ def get_credentials(service): "http://192.168.20.71:5000/v2.0"), tenant: os.environ.get("OS_TENANT_NAME", "admin"), }) + ssl = os.environ.get("OS_CACERT") + if ssl != None: + creds.update({"ca_cert":ssl}) + if not os.path.isfile(ssl): + print "WARNING: The 'OS_CACERT' environment variable is set to %s "\ + "but the file does not exist." % ssl return creds |