pyinfoblox is a Python module for interfacing with the Infoblox WAPI.
For more information about the Infoblox WAPI, please refer to the Infoblox WAPI documentation.
pyinfoblox is Open Source and licensed under the BSD License.
pyinfoblox is hosted on Github. Please contribute by reporting issues, suggesting features or by sending patches using pull requests.
The easiest way to install pyinfoblox is by using pip
:
$ pip install pyinfoblox
In order to install the latest version of pyinfoblox from the Github repository simply execute these commands instead:
$ git clone https://github.com/dnaeon/pyinfoblox.git
$ cd pyinfoblox
$ python setup.py install
The first thing we do when using pyinfoblox
is to instantiate a
new InfobloxWAPI
object.
>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> from pyinfoblox import InfobloxWAPI
>>> infoblox = InfobloxWAPI(
... username='admin',
... password='p4ssw0rd',
... wapi='https://localhost/wapi/v1.1/'
... )
Getting Infoblox networks is as easy as doing:
>>> networks = infoblox.network.get()
>>> print(networks)
Getting a specific network in Infoblox is easy too:
>>> network = infoblox.network.get(network='192.168.1.0/24')
>>> print(network)
Another example that will get all Infoblox ipv4address
objects.
>>> ipv4address = infoblox.ipv4address.get()
>>> print(ipv4address)
Here is how to create a new Infoblox network:
>>> objref = infoblox.network.create(
... network='192.168.1.0/24',
... comment='This is my test network'
... )
>>> print(objref)
u'network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default'
Creating new objects returns a reference to the newly created object in Infoblox.
We can also update objects. When we update objects in Infoblox we
need to pass the object reference as well. This is how we can
update the network
we created in the previous example
>>> infoblox.network.update(
... objref='network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default',
... comment='This is my updated network'
... )
u'network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default'
>>> network = infoblox.network.get(network='192.168.1.0/24')
>>> print(network[0]['comment'])
This is my updated network
When we no longer need an Infoblox object we can always remove it. Just make sure to pass the object reference when deleting objects.
>>> infoblox.network.delete(
... objref='network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default'
... )
u'network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default'
As a last example we will see how to call functions on Infoblox objects.
Here is how to call the next_available_ip
function on a
network
object in order to get the next 3 available IP addresses:
>>> infoblox.network.function(
... objref='network/ZG5zLm5ldHdvcmskMTkyLjE2OC4xLjAvMjQvMA:192.168.1.0/24/default',
... _function='next_available_ip',
... num=3
... )
{u'ips': [u'192.168.1.21', u'192.168.1.22', u'192.168.1.23']}
This example below calls the restartservices
function on a
grid
object:
>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> from pyinfoblox import InfobloxWAPI
>>> infoblox = InfobloxWAPI(
... username='admin',
... password='p4ssw0rd',
... wapi='https://localhost/wapi/v1.1/'
...)
>>> grids = infoblox.grid.get()
>>> print(grids)
[{'_ref': 'grid/b25lLmNsdXN0ZXIkMA:com'}]
>>> grid = grids[0]['_ref']
>>> infoblox.grid.function(
... objref=grid,
... _function='restartservices',
... member_order='SEQUENTIALLY',
... restart_option='RESTART_IF_NEEDED',
... sequential_delay=10,
... service_option='ALL'
...)