To use barbicanclient, you must first create an instance of the barbicanclient.client.Client class.
The client uses Keystone Sessions for both authentication and for handling HTTP requests. You can provide authentication credentials to the client by creating a Keystone Session with the appropriate auth plugin and then passing that session to the new Client.
See Authentication for more details.
Example:
from barbicanclient import client
barbican = client.Client(...)
The client object has different attributes that can be used to interact with the Barbican service. Each attribute represents an entity in the Barbican service: Secrets, Orders and Containers.
Secrets represent keys, credentials, and other sensitive data that is stored by the Barbican service. To store or retrieve a secret in the Barbican service you should use the different methods of the barbicanclient.secrets.SecretManager class that is exposed as the secrets attribute of the Client.
Example:
# Store a random text password in Barbican
from barbicanclient import client
import random
import string
def random_password(length):
sys_random = random.SystemRandom()
return u''.join(
sys_random.choice(string.ascii_letters + string.digits) for _ in range(length)
)
barbican = client.Client(...)
my_secret = barbican.secrets.create()
my_secret.name = u'Random plain text password'
my_secret.payload = random_password(24)
my_secret_ref = my_secret.store()
The secret reference returned by barbicanclient.secrets.SecretManager.store() can later be used to retrieve the secret data from barbican.
Example:
# Retrieve Secret from secret reference
retrieved_secret = barbican.secrets.get(my_secret_ref)
my_password = retrieved_secret.payload
The Barbican service defines a Secret Content Type. The client will choose the correct Content Type based on the type of the data that is set on the Secret.payload property. The following table summarizes the mapping of Python types to Barbican Secret Content Types:
six Type | Python 2 Type | Python 3 Type | Barbican Content Type |
---|---|---|---|
six.binary_type | str | bytes | application/octet-stream |
six.text_type | unicode | str | text/plain |
Warning
Previous versions of python-barbicanclient allowed the user to set the payload_content_type and payload_content_encoding properties for any secret. This can lead to unexpected behavior such as changing a unicode string back to a byte string in Python 2, and dropping the base64 encoding of a binary secret as in Launchpad Bug #1419166. Because of this, manually setting the payload_content_type and the payload_content_encoding has been deprecated.
Orders are used to request secret material to be created by the Barbican service. Submitting an order will result in a Secret being created on your behalf. The Secret can then be used like any Secret you may have uploaded yourself. Orders should be created using the factory methods in the barbicanclient.orders.OrderManager instance in the orders attribute of the Client.
Example:
# Submit an order to generate a random encryption key
from barbicanclient import client
barbican = client.Client(...)
my_order = barbican.orders.key_order()
my_order.algorithm = 'AES'
my_order.mode = 'CBC'
my_order.bit_length = 256
my_order_ref = my_order.submit()
The order reference returned by barbicanclient.orders.Order.submit() can later be used to retrieve the order from Barbican.
Example:
# Retrieve Order from order reference
retrieved_order = barbican.orders.get(my_order_ref)
Once your order has been processed by Barbican, the order status will be set to ‘ACTIVE’. An active order will contain the reference to the requested secret (or container).
Example:
# Retrieve Encryption Key generated by the above KeyOrder
generated_secret = barbican.secrets.get(retrieved_order.secret_ref)
key = generated_secret.payload
Currently the client can submit barbicanclient.orders.KeyOrder orders for Keys suitable for symmetric encryption, and barbicanclient.orders.AsymmetricOrder for Asymmetric keys such as RSA keys.
Containers can be either arbitrary groupings of Secrets or a strict grouping of Secrets, such as the Public and Private keys of an RSA keypair.
Containers should be managed using the barbicanclient.containers.ContainerManager instance in the containers attribute of the Client
Example:
# Add the Secrets created above to a container
my_container = barbican.containers.create()
my_container.add('Retrieved Secret', retrieved_secret)
my_container.add('Generated Secret', generated_secret)
my_container_ref = my_container.store()
The container reference returned by barbicanclient.containers.Container.store() can later be used to retrieve the container from Barbican.
Example:
# Retrieve container from Barbican
retrieved_container = barbican.containers.get(my_container_ref)