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OpenStack logging configuration library provides standardized configuration for all openstack projects. It also provides custom formatters, handlers and support for context specific logging (like resource id’s etc).
The oslo.i18n library contain utilities for working with internationalization (i18n) features, especially translation for text strings in an application or library.
The OpenStack Oslo database handling library. Provides database connectivity to the different backends and helper utils.
The OpenStack Oslo context library has helpers to maintain useful information about a request context. The request context is usually populated in the WSGI pipeline and used by various modules such as logging.
The Oslo project intends to produce a python library containing infrastructure code shared by OpenStack projects. The APIs provided by the project should be high quality, stable, consistent and generally useful. The oslo-config library is a command line and configuration file parsing library from the Oslo project.
Oslo concurrency library has utilities for safely running multi-thread, multi-process applications using locking mechanisms and for running external processes.
oslo.cache aims to provide a generic caching mechanism for OpenStack projects by wrapping the dogpile.cache library. The dogpile.cache library provides support memoization, key value storage and interfaces to common caching backends such as Memcached.
This library contains Windows / Hyper-V code commonly used in the OpenStack projects: nova, cinder, networking-hyperv. The library can be used in any other OpenStack projects where it is needed.
The os-client-config is a library for collecting client configuration for using an OpenStack cloud in a consistent and comprehensive manner. It will find cloud config for as few as 1 cloud and as many as you want to put in a config file. It will read environment variables and config files, and it also contains some vendor specific default values so that you don't have to know extra info to use OpenStack * If you have a config file, you will get the clouds listed in it * If you have environment variables, you will get a cloud named `envvars` * If you have neither, you will get a cloud named `defaults` with base defaults
OpenStack Cinder brick library for managing local volume attaches