# yum install atomic-enterprise-service-catalog-svcatThe basic workflow of interacting with the service catalog is that:
The cluster administrator installs and registers a broker server to make available its services.
The users use those services by instantiating them in an OpenShift project and linking those service instances to their pods.
The Service Catalog command-line interface (CLI) utility called svcat is
available to handle these user related tasks. While oc commands can perform the same tasks, you can use svcat for easier interaction with Service Catalog resources.
svcat communicates with the Service Catalog API by using the aggregated API
endpoint on an OpenShift cluster.
svcatYou can install svcat as an RPM by using Red Hat Subscription Management
(RHSM) if you have an active OpenShift Enterprise subscription on your Red Hat
account:
# yum install atomic-enterprise-service-catalog-svcatGoogle Compute Engine For Google Cloud Platform, run the following command to setup firewall rules to allow incoming traffic:
$ gcloud compute firewall-rules create allow-service-catalog-secure --allow tcp:30443 --description "Allow incoming traffic on 30443 port."svcatThis section includes common commands to handle the user associated tasks listed
in the service catalog workflow. Use the
svcat --help command to get more information and view other available
command-line options. The sample output in this section assumes that the Ansible
Service Broker is already installed on the cluster.
You can view a list available brokers, sync the broker catalog, and get details about brokers deployed in the service catalog.
To view all the brokers installed on the cluster:
$ svcat get brokers           NAME                                                        URL                                              STATUS
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------+
  ansible-service-broker    https://asb.openshift-ansible-service-broker.svc:1338/ansible-service-broker                Ready
  template-service-broker   https://apiserver.openshift-template-service-broker.svc:443/brokers/template.openshift.io   ReadyTo refresh the catalog metadata from the broker:
$ svcat sync broker ansible-service-brokerSynchronization requested for broker: ansible-service-brokerTo view the details of the broker:
$ svcat describe broker ansible-service-broker  Name:     ansible-service-broker
  URL:      https://openshift-automation-service-broker.openshift-automation-service-broker.svc:1338/openshift-automation-service-broker/
  Status:   Ready - Successfully fetched catalog entries from broker @ 2018-06-07 00:32:59 +0000 UTCWhen you create a ClusterServiceBroker resource, the service catalog
controller queries the broker server to find all services it offers and creates
a service class (ClusterServiceClass) for each of those services.
Additionally, it also creates service plans (ClusterServicePlan) for each of
the broker’s services.
To view the available ClusterServiceClass resources:
$ svcat get classes        NAME                   DESCRIPTION
+-------------------+--------------------------------+
  rh-mediawiki-apb    Mediawiki apb implementation
  ...
  rh-mariadb-apb      Mariadb apb implementation
  rh-mysql-apb        Software Collections MySQL APB
  rh-postgresql-apb   SCL PostgreSQL apb
                      implementationTo view details of a service class:
$ svcat describe class rh-postgresql-apb  Name:          rh-postgresql-apb
  Description:   SCL PostgreSQL apb implementation
  UUID:          d5915e05b253df421efe6e41fb6a66ba
  Status:        Active
  Tags:          database, postgresql
  Broker:        ansible-service-broker
Plans:
  NAME            DESCRIPTION
+------+--------------------------------+
  prod   A single DB server with
         persistent storage
  dev    A single DB server with no
         storageTo view the ClusterServicePlan resources available in the cluster:
$ svcat get plans   NAME           CLASS                  DESCRIPTION
+---------+-------------------+--------------------------------+
  default   rh-mediawiki-apb    An APB that deploys MediaWiki
  ...
  prod      rh-mariadb-apb      This plan deploys a single
                                MariaDB instance with 10 GiB
                                of persistent storage
  dev       rh-mariadb-apb      This plan deploys a single
                                MariaDB instance with
                                ephemeral storage
  prod      rh-mysql-apb        A MySQL server with persistent
                                storage
  dev       rh-mysql-apb        A MySQL server with ephemeral
                                storage
  prod      rh-postgresql-apb   A single DB server with
                                persistent storage
  dev       rh-postgresql-apb   A single DB server with no
                                storageView details of a plan:
$ svcat describe plan rh-postgresql-apb/dev  Name:          dev
  Description:   A single DB server with no storage
  UUID:          9783fc2e859f9179833a7dd003baa841
  Status:        Active
  Free:          true
  Class:         rh-postgresql-apb
Instances:
No instances defined
Instance Create Parameter Schema:
  $schema: http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema
  additionalProperties: false
  properties:
    postgresql_database:
      default: admin
      pattern: ^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*$
      title: PostgreSQL Database Name
      type: string
    postgresql_password:
      pattern: ^[a-zA-Z0-9_~!@#$%^&*()-=<>,.?;:|]+$
      title: PostgreSQL Password
      type: string
    postgresql_user:
      default: admin
      maxLength: 63
      pattern: ^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*$
      title: PostgreSQL User
      type: string
    postgresql_version:
      default: "9.6"
      enum:
      - "9.6"
      - "9.5"
      - "9.4"
      title: PostgreSQL Version
      type: string
  required:
  - postgresql_database
  - postgresql_user
  - postgresql_password
  - postgresql_version
  type: object
Instance Update Parameter Schema:
  $schema: http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema
  additionalProperties: false
  properties:
    postgresql_version:
      default: "9.6"
      enum:
      - "9.6"
      - "9.5"
      - "9.4"
      title: PostgreSQL Version
      type: string
  required:
  - postgresql_version
  type: object
Binding Create Parameter Schema:
  $schema: http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema
  additionalProperties: false
  type: objectProvisioning means to make the service available for consumption. To provision a service, you need to create a service instance and then bind to it.
| Service instances must be created inside an OpenShift namespace. | 
Create a new project.
$ oc new-project <project-name> (1)| 1 | Replace <project-name>with the name of your project. | 
Create service instance using the command:
$ svcat provision postgresql-instance --class rh-postgresql-apb --plan dev --params-json  '{"postgresql_database":"admin","postgresql_password":"admin","postgresql_user":"admin","postgresql_version":"9.6"}' -n szh-project  Name:        postgresql-instance
  Namespace:   szh-project
  Status:
  Class:       rh-postgresql-apb
  Plan:        dev
Parameters:
  postgresql_database: admin
  postgresql_password: admin
  postgresql_user: admin
  postgresql_version: "9.6"When you create a ServiceBinding resource:
The service catalog controller communicates with the broker server to initiate the binding.
The broker server create credentials and issue them to the service catalog controller.
The service catalog controller adds those credentials as secrets to the project.
Create the service binding using the command:
$ svcat bind postgresql-instance --name mediawiki-postgresql-binding  Name:        mediawiki-postgresql-binding
  Namespace:   szh-project
  Status:
  Instance:    postgresql-instance
Parameters:
  {}To view service binding details:
$ svcat get bindings              NAME                NAMESPACE         INSTANCE         STATUS
+------------------------------+-------------+---------------------+--------+
  mediawiki-postgresql-binding   szh-project   postgresql-instance   ReadyVerify the instance details after binding the service:
$ svcat describe instance postgresql-instance  Name:        postgresql-instance
  Namespace:   szh-project
  Status:      Ready - The instance was provisioned successfully @ 2018-06-05 08:42:55 +0000 UTC
  Class:       rh-postgresql-apb
  Plan:        dev
Parameters:
  postgresql_database: admin
  postgresql_password: admin
  postgresql_user: admin
  postgresql_version: "9.6"
Bindings:
              NAME               STATUS
+------------------------------+--------+
  mediawiki-postgresql-binding   ReadyTo delete service catalog related resources, you need to unbind service bindings and deprovision the service instances.
To delete all service bindings associated with a service instance:
$ svcat unbind -n <project-name> (1)
  \ <instance-name> (2)
| 1 | Name of the project that contains the service instance. | 
| 2 | Name of the service instance associated with the binding. | 
For example:
$ svcat unbind -n szh-project postgresql-instancedeleted mediawiki-postgresql-bindingVerify that all service bindings are deleted:
$ svcat get bindings  NAME   NAMESPACE   INSTANCE   STATUS
+------+-----------+----------+--------+
| Running this command deletes all service bindings for the instance. For deleting individual bindings from within an instance run the command  | 
Verify that the associated secret is deleted.
$ oc get secret -n szh-projectNAME                       TYPE                                  DATA      AGE
builder-dockercfg-jxk48    kubernetes.io/dockercfg               1         9m
builder-token-92jrf        kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9m
builder-token-b4sm6        kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9m
default-dockercfg-cggcr    kubernetes.io/dockercfg               1         9m
default-token-g4sg7        kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9m
default-token-hvdpq        kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9m
deployer-dockercfg-wm8th   kubernetes.io/dockercfg               1         9m
deployer-token-hnk5w       kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9m
deployer-token-xfr7c       kubernetes.io/service-account-token   4         9mTo deprovision the service instance:
$ svcat deprovision postgresql-instancedeleted postgresql-instanceVerify the instance is deleted:
$ svcat get instance  NAME   NAMESPACE   CLASS   PLAN   STATUS
+------+-----------+-------+------+--------+
To remove broker services for the service catalog, delete the ClusterServiceBroker resource:
$ oc delete clusterservicebrokers template-service-brokerclusterservicebroker "template-service-broker" deletedTo view all the brokers installed on the cluster:
$ svcat get brokers           NAME                                                        URL                                              STATUS
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------+
  ansible-service-broker    https://asb.openshift-ansible-service-broker.svc:1338/ansible-service-broker                ReadyView the ClusterServiceClass resources for the broker to verify that the broker is removed:
$ svcat get classes  NAME   DESCRIPTION
+------+-------------+