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  $> INSTANCE=<instance name>
  $> INSTANCE=<instance name>
  $> USER_NAME=<user name>
  $> USER_NAME=<user name>
  $> IP_ADDR=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/private network/ {print $5}')
  $> <nowiki>IP_ADDR=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/private network/ {print $5}')</nowiki>


We also need a rootfs-style image, which may be download from:
We also need a rootfs-style image, which may be download from:

Revision as of 18:40, 17 September 2012

Description

Nova instances can be booted from volume, analogous to EBS-backed volumes in EC2.

We construct a bootable volume, then fire up an instance backed by this volume.

Setup

We assume that an instance has already been booted in a previous test, and we use this as a builder to facilitate the creation of a bootable volume.

Capture the instance name, user name, and IP address as an environment variables:

$> INSTANCE=<instance name>
$> USER_NAME=<user name>
$> IP_ADDR=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/private network/ {print $5}')

We also need a rootfs-style image, which may be download from:

$> wget http://images.ansolabs.com/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz

Finally, we assume that the nova-volume service or cinder is enabled and running.

How to test

Create a 1Gb volume, which we will make bootable:

$> nova volume-create --display_name=bootable_volume 1
$> VOLUME_ID=$(nova volume-list | awk '/bootable_volume/ {print $2}')

and wait for the volume to become available:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Temporarily attach volume to your builder instance, this will allow us to copy image data into the volume

$> nova volume-attach $INSTANCE $VOLUME_ID /dev/vdb

Wait for the volume status to show as in-use:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Format and mount volume to a staging mount point:

$> ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR << EOF
set -o errexit
set -o xtrace
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/stage
sudo mkfs.ext3 -b 1024 /dev/vdb 1048576
sudo mount /dev/vdb /tmp/stage
sudo touch /tmp/stage/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
sudo chown $USER_NAME /tmp/stage/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
EOF

Copy image to the staging directory on the builder instance:

$> scp -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR:/tmp/stage

Unpack image into the volume (don't worry about an unmount failure).

$> ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -i $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR << EOF
set -o errexit
set -o xtrace
cd /tmp/stage
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/image
sudo gunzip cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
sudo mount cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img /tmp/image
sudo cp -pr /tmp/image/* /tmp/stage/
cd
sync
sudo umount /tmp/image
sudo umount /tmp/stage || true
EOF

Detach volume for the builder instance:

$> nova volume-detach $INSTANCE $VOLUME_ID

and wait for the volume status to show as availble:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Now snapshot the bootable volume we just created:

$> nova volume-snapshot-create --display_name bootable_snapshot $VOLUME_ID

and wait for the snapshot to become available:

$> nova volume-snapshot-show bootable_snapshot
$> SNAPSHOT_ID=$(nova volume-snapshot-list | awk '/bootable_snapshot/ {print $2}')

Now we can boot from the bootable volume. We use the same image as the builder instance, but that is only in order to retrieve the image properties.

$> IMAGE_ID=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/image/ {print $5}' | sed 's,(\(.*\)),\1,')
$> nova boot --flavor 1 --image $INSTANCE --block_device_mapping vda=${SNAPSHOT_ID}:snap::0 volume_backed

Expected Results

You should be able able to ssh into the volume-backed instance.

Note that an additional snapshot now exists to back the image:

$> nova volume-snapshot-list

Also note the volume-backed instance you've fired up, there is a volume cloned from the corresponding snapshot:

$> nova volume-list