Instances are virtual machines that run inside the cloud.
Before you can launch an instance, gather the following parameters:
cloud-init
package. Create at least one key pair for each
project. If you already have generated a key pair with an external
tool, you can import it into OpenStack. You can use the key pair
for multiple instances that belong to that project.Note
Instances that use the default security group cannot, by default, be accessed from any IP address outside of the cloud. If you want those IP addresses to access the instances, you must modify the rules for the default security group.
After you gather the parameters that you need to launch an instance, you can launch it from an image or a volume. You can launch an instance directly from one of the available OpenStack images or from an image that you have copied to a persistent volume. The OpenStack Image service provides a pool of images that are accessible to members of different projects.
Before you begin, source the OpenStack RC file.
Create a flavor.
Creating a flavor is typically only available to administrators of a cloud because this has implications for scheduling efficiently in the cloud.
$ openstack flavor create --ram 512 --disk 1 --vcpus 1 m1.tiny
List the available flavors.
$ openstack flavor list
Note the ID of the flavor that you want to use for your instance:
+-----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
| ID | Name | RAM | Disk | Ephemeral | VCPUs | Is_Public |
+-----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
| 1 | m1.tiny | 512 | 1 | 0 | 1 | True |
| 2 | m1.small | 2048 | 20 | 0 | 1 | True |
| 3 | m1.medium | 4096 | 40 | 0 | 2 | True |
| 4 | m1.large | 8192 | 80 | 0 | 4 | True |
| 5 | m1.xlarge | 16384 | 160 | 0 | 8 | True |
+-----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
List the available images.
$ openstack image list
Note the ID of the image from which you want to boot your instance:
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
| ID | Name | Status |
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
| 397e713c-b95b-4186-ad46-6126863ea0a9 | cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-uec | active |
| df430cc2-3406-4061-b635-a51c16e488ac | cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-uec-kernel | active |
| 3cf852bd-2332-48f4-9ae4-7d926d50945e | cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-uec-ramdisk | active |
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
You can also filter the image list by using grep to find a specific image, as follows:
$ openstack image list | grep 'kernel'
| df430cc2-3406-4061-b635-a51c16e488ac | cirros-0.3.5-x86_64-uec-kernel | active |
List the available security groups.
$ openstack security group list
Note
If you are an admin user, this command will list groups for all tenants.
Note the ID of the security group that you want to use for your instance:
+--------------------------------------+---------+------------------------+----------------------------------+
| ID | Name | Description | Project |
+--------------------------------------+---------+------------------------+----------------------------------+
| b0d78827-0981-45ef-8561-93aee39bbd9f | default | Default security group | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| ec02e79e-83e1-48a5-86ad-14ab9a8c375f | default | Default security group | 1eaaf6ede7a24e78859591444abf314a |
+--------------------------------------+---------+------------------------+----------------------------------+
If you have not created any security groups, you can assign the instance to only the default security group.
You can view rules for a specified security group:
$ openstack security group rule list default
List the available key pairs, and note the key pair name that you use for SSH access.
$ openstack keypair list
You can launch an instance from various sources.
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