Follow the steps below to launch an instance from an image.
After you gather required parameters, run the following command to launch an instance. Specify the server name, flavor ID, and image ID.
$ openstack server create --flavor FLAVOR_ID --image IMAGE_ID --key-name KEY_NAME \
--user-data USER_DATA_FILE --security-group SEC_GROUP_NAME --property KEY=VALUE \
INSTANCE_NAME
Optionally, you can provide a key name for access control and a security
group for security. You can also include metadata key and value pairs.
For example, you can add a description for your server by providing the
--property description="My Server"
parameter.
You can pass user data in a local file at instance
launch by using the --user-data USER-DATA-FILE
parameter.
Important
If you boot an instance with an INSTANCE_NAME greater than 63 characters,
Compute truncates it automatically when turning it into a host name to
ensure the correct work of dnsmasq. The corresponding warning is written
into the neutron-dnsmasq.log
file.
The following command launches the MyCirrosServer
instance with the
m1.small
flavor (ID of 1
), cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec
image (ID
of 397e713c-b95b-4186-ad46-6126863ea0a9
), default
security
group, KeyPair01
key, and a user data file called
cloudinit.file
:
$ openstack server create --flavor 1 --image 397e713c-b95b-4186-ad46-6126863ea0a9 \
--security-group default --key-name KeyPair01 --user-data cloudinit.file \
myCirrosServer
Depending on the parameters that you provide, the command returns a list of server properties.
+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
| OS-DCF:diskConfig | MANUAL |
| OS-EXT-AZ:availability_zone | |
| OS-EXT-SRV-ATTR:host | None |
| OS-EXT-SRV-ATTR:hypervisor_hostname | None |
| OS-EXT-SRV-ATTR:instance_name | |
| OS-EXT-STS:power_state | NOSTATE |
| OS-EXT-STS:task_state | scheduling |
| OS-EXT-STS:vm_state | building |
| OS-SRV-USG:launched_at | None |
| OS-SRV-USG:terminated_at | None |
| accessIPv4 | |
| accessIPv6 | |
| addresses | |
| adminPass | E4Ksozt4Efi8 |
| config_drive | |
| created | 2016-11-30T14:48:05Z |
| flavor | m1.tiny |
| hostId | |
| id | 89015cc9-bdf1-458a-8518-fdca2b4a5785 |
| image | cirros (397e713c-b95b-4186-ad46-6126863ea0a9) |
| key_name | KeyPair01 |
| name | myCirrosServer |
| os-extended-volumes:volumes_attached | [] |
| progress | 0 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| properties | |
| security_groups | [{u'name': u'default'}] |
| status | BUILD |
| updated | 2016-11-30T14:48:05Z |
| user_id | c36cec73b0e44876a4478b1e6cd749bb |
| metadata | {u'KEY': u'VALUE'} |
+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
A status of BUILD
indicates that the instance has started, but is
not yet online.
A status of ACTIVE
indicates that the instance is active.
Copy the server ID value from the id
field in the output. Use the
ID to get server details or to delete your server.
Copy the administrative password value from the adminPass
field. Use the
password to log in to your server.
Check if the instance is online.
$ openstack server list
The list shows the ID, name, status, and private (and if assigned, public) IP addresses for all instances in the project to which you belong:
+-------------+----------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------+------------+
| ID | Name | Status | Task State | Power State | Networks | Image Name |
+-------------+----------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------+------------+
| 84c6e57d... | myCirrosServer | ACTIVE | None | Running | private=10.0.0.3 | cirros |
| 8a99547e... | myInstanceFromVolume | ACTIVE | None | Running | private=10.0.0.4 | centos |
+-------------+----------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------+------------+
If the status for the instance is ACTIVE, the instance is online.
To view the available options for the openstack server list command, run the following command:
$ openstack help server list
Note
If you did not provide a key pair, security groups, or rules, you can access the instance only from inside the cloud through VNC. Even pinging the instance is not possible.
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