horizon/doc/source/user/launch-instances.rst
Akihiro Motoki a4d05ce55d Clean up broken links due to doc-migration
admin-manage-stacks.rst is dropped as we have no admin stack panel.
view-cloud-resources.rst is dropped as the metering panel was dropped
several releases ago.

Closes-Bug: 1714753

Change-Id: I483cb3dbaab23722abd2f321e8666d8beea2f7c7
2017-09-03 08:57:42 +00:00

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===========================
Launch and manage instances
===========================
Instances are virtual machines that run inside the cloud.
You can launch an instance from the following sources:
* Images uploaded to the Image service.
* Image that you have copied to a persistent volume. The instance
launches from the volume, which is provided by the ``cinder-volume``
API through iSCSI.
* Instance snapshot that you took.
Launch an instance
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#. Log in to the dashboard.
#. Select the appropriate project from the drop down menu at the top left.
#. On the :guilabel:`Project` tab, open the :guilabel:`Compute` tab and
click :guilabel:`Instances` category.
The dashboard shows the instances with its name, its private and
floating IP addresses, size, status, task, power state, and so on.
#. Click :guilabel:`Launch Instance`.
#. In the :guilabel:`Launch Instance` dialog box, specify the following values:
:guilabel:`Details` tab
Instance Name
Assign a name to the virtual machine.
Availability Zone
By default, this value is set to the availability zone given by the
cloud provider (for example, ``us-west`` or ``apac-south``). For some
cases, it could be ``nova``.
.. note::
The name you assign here becomes the initial host name of the server.
If the name is longer than 63 characters, the Compute service
truncates it automatically to ensure dnsmasq works correctly.
After the server is built, if you change the server name in the API
or change the host name directly, the names are not updated in the
dashboard.
Server names are not guaranteed to be unique when created so you
could have two instances with the same host name.
Count
To launch multiple instances, enter a value greater than ``1``. The
default is ``1``.
:guilabel:`Source` tab
Instance Boot Source
Your options are:
Boot from image
If you choose this option, a new field for :guilabel:`Image Name`
displays. You can select the image from the list.
Boot from snapshot
If you choose this option, a new field for :guilabel:`Instance
Snapshot` displays. You can select the snapshot from the list.
Boot from volume
If you choose this option, a new field for :guilabel:`Volume`
displays. You can select the volume from the list.
Boot from image (creates a new volume)
With this option, you can boot from an image and create a volume
by entering the :guilabel:`Device Size` and :guilabel:`Device
Name` for your volume. Click the :guilabel:`Delete Volume on
Instance Delete` option to delete the volume on deleting the
instance.
Boot from volume snapshot (creates a new volume)
Using this option, you can boot from a volume snapshot and create
a new volume by choosing :guilabel:`Volume Snapshot` from a list
and adding a :guilabel:`Device Name` for your volume. Click the
:guilabel:`Delete Volume on Instance Delete` option to delete the
volume on deleting the instance.
Image Name
This field changes based on your previous selection. If you have
chosen to launch an instance using an image, the :guilabel:`Image Name`
field displays. Select the image name from the dropdown list.
Instance Snapshot
This field changes based on your previous selection. If you have
chosen to launch an instance using a snapshot, the
:guilabel:`Instance Snapshot` field displays.
Select the snapshot name from the dropdown list.
Volume
This field changes based on your previous selection. If you have
chosen to launch an instance using a volume, the :guilabel:`Volume`
field displays. Select the volume name from the dropdown list.
If you want to delete the volume on instance delete,
check the :guilabel:`Delete Volume on Instance Delete` option.
:guilabel:`Flavor` tab
Flavor
Specify the size of the instance to launch.
.. note::
The flavor is selected based on the size of the image selected
for launching an instance. For example, while creating an image, if
you have entered the value in the :guilabel:`Minimum RAM (MB)` field
as 2048, then on selecting the image, the default flavor is
``m1.small``.
:guilabel:`Networks` tab
Selected Networks
To add a network to the instance, click the :guilabel:`+` in the
:guilabel:`Available` field.
:guilabel:`Network Ports` tab
Ports
Activate the ports that you want to assign to the instance.
:guilabel:`Security Groups` tab
Security Groups
Activate the security groups that you want to assign to the instance.
Security groups are a kind of cloud firewall that define which
incoming network traffic is forwarded to instances.
If you have not created any security groups, you can assign
only the default security group to the instance.
:guilabel:`Key Pair` tab
Key Pair
Specify a key pair.
If the image uses a static root password or a static key set
(neither is recommended), you do not need to provide a key pair
to launch the instance.
:guilabel:`Configuration` tab
Customization Script Source
Specify a customization script that runs after your instance
launches.
:guilabel:`Metadata` tab
Available Metadata
Add Metadata items to your instance.
#. Click :guilabel:`Launch Instance`.
The instance starts on a compute node in the cloud.
.. note::
If you did not provide a key pair, security groups, or rules, users
can access the instance only from inside the cloud through VNC. Even
pinging the instance is not possible without an ICMP rule configured.
You can also launch an instance from the :guilabel:`Images` or
:guilabel:`Volumes` category when you launch an instance from
an image or a volume respectively.
When you launch an instance from an image, OpenStack creates a local
copy of the image on the compute node where the instance starts.
For details on creating images, see `Creating images
manually <https://docs.openstack.org/image-guide/create-images-manually.html>`_
in the *OpenStack Virtual Machine Image Guide*.
When you launch an instance from a volume, note the following steps:
* To select the volume from which to launch, launch an instance from
an arbitrary image on the volume. The arbitrary image that you select
does not boot. Instead, it is replaced by the image on the volume that
you choose in the next steps.
To boot a Xen image from a volume, the image you launch in must be
the same type, fully virtualized or paravirtualized, as the one on
the volume.
* Select the volume or volume snapshot from which to boot. Enter a
device name. Enter ``vda`` for KVM images or ``xvda`` for Xen images.
.. note::
When running QEMU without support for the hardware virtualization, set
``cpu_mode="none"`` alongside ``virt_type=qemu`` in
``/etc/nova/nova-compute.conf`` to solve the following error:
.. code-block:: console
libvirtError: unsupported configuration: CPU mode 'host-model'
for ``x86_64`` qemu domain on ``x86_64`` host is not supported by hypervisor
Connect to your instance by using SSH
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To use SSH to connect to your instance, use the downloaded keypair
file.
.. note::
The user name is ``ubuntu`` for the Ubuntu cloud images on TryStack.
#. Copy the IP address for your instance.
#. Use the :command:`ssh` command to make a secure connection to the instance.
For example:
.. code-block:: console
$ ssh -i MyKey.pem ubuntu@10.0.0.2
#. At the prompt, type ``yes``.
It is also possible to SSH into an instance without an SSH keypair, if the
administrator has enabled root password injection. For more information
about root password injection, see `Injecting the administrator password
<https://docs.openstack.org/nova/latest/admin/admin-password-injection.html>`_
in the *OpenStack Administrator Guide*.
Track usage for instances
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can track usage for instances for each project. You can track costs
per month by showing meters like number of vCPUs, disks, RAM, and
uptime for all your instances.
#. Log in to the dashboard.
#. Select the appropriate project from the drop down menu at the top left.
#. On the :guilabel:`Project` tab, open the :guilabel:`Compute` tab and
click :guilabel:`Overview` category.
#. To query the instance usage for a month, select a month and click
:guilabel:`Submit`.
#. To download a summary, click :guilabel:`Download CSV Summary`.
Create an instance snapshot
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#. Log in to the dashboard.
#. Select the appropriate project from the drop down menu at the top left.
#. On the :guilabel:`Project` tab, open the :guilabel:`Compute` tab and
click the :guilabel:`Instances` category.
#. Select the instance from which to create a snapshot.
#. In the actions column, click :guilabel:`Create Snapshot`.
#. In the :guilabel:`Create Snapshot` dialog box, enter a name for the
snapshot, and click :guilabel:`Create Snapshot`.
The :guilabel:`Images` category shows the instance snapshot.
To launch an instance from the snapshot, select the snapshot and click
:guilabel:`Launch`. Proceed with launching an instance.
Manage an instance
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#. Log in to the dashboard.
#. Select the appropriate project from the drop down menu at the top left.
#. On the :guilabel:`Project` tab, open the :guilabel:`Compute` tab and
click :guilabel:`Instances` category.
#. Select an instance.
#. In the menu list in the actions column, select the state.
You can resize or rebuild an instance. You can also choose to view
the instance console log, edit instance or the security groups.
Depending on the current state of the instance, you can pause,
resume, suspend, soft or hard reboot, or terminate it.