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Modify images
Once you have obtained a virtual machine image, you may want to make some changes to it before uploading it to the Image service. Here we describe several tools available that allow you to modify images.
Warning
Do not attempt to use these tools to modify an image that is attached to a running virtual machine. These tools are designed only to modify the images that are not currently running.
guestfish
The guestfish
program is a tool from the libguestfs project that allows you to
modify the files inside of a virtual machine image.
Note
guestfish
does not mount the image directly into the
local file system. Instead, it provides you with a shell interface that
enables you to view, edit, and delete files. Many of guestfish
commands, such
as touch
, chmod
, and rm
, resemble traditional
bash commands.
Example guestfish session
Sometimes you must modify a virtual machine image to remove any
traces of the MAC address that was assigned to the virtual network
interface card when the image was first created. This is because the MAC
address is different when the virtual machine images boots. This example
shows how to use the guestfish
to remove references to the
old MAC address by deleting the
/etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
file and removing
the HWADDR
line from the
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0
file.
Assume that you have a CentOS qcow2 image called
centos63_desktop.img
. Mount the image in read-write mode as
root, as follows:
# guestfish --rw -a centos63_desktop.img
Welcome to guestfish, the libguestfs filesystem interactive shell for
editing virtual machine filesystems.
Type: 'help' for help on commands
'man' to read the manual
'quit' to quit the shell
><fs>
This starts a guestfish session.
Note
the guestfish prompt looks like a fish:
><fs>
.
We must first use the run
command at the guestfish prompt before we can
do anything else. This will launch a virtual machine, which will be used
to perform all of the file manipulations.
><fs> run
We can now view the file systems in the image using the
list-filesystems
command:><fs> list-filesystems /dev/vda1: ext4 /dev/vg_centosbase/lv_root: ext4 /dev/vg_centosbase/lv_swap: swap
We need to mount the logical volume that contains the root partition:
><fs> mount /dev/vg_centosbase/lv_root /
Next, we want to delete a file. We can use the
rm
guestfish command, which works the same way it does in a traditional shell.><fs> rm /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
We want to edit the
ifcfg-eth0
file to remove theHWADDR
line. Theedit
command will copy the file to the host, invoke your editor, and then copy the file back.><fs> edit /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0
If you want to modify this image to load the 8021q kernel at boot time, you must create an executable script in the
/etc/sysconfig/modules/
directory. You can use thetouch
guestfish command to create an empty file, theedit
command to edit it, and thechmod
command to make it executable.><fs> touch /etc/sysconfig/modules/8021q.modules ><fs> edit /etc/sysconfig/modules/8021q.modules
We add the following line to the file and save it:
modprobe 8021q
Then we set to executable:
><fs> chmod 0755 /etc/sysconfig/modules/8021q.modules
We are done, so we can exit using the
exit
command:><fs> exit
Go further with guestfish
There is an enormous amount of functionality in guestfish and a full treatment is beyond the scope of this document. Instead, we recommend that you read the guestfs-recipes documentation page for a sense of what is possible with these tools.
guestmount
For some types of changes, you may find it easier to mount the
image's file system directly in the guest. The guestmount
program, also from the libguestfs project, allows you to do so.
For example, to mount the root partition from our
centos63_desktop.qcow2
image to/mnt
, we can do:# guestmount -a centos63_desktop.qcow2 -m /dev/vg_centosbase/lv_root --rw /mnt
If we did not know in advance what the mount point is in the guest, we could use the
-i
(inspect) flag to tell guestmount to automatically determine what mount point to use:# guestmount -a centos63_desktop.qcow2 -i --rw /mnt
Once mounted, we could do things like list the installed packages using rpm:
# rpm -qa --dbpath /mnt/var/lib/rpm
Once done, we unmount:
# umount /mnt
virt-* tools
The libguestfs project has a number of other useful tools, including:
- virt-edit for editing a file inside of an image.
- virt-df for displaying free space inside of an image.
- virt-resize for resizing an image.
- virt-sysprep for preparing an image for distribution (for example, delete SSH host keys, remove MAC address info, or remove user accounts).
- virt-sparsify for making an image sparse.
- virt-p2v for converting a physical machine to an image that runs on KVM.
- virt-v2v for converting Xen and VMware images to KVM images.
Modify a single file inside of an image
This example shows how to use virt-edit
to modify a file. The command can take
either a filename as an argument with the -a
flag, or a
domain name as an argument with the -d
flag. The following
examples shows how to use this to modify the /etc/shadow
file in instance with libvirt domain name instance-000000e1
that is currently running:
# virsh shutdown instance-000000e1
# virt-edit -d instance-000000e1 /etc/shadow
# virsh start instance-000000e1
Resize an image
Here is an example of how to use virt-resize
to resize an image. Assume we have a
16 GB Windows image in qcow2 format that we want to resize to 50 GB.
First, we use
virt-filesystems
to identify the partitions:# virt-filesystems --long --parts --blkdevs -h -a /data/images/win2012.qcow2 Name Type MBR Size Parent /dev/sda1 partition 07 350M /dev/sda /dev/sda2 partition 07 16G /dev/sda /dev/sda device - 16G -
In this case, it is the
/dev/sda2
partition that we want to resize. We create a new qcow2 image and use thevirt-resize
command to write a resized copy of the original into the new image:# qemu-img create -f qcow2 /data/images/win2012-50gb.qcow2 50G # virt-resize --expand /dev/sda2 /data/images/win2012.qcow2 \ /data/images/win2012-50gb.qcow2 Examining /data/images/win2012.qcow2 ... ********** Summary of changes: /dev/sda1: This partition will be left alone. /dev/sda2: This partition will be resized from 15.7G to 49.7G. The filesystem ntfs on /dev/sda2 will be expanded using the 'ntfsresize' method. ********** Setting up initial partition table on /data/images/win2012-50gb.qcow2 ... Copying /dev/sda1 ... 100% [ ] 00:00 Copying /dev/sda2 ... 100% [ ] 00:00 Expanding /dev/sda2 using the 'ntfsresize' method ... Resize operation completed with no errors. Before deleting the old disk, carefully check that the resized disk boots and works correctly.
Loop devices, kpartx, network block devices
If you do not have access to the libguestfs, you can mount image file systems directly in the host using loop devices, kpartx, and network block devices.
Warning
Mounting untrusted guest images using the tools described in this section is a security risk, always use libguestfs tools such as guestfish and guestmount if you have access to them. See A reminder why you should never mount guest disk images on the host OS <https://www.berrange.com/posts/2013/02/20/ a-reminder-why-you-should-never-mount-guest-disk-images-on-the-host-os/> by Daniel Berrangé for more details.
Mount a raw image (without LVM)
If you have a raw virtual machine image that is not using LVM to
manage its partitions, use the losetup
command to find an unused loop device.
# losetup -f
/dev/loop0
In this example, /dev/loop0
is free. Associate a loop
device with the raw image:
# losetup /dev/loop0 fedora17.img
If the image only has a single partition, you can mount the loop device directly:
# mount /dev/loop0 /mnt
If the image has multiple partitions, use kpartx
to expose the
partitions as separate devices (for example,
/dev/mapper/loop0p1
), then mount the partition that
corresponds to the root file system:
# kpartx -av /dev/loop0
If the image has, say three partitions (/boot, /, swap), there should be one new device created per partition:
$ ls -l /dev/mapper/loop0p*
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 49 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/mapper/loop0p1
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 50 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/mapper/loop0p2
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 51 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/mapper/loop0p3
To mount the second partition, as root:
# mkdir /mnt/image
# mount /dev/mapper/loop0p2 /mnt/image
Once you are done, to clean up:
# umount /mnt/image
# rmdir /mnt/image
# kpartx -d /dev/loop0
# losetup -d /dev/loop0
Mount a raw image (with LVM)
If your partitions are managed with LVM, use losetup
and kpartx
commands as in the
previous example to expose the partitions to the host.
# losetup -f
/dev/loop0
# losetup /dev/loop0 rhel62.img
# kpartx -av /dev/loop0
Next, you need to use the vgscan
command to identify the LVM volume groups
and then the vgchange
command to expose the volumes as
devices:
# vgscan
Reading all physical volumes. This may take a while...
Found volume group "vg_rhel62x8664" using metadata type lvm2
# vgchange -ay
2 logical volume(s) in volume group "vg_rhel62x8664" now active
# mount /dev/vg_rhel62x8664/lv_root /mnt
Clean up when you are done:
# umount /mnt
# vgchange -an vg_rhel62x8664
# kpartx -d /dev/loop0
# losetup -d /dev/loop0
Mount a qcow2 image (without LVM)
You need the nbd
(network block device) kernel module
loaded to mount qcow2 images. This will load it with support for 16
block devices, which is fine for our purposes. As root:
# modprobe nbd max_part=16
Assuming the first block device (/dev/nbd0
) is not
currently in use, we can expose the disk partitions using the qemu-nbd
and partprobe
commands. As
root:
# qemu-nbd -c /dev/nbd0 image.qcow2
# partprobe /dev/nbd0
If the image has, say three partitions (/boot, /, swap), there should be one new device created for each partition:
$ ls -l /dev/nbd3*
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 48 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/nbd0
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 49 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/nbd0p1
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 50 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/nbd0p2
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 43, 51 2012-03-05 15:32 /dev/nbd0p3
Note
If the network block device you selected was already in use, the
initial qemu-nbd
command will fail silently, and the /dev/nbd3p{1,2,3}
device files will not be created.
If the image partitions are not managed with LVM, they can be mounted directly:
# mkdir /mnt/image
# mount /dev/nbd3p2 /mnt/image
When you are done, clean up:
# umount /mnt/image
# rmdir /mnt/image
# qemu-nbd -d /dev/nbd0
Mount a qcow2 image (with LVM)
If the image partitions are managed with LVM, after you use qemu-nbd
and partprobe
, you must use
vgscan
and vgchange -ay
in order to
expose the LVM partitions as devices that can be mounted:
# modprobe nbd max_part=16
# qemu-nbd -c /dev/nbd0 image.qcow2
# partprobe /dev/nbd0
# vgscan
Reading all physical volumes. This may take a while...
Found volume group "vg_rhel62x8664" using metadata type lvm2
# vgchange -ay
2 logical volume(s) in volume group "vg_rhel62x8664" now active
# mount /dev/vg_rhel62x8664/lv_root /mnt
When you are done, clean up:
# umount /mnt
# vgchange -an vg_rhel62x8664
# qemu-nbd -d /dev/nbd0