In cli-manage-images section, CLI reference is not specified OSC but specified glance command in image. This commit fixes CLI reference for image control command and removes unnecessary command option descriptions. Change-Id: I87c4e6b50aeda724115cfc7bb103bff74c45653d Implements: blueprint use-openstack-command
11 KiB
Manage images
The cloud operator assigns roles to users. Roles determine who can upload and manage images. The operator might restrict image upload and management to only cloud administrators or operators.
You can upload images through the glance
client or the
Image service API. You can use the nova
client for the
image management. The latter provides mechanisms to list and delete
images, set and delete image metadata, and create images of a running
instance or snapshot and backup types.
After you upload an image, you cannot change it.
For details about image creation, see the Virtual Machine Image Guide.
List or get details for images (glance)
To get a list of images and to get further details about a single
image, use openstack image list
and openstack image show
commands.
$ openstack image list
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
| ID | Name | Status |
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
| dfc1dfb0-d7bf-4fff-8994-319dd6f703d7 | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec | active |
| a3867e29-c7a1-44b0-9e7f-10db587cad20 | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec-kernel | active |
| 4b916fba-6775-4092-92df-f41df7246a6b | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec-ramdisk | active |
| d07831df-edc3-4817-9881-89141f9134c3 | myCirrosImage | active |
+--------------------------------------+---------------------------------+--------+
$ openstack image show myCirrosImage
+------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
| checksum | ee1eca47dc88f4879d8a229cc70a07c6 |
| container_format | ami |
| created_at | 2016-08-11T15:07:26Z |
| disk_format | ami |
| file | /v2/images/dfc1dfb0-d7bf-4fff-8994-319dd6f703d7/file |
| id | dfc1dfb0-d7bf-4fff-8994-319dd6f703d7 |
| min_disk | 0 |
| min_ram | 0 |
| name | myCirrosImage |
| owner | d88310717a8e4ebcae84ed075f82c51e |
| protected | False |
| schema | /v2/schemas/image |
| size | 13287936 |
| status | active |
| tags | |
| updated_at | 2016-08-11T15:20:02Z |
| virtual_size | None |
| visibility | private |
+------------------+------------------------------------------------------+
When viewing a list of images, you can also use grep
to
filter the list, as follows:
$ openstack image list | grep 'cirros'
| dfc1dfb0-d7bf-4fff-8994-319dd6f703d7 | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec | active |
| a3867e29-c7a1-44b0-9e7f-10db587cad20 | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec-kernel | active |
| 4b916fba-6775-4092-92df-f41df7246a6b | cirros-0.3.2-x86_64-uec-ramdisk | active |
Note
To store location metadata for images, which enables direct file
access for a client, update the /etc/glance/glance-api.conf
file with the following statements:
show_multiple_locations = True
filesystem_store_metadata_file = filePath
where filePath points to a JSON file that defines the mount point for OpenStack images on your system and a unique ID. For example:
[{
"id": "2d9bb53f-70ea-4066-a68b-67960eaae673",
"mountpoint": "/var/lib/glance/images/"
}]
After you restart the Image service, you can use the following syntax to view the image's location information:
$ openstack --os-image-api-version 2 image show imageID
For example, using the image ID shown above, you would issue the command as follows:
$ openstack --os-image-api-version 2 image show 2d9bb53f-70ea-4066-a68b-67960eaae673
Create or update an image (glance)
To create an image, use openstack image create
:
$ openstack image create imageName
To update an image by name or ID, use openstack image set
:
$ openstack image set imageName
The following list explains the optional arguments that you can use
with the create
and set
commands to modify
image properties. For more information, refer to the OpenStack
Image command reference.
The following example shows the command that you would use to upload a CentOS 6.3 image in qcow2 format and configure it for public access:
$ openstack image create --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare \
--public --file ./centos63.qcow2 centos63-image
The following example shows how to update an existing image with a properties that describe the disk bus, the CD-ROM bus, and the VIF model:
Note
When you use OpenStack with VMware vCenter Server, you need to
specify the vmware_disktype
and
vmware_adaptertype
properties with openstack image create
.
Also, we recommend that you set the
hypervisor_type="vmware"
property. For more information,
see Images
with VMware vSphere in the OpenStack Configuration Reference.
$ openstack image set \
--property hw_disk_bus=scsi \
--property hw_cdrom_bus=ide \
--property hw_vif_model=e1000 \
f16-x86_64-openstack-sda
Currently the libvirt virtualization tool determines the disk,
CD-ROM, and VIF device models based on the configured hypervisor type
(libvirt_type
in /etc/nova/nova.conf
file).
For the sake of optimal performance, libvirt defaults to using virtio
for both disk and VIF (NIC) models. The disadvantage of this approach is
that it is not possible to run operating systems that lack virtio
drivers, for example, BSD, Solaris, and older versions of Linux and
Windows.
If you specify a disk or CD-ROM bus model that is not supported, see the Disk_and_CD-ROM_bus_model_values_table. If you specify a VIF model that is not supported, the instance fails to launch. See the VIF_model_values_table.
The valid model values depend on the libvirt_type
setting, as shown in the following tables.
Disk and CD-ROM bus model values
libvirt_type setting | Supported model values |
---|---|
qemu or kvm |
|
xen |
|
VIF model values
libvirt_type setting | Supported model values |
---|---|
qemu or kvm |
|
xen |
|
vmware |
|
Note
By default, hardware properties are retrieved from the image
properties. However, if this information is not available, the
libosinfo
database provides an alternative source for these
values.
If the guest operating system is not in the database, or if the use
of libosinfo
is disabled, the default system values are
used.
Users can set the operating system ID or a short-id
in
image properties. For example:
$ openstack image set --property short-id=fedora23 \
name-of-my-fedora-image
Alternatively, users can set id
to a URL:
$ openstack image set \
--property id=http://fedoraproject.org/fedora/23 \
ID-of-my-fedora-image
Create an image from ISO image
You can upload ISO images to the Image service (glance). You can subsequently boot an ISO image using Compute.
In the Image service, run the following command:
$ openstack image create ISO_IMAGE --file IMAGE.iso \
--disk-format iso --container-format bare
Optionally, to confirm the upload in Image service, run:
$ openstack image list
Troubleshoot image creation
If you encounter problems in creating an image in the Image service or Compute, the following information may help you troubleshoot the creation process.
- Ensure that the version of qemu you are using is version 0.14 or
later. Earlier versions of qemu result in an
unknown option -s
error message in the/var/log/nova/nova-compute.log
file. - Examine the
/var/log/nova/nova-api.log
and/var/log/nova/nova-compute.log
log files for error messages.