openstack-manuals/doc/install-guide/source/launch-instance.rst
Stephen Finucane 2250b193e4 Remove '.. end' comments
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Change-Id: I4b4ef694206249da8b98589b3026f2a2be501ee3
Signed-off-by: Stephen Finucane <sfinucan@redhat.com>
2018-09-25 16:02:19 +01:00

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Launch an instance

This section creates the necessary virtual networks to support launching instances. Networking option 1 includes one provider (external) network with one instance that uses it. Networking option 2 includes one provider network with one instance that uses it and one self-service (private) network with one instance that uses it.

The instructions in this section use command-line interface (CLI) tools on the controller node. However, you can follow the instructions on any host that the tools are installed.

For more information on the CLI tools, see the OpenStackClient documentation for Pike, the OpenStackClient documentation for Queens, or the OpenStackClient documentation for Rocky.

To use the dashboard, see the Dashboard User Documentation for Pike, the Dashboard User Documentation for Queens, or the Dashboard User Documentation for Rocky.

Create virtual networks

Create virtual networks for the networking option that you chose when configuring Neutron. If you chose option 1, create only the provider network. If you chose option 2, create the provider and self-service networks.

launch-instance-networks-provider.rst launch-instance-networks-selfservice.rst

After creating the appropriate networks for your environment, you can continue preparing the environment to launch an instance.

Create m1.nano flavor

The smallest default flavor consumes 512 MB memory per instance. For environments with compute nodes containing less than 4 GB memory, we recommend creating the m1.nano flavor that only requires 64 MB per instance. Only use this flavor with the CirrOS image for testing purposes.

$ openstack flavor create --id 0 --vcpus 1 --ram 64 --disk 1 m1.nano

+----------------------------+---------+
| Field                      | Value   |
+----------------------------+---------+
| OS-FLV-DISABLED:disabled   | False   |
| OS-FLV-EXT-DATA:ephemeral  | 0       |
| disk                       | 1       |
| id                         | 0       |
| name                       | m1.nano |
| os-flavor-access:is_public | True    |
| properties                 |         |
| ram                        | 64      |
| rxtx_factor                | 1.0     |
| swap                       |         |
| vcpus                      | 1       |
+----------------------------+---------+

Generate a key pair

Most cloud images support public key authentication rather than conventional password authentication. Before launching an instance, you must add a public key to the Compute service.

  1. Source the demo project credentials:

    $ . demo-openrc
  2. Generate a key pair and add a public key:

    $ ssh-keygen -q -N ""
    $ openstack keypair create --public-key ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub mykey
    
    +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
    | Field       | Value                                           |
    +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
    | fingerprint | ee:3d:2e:97:d4:e2:6a:54:6d:0d:ce:43:39:2c:ba:4d |
    | name        | mykey                                           |
    | user_id     | 58126687cbcc4888bfa9ab73a2256f27                |
    +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+

    Note

    Alternatively, you can skip the ssh-keygen command and use an existing public key.

  3. Verify addition of the key pair:

    $ openstack keypair list
    
    +-------+-------------------------------------------------+
    | Name  | Fingerprint                                     |
    +-------+-------------------------------------------------+
    | mykey | ee:3d:2e:97:d4:e2:6a:54:6d:0d:ce:43:39:2c:ba:4d |
    +-------+-------------------------------------------------+

Add security group rules

By default, the default security group applies to all instances and includes firewall rules that deny remote access to instances. For Linux images such as CirrOS, we recommend allowing at least ICMP (ping) and secure shell (SSH).

  • Add rules to the default security group:
    • Permit ICMP <Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)> (ping):

      $ openstack security group rule create --proto icmp default
      
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
      | Field             | Value                                |
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
      | created_at        | 2017-03-30T00:46:43Z                 |
      | description       |                                      |
      | direction         | ingress                              |
      | ether_type        | IPv4                                 |
      | id                | 1946be19-54ab-4056-90fb-4ba606f19e66 |
      | name              | None                                 |
      | port_range_max    | None                                 |
      | port_range_min    | None                                 |
      | project_id        | 3f714c72aed7442681cbfa895f4a68d3     |
      | protocol          | icmp                                 |
      | remote_group_id   | None                                 |
      | remote_ip_prefix  | 0.0.0.0/0                            |
      | revision_number   | 1                                    |
      | security_group_id | 89ff5c84-e3d1-46bb-b149-e621689f0696 |
      | updated_at        | 2017-03-30T00:46:43Z                 |
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
    • Permit secure shell (SSH) access:

      $ openstack security group rule create --proto tcp --dst-port 22 default
      
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
      | Field             | Value                                |
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
      | created_at        | 2017-03-30T00:43:35Z                 |
      | description       |                                      |
      | direction         | ingress                              |
      | ether_type        | IPv4                                 |
      | id                | 42bc2388-ae1a-4208-919b-10cf0f92bc1c |
      | name              | None                                 |
      | port_range_max    | 22                                   |
      | port_range_min    | 22                                   |
      | project_id        | 3f714c72aed7442681cbfa895f4a68d3     |
      | protocol          | tcp                                  |
      | remote_group_id   | None                                 |
      | remote_ip_prefix  | 0.0.0.0/0                            |
      | revision_number   | 1                                    |
      | security_group_id | 89ff5c84-e3d1-46bb-b149-e621689f0696 |
      | updated_at        | 2017-03-30T00:43:35Z                 |
      +-------------------+--------------------------------------+

Launch an instance

If you chose networking option 1, you can only launch an instance on the provider network. If you chose networking option 2, you can launch an instance on the provider network and the self-service network.

launch-instance-provider.rst launch-instance-selfservice.rst

Block Storage

If your environment includes the Block Storage service, you can create a volume and attach it to an instance.

launch-instance-cinder.rst

Orchestration

If your environment includes the Orchestration service, you can create a stack that launches an instance.

For more information, see the Orchestration installation guide for Pike, the Orchestration installation guide for Queens, or the Orchestration installation guide for Rocky.

Shared File Systems

If your environment includes the Shared File Systems service, you can create a share and mount it in an instance.

For more information, see the Shared File Systems installation guide for Pike, the Shared File Systems installation guide for Queens, or the Shared File Systems installation guide for Rocky.