With the split of the User Guides, there's no need anymore to have orphan and user_only flags, remove them from the user-guide directory. Only files that keep :orphan: are doc/user-guide/source/hot-guide/hot_advanced_topics.rst and hot_existing_templates.rst since these files are not currently included. Change-Id: I1ac0356d69d8668785f8b1947e8b061731aca747
6.5 KiB
Manage bare-metal nodes
The bare-metal driver for OpenStack Compute manages provisioning of physical hardware by using common cloud APIs and tools such as Orchestration (Heat). The use case for this driver is for single tenant clouds such as a high-performance computing cluster, or for deploying OpenStack itself.
If you use the bare-metal driver, you must create a network interface and add it to a bare-metal node. Then, you can launch an instance from a bare-metal image.
You can list and delete bare-metal nodes. When you delete a node, any associated network interfaces are removed. You can list and remove network interfaces that are associated with a bare-metal node.
Commands
The following commands can be used to manage bare-metal nodes.
baremetal-interface-add
-
Adds a network interface to a bare-metal node.
baremetal-interface-list
-
Lists network interfaces associated with a bare-metal node.
baremetal-interface-remove
-
Removes a network interface from a bare-metal node.
baremetal-node-create
-
Creates a bare-metal node.
baremetal-node-delete
-
Removes a bare-metal node and any associated interfaces.
baremetal-node-list
-
Lists available bare-metal nodes.
baremetal-node-show
-
Shows information about a bare-metal node.
Create a bare-metal node
When you create a bare-metal node, your PM address, user name, and password should match the information in your hardware's BIOS/IPMI configuration.
$ nova baremetal-node-create --pm_address PM_ADDRESS --pm_user PM_USERNAME \
--pm_password PM_PASSWORD $(hostname -f) 1 512 10 aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
The following example shows the command and results from creating a
node with the PM address 1.2.3.4
, the PM user name ipmi,
and password ipmi
.
$ nova baremetal-node-create --pm_address 1.2.3.4 --pm_user ipmi \
--pm_password ipmi $(hostname -f) 1 512 10 aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
+------------------+-------------------+
| Property | Value |
+------------------+-------------------+
| instance_uuid | None |
| pm_address | 1.2.3.4 |
| interfaces | [] |
| prov_vlan_id | None |
| cpus | 1 |
| memory_mb | 512 |
| prov_mac_address | aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff |
| service_host | ubuntu |
| local_gb | 10 |
| id | 1 |
| pm_user | ipmi |
| terminal_port | None |
+------------------+-------------------+
Add a network interface to the node
For each NIC on the node, you must create an interface, specifying the interface's MAC address.
$ nova baremetal-interface-add 1 aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
+-------------+-------------------+
| Property | Value |
+-------------+-------------------+
| datapath_id | 0 |
| id | 1 |
| port_no | 0 |
| address | aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff |
+-------------+-------------------+
Launch an instance from a bare-metal image
A bare-metal instance is an instance created directly on a physical machine, without any virtualization layer running underneath it. Nova retains power control via IPMI. In some situations, Nova may retain network control via Neutron and OpenFlow.
$ nova boot --image my-baremetal-image --flavor my-baremetal-flavor test
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Property | Value |
+-----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| status | BUILD |
| id | cc302a8f-cd81-484b-89a8-b75eb3911b1b |
... wait for instance to become active ...
Note
Set the --availability_zone
parameter to specify which
zone or node to use to start the server. Separate the zone from the host
name with a comma. For example:
$ nova boot --availability_zone zone:HOST,NODE
host
is optional for the
--availability_zone
parameter. You can simply specify
zone:,node
, still including the comma.
List bare-metal nodes and interfaces
Use the nova baremetal-node-list
command to view all
bare-metal nodes and interfaces. When a node is in use, its status
includes the UUID of the instance that runs on it:
$ nova baremetal-node-list
+----+--------+------+-----------+---------+-------------------+------+------------+-------------+-------------+---------------+
| ID | Host | CPUs | Memory_MB | Disk_GB | MAC Address | VLAN | PM Address | PM Username | PM Password | Terminal Port |
+----+--------+------+-----------+---------+-------------------+------+------------+-------------+-------------+---------------+
| 1 | ubuntu | 1 | 512 | 10 | aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff | None | 1.2.3.4 | ipmi | | None |
+----+--------+------+-----------+---------+-------------------+------+------------+-------------+-------------+---------------+
Show details for a bare-metal node
Use the nova baremetal-node-list
command to view the
details for a bare-metal node:
$ nova baremetal-node-show 1
+------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Property | Value |
+------------------+--------------------------------------+
| instance_uuid | cc302a8f-cd81-484b-89a8-b75eb3911b1b |
| pm_address | 1.2.3.4 |
| interfaces | [{u'datapath_id': u'0', u'id': 1, |
| | u'port_no': 0, |
| | u'address': u'aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff'}] |
| prov_vlan_id | None |
| cpus | 1 |
| memory_mb | 512 |
| prov_mac_address | aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff |
| service_host | ubuntu |
| local_gb | 10 |
| id | 1 |
| pm_user | ipmi |
| terminal_port | None |
+------------------+--------------------------------------+