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  $> <nowiki>IMAGE_ID=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/image/ {print $5}' | sed 's,(\(.*\)),\1,')</nowiki>
  $> <nowiki>IMAGE_ID=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/image/ {print $5}' | sed 's,(\(.*\)),\1,')</nowiki>
  $> nova boot --flavor 1 --image $INSTANCE --block_device_mapping vda=${SNAPSHOT_ID}:snap::0 volume_backed --key_name nova_key
  $> nova boot --flavor 1 --image $INSTANCE --block_device_mapping vda=${SNAPSHOT_ID}:snap::0 --key_name nova_key volume_backed


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Revision as of 13:19, 18 September 2012

Description

Nova instances can be booted from volume, analogous to EBS-backed volumes in EC2.

We construct a bootable volume, then fire up an instance backed by this volume.

Setup

We assume that an instance has already been booted in the previous test case, and we use this as a builder to facilitate the creation of a bootable volume.

We also need a rootfs-style image, which may be download from:

$> wget http://images.ansolabs.com/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz

Finally, we assume that the nova-volume service or cinder is enabled and running.

How to test

Create a 1Gb volume, which we will make bootable:

$> cinder create --display_name=bootable_volume 1
$> VOLUME_ID=$(nova volume-list | awk '/bootable_volume/ {print $2}')

and wait for the volume to become available:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Temporarily attach volume to your builder instance, this will allow us to copy image data into the volume

$> nova volume-attach $INSTANCE $VOLUME_ID /dev/vdb

Wait for the volume status to show as in-use:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Format and mount volume to a staging mount point:

$> ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -i nova_key.priv $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR << EOF
set -o errexit
set -o xtrace
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/stage
sudo mkfs.ext3 -b 1024 /dev/vdb 1048576
sudo mount /dev/vdb /tmp/stage
sudo touch /tmp/stage/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
sudo chown $USER_NAME /tmp/stage/cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
EOF

Copy image to the staging directory on the builder instance:

$> scp -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR:/tmp/stage

Unpack image into the volume (don't worry about an unmount failure).

$> ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -i nova_key.priv -i $USER_NAME@$IP_ADDR << EOF
set -o errexit
set -o xtrace
cd /tmp/stage
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/image
sudo gunzip cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img.gz
sudo mount cirros-0.3.0-x86_64-rootfs.img /tmp/image
sudo cp -pr /tmp/image/* /tmp/stage/
cd
sync
sudo umount /tmp/image
sudo umount /tmp/stage || true
EOF

Detach volume for the builder instance:

$> nova volume-detach $INSTANCE $VOLUME_ID

and wait for the volume status to show as availble:

$> watch "nova volume-show bootable_volume | grep status"

Now snapshot the bootable volume we just created:

$> nova volume-snapshot-create --display_name bootable_snapshot $VOLUME_ID

and wait for the snapshot to become available:

$> nova volume-snapshot-show bootable_snapshot
$> SNAPSHOT_ID=$(nova volume-snapshot-list | awk '/bootable_snapshot/ {print $2}')

Now we can boot from the bootable volume. We use the same image as the builder instance, but that is only in order to retrieve the image properties.

$> IMAGE_ID=$(nova show $INSTANCE | awk '/image/ {print $5}' | sed 's,(\(.*\)),\1,')
$> nova boot --flavor 1 --image $INSTANCE --block_device_mapping vda=${SNAPSHOT_ID}:snap::0 --key_name nova_key volume_backed

Expected Results

You should be able able to ssh into the volume-backed instance.

Note that an additional snapshot now exists to back the image:

$> nova volume-snapshot-list

Also note the volume-backed instance you've fired up, there is a volume cloned from the corresponding snapshot:

$> nova volume-list