ironic/install-guide/source/include/configure-glance-images.rst
Mathieu Mitchell f4a6dc72d5 [install-guide] Import "Building or downloading a deploy ramdisk image"
Change-Id: I11cd67602b04c23cfe966cd2c2176ba01807c672
Partial-bug: #1612278
2016-09-26 08:41:21 -04:00

4.1 KiB

Create and add images to the Image service

Bare Metal provisioning requires two sets of images: the deploy images and the user images. The deploy images are used by the Bare Metal service to prepare the bare metal server for actual OS deployment. Whereas the user images are installed on the bare metal server to be used by the end user. Below are the steps to create the required images and add them to the Image service:

  1. The disk-image-builder can be used to create images required for deployment and the actual OS which the user is going to run.

    • Install diskimage-builder package (use virtualenv, if you don't want to install anything globally):

      # pip install diskimage-builder
    • Build the image your users will run (Ubuntu image has been taken as an example):

      • Partition images

        $ disk-image-create ubuntu baremetal dhcp-all-interfaces grub2 -o my-image
      • Whole disk images

        $ disk-image-create ubuntu vm dhcp-all-interfaces -o my-image

    The partition image command creates my-image.qcow2, my-image.vmlinuz and my-image.initrd files. The grub2 element in the partition image creation command is only needed if local boot will be used to deploy my-image.qcow2, otherwise the images my-image.vmlinuz and my-image.initrd will be used for PXE booting after deploying the bare metal with my-image.qcow2.

    If you want to use Fedora image, replace ubuntu with fedora in the chosen command.

    Note

    To build the deploy image take a look at the deploy-ramdisk section.

  2. Add the user images to the Image service

    Load all the images created in the below steps into the Image service, and note the image UUIDs in the Image service for each one as it is generated.

    • Add the kernel and ramdisk images to the Image service:

      $ glance image-create --name my-kernel --visibility public \
        --disk-format aki --container-format aki < my-image.vmlinuz

      Store the image uuid obtained from the above step as MY_VMLINUZ_UUID.

      $ glance image-create --name my-image.initrd --visibility public \
        --disk-format ari --container-format ari < my-image.initrd

      Store the image UUID obtained from the above step as MY_INITRD_UUID.

    • Add the my-image to the Image service which is going to be the OS that the user is going to run. Also associate the above created images with this OS image. These two operations can be done by executing the following command:

      $ glance image-create --name my-image --visibility public \
        --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare --property \
        kernel_id=$MY_VMLINUZ_UUID --property \
        ramdisk_id=$MY_INITRD_UUID < my-image.qcow2

    Note

    To deploy a whole disk image, a kernel_id and a ramdisk_id shouldn't be associated with the image. For example,

    $ glance image-create --name my-whole-disk-image --visibility public \
      --disk-format qcow2 \
      --container-format bare < my-whole-disk-image.qcow2
  3. Add the deploy images to the Image service

    Add the my-deploy-ramdisk.kernel and my-deploy-ramdisk.initramfs images to the Image service:

    $ glance image-create --name deploy-vmlinuz --visibility public \
      --disk-format aki --container-format aki < my-deploy-ramdisk.kernel

    Store the image UUID obtained from the above step as DEPLOY_VMLINUZ_UUID.

    $ glance image-create --name deploy-initrd --visibility public \
      --disk-format ari --container-format ari < my-deploy-ramdisk.initramfs

    Store the image UUID obtained from the above step as DEPLOY_INITRD_UUID.