Flavors The nova flavor-create command allows authorized users to create new flavors. Additional flavor manipulation commands can be shown with the command nova help | grep flavor. Note that the OpenStack Dashboard simulates the ability to modify an existing flavor by deleting an existing flavor and creating a new one with the same name. Flavors define a number of elements:
Identity Service configuration file sections
Element Description
Name A descriptive name. xx.size_name is typically not required, though some third party tools may rely on it.
Memory_MB Virtual machine memory in megabytes.
Disk Virtual root disk size in gigabytes. This is an ephemeral disk that the base image is copied into. When booting from a persistent volume it is not used. The "0" size is a special case which uses the native base image size as the size of the ephemeral root volume.
Ephemeral Specifies the size of a secondary ephemeral data disk. This is an empty, unformatted disk and exists only for the life of the instance.
Swap Optional swap space allocation for the instance.
VCPUs Number of virtual CPUs presented to the instance.
RXTX_Factor Optional property allows created servers to have a different bandwidth cap than that defined in the network they are attached to. This factor is multiplied by the rxtx_base property of the network. Default value is 1.0 (that is, the same as attached network).
Is_Public Boolean value, whether flavor is available to all users or private to the tenant it was created in. Defaults to True.
extra_specs additional optional restrictions on which compute nodes the flavor can run on. This is implemented as key/value pairs that must match against the corresponding key/value pairs on compute nodes. Can be used to implement things like special resources (e.g., flavors that can only run on compute nodes with GPU hardware).
Flavor customization can be limited by the hypervisor in use, for example the libvirt driver enables quotas on CPUs available to a VM, disk tuning, bandwidth I/O, and instance VIF traffic control. You can configure the CPU limits with three control parameters with the nova-manage tool. Here is an example of configuring the I/O limit: # nova-manage flavor set_key --name m1.small --key quota:read_bytes_sec --value 10240000 # nova-manage flavor set_key --name m1.small --key quota:read_bytes_sec --value 10240000 There are CPU control parameters for weight shares, enforcement intervals for runtime quotas, and a quota for maximum allowed bandwidth. The optional cpu_shares element specifies the proportional weighted share for the domain. If this element is omitted, the service defaults to the OS provided defaults. There is no unit for the value, it's a relative measure based on the setting of other VMs. For example, a VM configured with value 2048 will get twice as much CPU time as a VM configured with value 1024. The optional cpu_period element specifies the enforcement interval(unit: microseconds) for QEMU and LXC hypervisors. Within period, each VCPU of the domain will not be allowed to consume more than quota worth of runtime. The value should be in range [1000, 1000000]. A period with value 0 means no value. The optional cpu_quota element specifies the maximum allowed bandwidth(unit: microseconds). A domain with quota as any negative value indicates that the domain has infinite bandwidth, which means that it is not bandwidth controlled. The value should be in range [1000, 18446744073709551] or less than 0. A quota with value 0 means no value. You can use this feature to ensure that all vcpus run at the same speed. An example: # nova flavor-key m1.low_cpu set cpu_quota=10000 # nova flavor-key m1.low_cpu set cpu_period=20000 In that example, the instance of m1.low_cpu can only consume a maximum of 50% CPU of a physical CPU computing capability. Through quotas for disk I/O, you can set maximum disk write to 10MB/sec for VM user for example: # nova flavor-set m1.medium set disk_write_bytes_sec=10240000 These are the options for disk I/O: disk_read_bytes_sec disk_read_iops_sec disk_write_bytes_sec disk_write_iops_sec disk_total_bytes_sec disk_total_iops_sec These are the options for vif I/O: vif_inbound_ average vif_inbound_burst vif_inbound_peak vif_outbound_ average vif_outbound_burst vif_outbound_peak Incoming and outgoing traffic can be shaped independently. The bandwidth element can have at most one inbound and at most one outbound child element. Leaving any of these children element out result in no QoS applied on that traffic direction. So, when you want to shape only the network's incoming traffic, use inbound only, and vice versa. Each of these elements have one mandatory attribute average. It specifies average bit rate on the interface being shaped. Then there are two optional attributes: peak, which specifies maximum rate at which bridge can send data, and burst, amount of bytes that can be burst at peak speed. Accepted values for attributes are integer numbers, The units for average and peak attributes are kilobytes per second, and for the burst just kilobytes. The rate is shared equally within domains connected to the network. Here are some examples for configuring a bandwidth limit for instance network traffic: # nova-manage flavor set_key --name m1.small --key quota:inbound_average --value 10240 # nova-manage flavor set_key --name m1.small --key quota:outbound_average --value 10240