Config driveIntroductionOpenStack can be configured to write metadata to a
special configuration drive that will be attached to the
instance when it boots. The instance can retrieve any
information that would normally be available through the
metadata
service by mounting this disk and reading files
from it.One use case for the config drive is to pass networking
configuration (such as, IP address, netmask, and gateway)
when DHCP is not being used to assign IP addresses to
instances. The instance's IP configuration can be
transmitted using the config drive, which can be mounted
and accessed before the instance's network settings have
been configured.The config drive can be used by any guest operating
system that is capable of mounting an ISO9660 or VFAT file
system. This functionality should be available on all
modern operating systems.Compute host requirementsConfig drive is currently supported by the following
hypervisors: libvirt, xenserver, hyper-v and vmware.To use config drive with libvirt, xenserver or vmware, the
genisoimage program must be
installed on each compute host. In the Ubuntu
packages, it is not installed by default (see bug
#1165174).
Make sure you install this
program on each compute host before attempting to
use config drive, or an instance will not boot
properly. The path to where
genisoimage is installed can
be set using the mkisofs_cmd flag. If
genisoimage is in the path
used by nova-compute you do not need to set
the value of this flag.To use config drive with hyper-v, you must set the
value of the mkisofs_cmd to the
full path to an installation of mkisofs.exe.
Additionally, you will need to set the value of the
qemu_img_cmd flag in the hyperv
configuration section to the full path to an installation
of the qemu-img command.Image requirementsAn image that has been built with a recent
version of the cloud-init package will be able to
automatically access metadata passed via config drive. The
current version of cloud-init as of this writing (0.7.1)
has been confirmed to work with Ubuntu, as well as
Fedora-based images such as RHEL.If an image does not have the cloud-init package
installed, the image must be customized to run a script
that mounts the config drive on boot, reads the data from
the drive, and takes appropriate action such as adding the
public key to an account. See below for details on how
data is organized on the config drive.
If you use Xen with a config drive, disable the
agent through the
xenapi_disable_agent
configuration parameter.Enabling the config driveTo enable the config drive, pass the
--config-drive=true parameter when
calling nova boot. Here is a complex
example that enables the config drive as well as passing
user data, two files, and two key/value metadata pairs,
all of which are accessible from the config drive.$nova boot --config-drive=true --image my-image-name --key-name mykey --flavor 1 --user-data ./my-user-data.txt myinstance --file /etc/network/interfaces=/home/myuser/instance-interfaces --file known_hosts=/home/myuser/.ssh/known_hosts --meta role=webservers --meta essential=falseYou can also configure the Compute service to always
create a config drive by setting the following option in
/etc/nova/nova.conf:force_config_drive=trueIf a user passes the
--config-drive=true flag to the
nova boot command, an
administrator cannot disable the config drive.Accessing the config drive from inside an
instanceThe config drive will have a volume label of
config-2. If your guest OS supports
accessing disk by label, you should be able to mount the
config drive as the
/dev/disk/by-label/config-2
device. For
example:#mkdir -p /mnt/config#mount /dev/disk/by-label/config-2 /mnt/configThe cirros 0.3.0 test image does not have
support for the config drive. Support will be
added in version 0.3.1.If your guest operating system does not use
udev, then the
/dev/disk/by-label directory will
not be present. The blkid command can
be used to identify the block device that corresponds to
the config drive. For example, when booting the cirros
image with the m1.tiny flavor, the device will be
/dev/vdb:#blkid -t LABEL="config-2" -odevice/dev/vdbOnce
identified, the device can then be mounted:#mkdir -p /mnt/config#mount /dev/vdb /mnt/configContents of the config driveThe files that will be present in the config drive will
vary depending on the arguments that were passed to
nova boot. Based on the example
above, the contents of the config drive is:ec2/2009-04-04/meta-data.json
ec2/2009-04-04/user-data
ec2/latest/meta-data.json
ec2/latest/user-data
openstack/2012-08-10/meta_data.json
openstack/2012-08-10/user_data
openstack/content
openstack/content/0000
openstack/content/0001
openstack/latest/meta_data.json
openstack/latest/user_dataGuidelines for accessing config drive dataDo not rely on the presence of the EC2 metadata present
in the config drive (i.e., files under the
ec2 directory), as this content
may be removed in a future release.When creating images that access config drive data, if
there are multiple directories under the
openstack directory, always
select the highest API version by date that your consumer
supports. For example, if your guest image can support
versions 2012-03-05, 2012-08-05, 2013-04-13. It is best to
try 2013-04-13 first and fall back to an earlier version
if it 2013-04-13 isn't present.Format of OpenStack metadataHere is an example of the contents of
openstack/2012-08-10/meta_data.json,
openstack/latest/meta_data.json
(these two files are identical), formatted to improve
readability:{
"availability_zone": "nova",
"files": [
{
"content_path": "/content/0000",
"path": "/etc/network/interfaces"
},
{
"content_path": "/content/0001",
"path": "known_hosts"
}
],
"hostname": "test.novalocal",
"launch_index": 0,
"name": "test",
"meta": {
"role": "webservers"
"essential": "false"
},
"public_keys": {
"mykey": "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAAAgQDBqUfVvCSez0/Wfpd8dLLgZXV9GtXQ7hnMN+Z0OWQUyebVEHey1CXuin0uY1cAJMhUq8j98SiW+cU0sU4J3x5l2+xi1bodDm1BtFWVeLIOQINpfV1n8fKjHB+ynPpe1F6tMDvrFGUlJs44t30BrujMXBe8Rq44cCk6wqyjATA3rQ== Generated by Nova\n"
},
"uuid": "83679162-1378-4288-a2d4-70e13ec132aa"
}Note the effect of the --file
/etc/network/interfaces=/home/myuser/instance-interfaces
argument passed to the original nova
boot command. The contents of this file are
contained in the file
openstack/content/0000 file on
the config drive, and the path is specified as
/etc/network/interfaces in the
meta_data.json file.Format of EC2 metadataHere is an example of the contents of
ec2/2009-04-04/meta-data.json,
latest/meta-data.json (these two
files are identical) formatted to improve
readability:{
"ami-id": "ami-00000001",
"ami-launch-index": 0,
"ami-manifest-path": "FIXME",
"block-device-mapping": {
"ami": "sda1",
"ephemeral0": "sda2",
"root": "/dev/sda1",
"swap": "sda3"
},
"hostname": "test.novalocal",
"instance-action": "none",
"instance-id": "i-00000001",
"instance-type": "m1.tiny",
"kernel-id": "aki-00000002",
"local-hostname": "test.novalocal",
"local-ipv4": null,
"placement": {
"availability-zone": "nova"
},
"public-hostname": "test.novalocal",
"public-ipv4": "",
"public-keys": {
"0": {
"openssh-key": "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAAAgQDBqUfVvCSez0/Wfpd8dLLgZXV9GtXQ7hnMN+Z0OWQUyebVEHey1CXuin0uY1cAJMhUq8j98SiW+cU0sU4J3x5l2+xi1bodDm1BtFWVeLIOQINpfV1n8fKjHB+ynPpe1F6tMDvrFGUlJs44t30BrujMXBe8Rq44cCk6wqyjATA3rQ== Generated by Nova\n"
}
},
"ramdisk-id": "ari-00000003",
"reservation-id": "r-7lfps8wj",
"security-groups": [
"default"
]
}User dataThe files
openstack/2012-08-10/user_data,
openstack/latest/user_data,
ec2/2009-04-04/user-data, and
ec2/latest/user-data, will only
be present if the --user-data flag was
passed to nova boot and will contain
the contents of the user data file passed as the
argument.Format of the config driveThe default format of the config drive as an ISO 9660
filesystem. To explicitly specify the ISO 9660 format,
the following line is in
/etc/nova/nova.conf:config_drive_format=iso9660By default, you cannot attach the config drive image as a CD drive
instead of a disk drive. Change this setting in
/etc/nova/nova.conf to true if you want a
CD drive attached.config_drive_cdrom=trueFor legacy reasons, the config drive can be configured to use VFAT
format instead of ISO 9660. It is unlikely that you would require
VFAT format, since ISO 9660 is widely supported across operating
systems. However, if you wish to use the VFAT format, add the
following line to /etc/nova/nova.conf
instead:config_drive_format=vfatIf you choose VFAT, the config drive is 64 MBs.Configuration ReferenceThe following table shows all options for the config
drive.