You can configure OpenStack to write metadata to a special configuration drive that attaches to the instance when it boots. The instance can mount this drive and read files from it to get information that is normally available through the metadata service. This metadata is different from the user data.
One use case for using the configuration drive is to pass a networking configuration when you do not use DHCP to assign IP addresses to instances. For example, you might pass the IP address configuration for the instance through the configuration drive, which the instance can mount and access before you configure the network settings for the instance.
Any modern guest operating system that is capable of mounting an ISO 9660 or VFAT file system can use the configuration drive.
To use the configuration drive, you must follow the following requirements for the compute host and image.
Compute host requirements
The following hypervisors support the configuration drive: libvirt, XenServer, Hyper-V, and VMware.
Also, the Bare Metal service supports the configuration drive.
To use configuration drive with libvirt, XenServer, or VMware, you must first install the genisoimage package on each compute host. Otherwise, instances do not boot properly.
Use the mkisofs_cmd flag to set the path where you install the genisoimage program. If genisoimage is in same path as the nova-compute service, you do not need to set this flag.
To use configuration drive with Hyper-V, you must set the mkisofs_cmd value to the full path to an mkisofs.exe installation. Additionally, you must set the qemu_img_cmd value in the hyperv configuration section to the full path to an qemu-img command installation.
To use configuration drive with the Bare Metal service, you do not need to prepare anything because the Bare Metal service treats the configuration drive properly.
Image requirements
Guidelines
To enable the configuration drive, pass the --config-drive true parameter to the nova boot command.
The following example enables the configuration drive and passes user data, two files, and two key/value metadata pairs, all of which are accessible from the configuration 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=false
You can also configure the Compute service to always create a configuration drive by setting the following option in the /etc/nova/nova.conf file:
force_config_drive=true
Note
If a user passes the --config-drive true flag to the nova boot command, an administrator cannot disable the configuration drive.
If your guest operating system supports accessing disk by label, you can mount the configuration drive as the /dev/disk/by-label/configurationDriveVolumeLabel device. In the following example, the configuration drive has the config-2 volume label:
# mkdir -p /mnt/config
# mount /dev/disk/by-label/config-2 /mnt/config
Note
Ensure that you use at least version 0.3.1 of CirrOS for configuration drive support.
If your guest operating system does not use udev, the /dev/disk/by-label directory is not present.
You can use the blkid command to identify the block device that corresponds to the configuration drive. For example, when you boot the CirrOS image with the m1.tiny flavor, the device is /dev/vdb:
# blkid -t LABEL="config-2" -odevice
/dev/vdb
Once identified, you can mount the device:
# mkdir -p /mnt/config
# mount /dev/vdb /mnt/config
In this example, the contents of the configuration drive are as follows:
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_data
The files that appear on the configuration drive depend on the arguments that you pass to the nova boot command.
The following example shows the contents of the openstack/2012-08-10/meta_data.json and openstack/latest/meta_data.json files. These files are identical. The file contents are formatted for 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 that was passed to the nova boot command. The contents of this file are contained in the openstack/content/0000 file on the configuration drive, and the path is specified as /etc/network/interfaces in the meta_data.json file.
The following example shows the contents of the ec2/2009-04-04/meta-data.json and the ec2/latest/meta-data.json files. These files are identical. The file contents are 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"
]
}
The openstack/2012-08-10/user_data, openstack/latest/user_data, ec2/2009-04-04/user-data, and ec2/latest/user-data file are present only if the --user-data flag and the contents of the user data file are passed to the nova boot command.
The default format of the configuration drive as an ISO 9660 file system. To explicitly specify the ISO 9660 format, add the following line to the /etc/nova/nova.conf file:
config_drive_format=iso9660
By default, you cannot attach the configuration drive image as a CD drive instead of as a disk drive. To attach a CD drive, add the following line to the /etc/nova/nova.conf file:
config_drive_cdrom=true
For legacy reasons, you can configure the configuration drive to use VFAT format instead of ISO 9660. It is unlikely that you would require VFAT format because ISO 9660 is widely supported across operating systems. However, to use the VFAT format, add the following line to the /etc/nova/nova.conf file:
config_drive_format=vfat
If you choose VFAT, the configuration drive is 64 MB.
Note
In current version (Liberty) of OpenStack Compute, live migration with config_drive on local disk is forbidden due to the bug in libvirt of copying a read-only disk. However, if we use VFAT as the format of config_drive, the function of live migration works well.
Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. See all OpenStack Legal Documents.