blob: c94b206ab2284fdb77780b1c85d566d309e85e6d (
plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
|
The data source 'NoCloud' and 'NoCloudNet' allow the user to provide user-data
and meta-data to the instance without running a network service (or even without
having a network at all)
You can provide meta-data and user-data to a local vm boot via files on a vfat
or iso9660 filesystem. These user-data and meta-data files are expected to be
in the format described in doc/example/seed/README . Basically, user-data is
simply user-data and meta-data is a yaml formated file representing what you'd
find in the EC2 metadata service.
Given a disk 12.04 cloud image in 'disk.img', you can create a sufficient disk
by following the example below.
## create user-data and meta-data files that will be used
## to modify image on first boot
$ { echo instance-id: iid-local01; echo local-hostname: cloudimg; } > meta-data
$ printf "#cloud-config\npassword: passw0rd\nchpasswd: { expire: False }\nssh_pwauth: True\n" > user-data
## create a disk to attach with some user-data and meta-data
$ genisoimage -output seed.iso -volid cidata -joliet -rock user-data meta-data
## alternatively, create a vfat filesystem with same files
## $ truncate --size 2M seed.img
## $ mkfs.vfat -n cidata seed.img
## $ mcopy -oi seed.img user-data meta-data ::
## create a new qcow image to boot, backed by your original image
$ qemu-img create -f qcow2 -b disk.img boot-disk.img
## boot the image and login as 'ubuntu' with password 'passw0rd'
## note, passw0rd was set as password through the user-data above,
## there is no password set on these images.
$ kvm -m 256 \
-net nic -net user,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \
-drive file=boot-disk.img,if=virtio \
-drive file=seed.iso,if=virtio
Note, that the instance-id provided ('iid-local01' above) is what is used to
determine if this is "first boot". So if you are making updates to user-data
you will also have to change that, or start the disk fresh.
Also, you can inject an /etc/network/interfaces file by providing the content
for that file in the 'network-interfaces' field of metadata. Example metadata:
instance-id: iid-abcdefg
network-interfaces: |
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.168.1.10
network 192.168.1.0
netmask 255.255.255.0
broadcast 192.168.1.255
gateway 192.168.1.254
hostname: myhost
|