Cloud Quick Start

Revision as of 19:24, 12 May 2016 by Diane27 (talk | contribs)
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Getting a Cloud account

1. If you do not have a Compute Canada account, create one here.

2. If you do not have a WestGrid account, create one by connecting to CCDB.

Under My Account, select Apply for a Consortium Account and click the Apply button next to WestGrid.
You need confirmation from WestGrid to continue.

3. Create your cloud account here.

Launching your first instance (VM)

Log into the East or West Cloud

 
OpenStack Dashboard, Compute Overview (Click for larger image)

Depending on where your project is located, go to https://east.cloud.computecanada.ca or https://west.cloud.computecanada.ca and enter your WestGrid credentials.

When you log in, the dashboard shows an overview of your resources.

SSH Key Pair

should we use KEY or KEY PAIR (sometimes just PAIR) ? When you start an instance, there is no password for an admin or a root account on the virtual machine. This is for security reasons, so that no one can log in with a password (you wouldn't want a hacker to be able to access the brand new VM you just started using some default password...)

[?this is not clear; does OS create the keyPair or does it need to be imported or do I need to create the keyPair?] OpenStack creates your VM with one SSH public key installed; you can only log in with this SSH key pair. You can either import an existing SSH key pair through OpenStack or you can create a new pair. In order to manage your key pair, click on Access & Security from the left menu, then on the Key Pairs tab.

Importing an Existing Key Pair

 
Import key pair (Click for larger image)
  1. Click  ; the Import Key Pair window is displayed.
  2. Name your key pair.
  3. Paste your public key.
  4. Click on the Import Key Pair button.

Creating a New Key Pair

 
Create key pair (Click for larger image)
  1. Click on  ; the Create Key Pair window is displayed
  2. Name your key pair.
  3. Click on the Create Key Pair button.
  4. Save the <key name>.pem on your disk.

→On UNIX hosts, you will need to chmod 400 <key name>.pem in order to connect later on. This needs to be done on your machine, not on the VM.

→On Windows hosts, to use the key downloaded from OpenStack with PuTTY or MobaXterm, you need to convert it to a Windows compatible format (see Generating ssh keys in Windows#Converting an OpenStack Key.)

Launching a VM

 
Launch Instance (Click for larger image)

To launch an instance, click on the Instances menu on the left, then click on  

A form is displayed where you define the instance (if you are following along with this example, you can use the same values).

  • Details tab
    • Availability Zone: There is only one zone; do not change its name.
    • Instance name: test
      Enter a name for your instance. ? are there naming constraints ? length, character types, etc.) ?
    • Flavor: c1-3.75gb-36
      The flavor defines [instance/VM] specifications. This particular flavor has one virtual CPU, 3.75GB of RAM (memory) and an ephemeral disk of 36GB. Ephemeral disks are disks created and destroyed with the instance; they reside on the local hardware running the VM.
→Flavors starting with a "p" do not have an extra ephemeral disk and thus no "-##" on the end. They also have a very small root disk of only 2.2G, with a typical OS taking about 770MB of that. The root disk, as you might have guessed, is mounted at the root of the Linux file system.
→Flavors starting with a "c" have an extra ephemeral disk attached, as well as a 20GB root disk.
    • Instance Count: 1
      Number of VMs to create.
    • Instance Boot Source: Boot from image
      Indicates that you wish to boot from an already created image. ??
    • Image Name: CentOS-7-x86-64-GenericCloud-1503
      Name of the image to boot from.
    • Project Limits: The green bars reflect the fraction of your available resources that will be consumed by the VM you are about to launch.
→If the bars become red, the flavor chosen will consume more resources than your project has available.
→Blue bars indicate any existing resources your project may be using.
  • Access & Security tab
    • Key Pair: Select your SSH key pair.

If you have only one, it is selected by default. If you do not have a key pair, please see above [Cloud Quick Start#SSH Key Pair].

    • Security Groups: Do not change default.
  • Networking tab
    Do not change this now. Networking will be discussed later, after you have launched an instance.
  • Post-Creation Tab
    Do not change this now. This is where you would paste a cloud-init script which can do things ?working?like install and configure software and add users and additional SSH keys (see OpenStack#Accessing a VM with Multiple Users) in an automated step after the VM is created. See cloudinit for more details about clout-init.
  • Advanced Options tab
    Leave Disk Partition on Automatic for now.

Once you have reviewed all the tabs and defined your instance, click on the blue Launch button and your instance will be created. The Instances list will be displayed and the Status field will show the different tasks required before it is run. It may take a few minutes for your instance to start, depending on a variety of factors.

Note: When creating a persistent service, we recommend that you boot your instance from a volume. See Persistent Services In The Cloud.

Network

Private IP

On the Instances[[sing or plur?] list, are the IP addresses to which your instance is linked. By default a network on 192.168.X.0 is created for your tenant (also referred to as a "project" on the OpenStack dashboard). The Instances[[sing or plur?] list shows your instance's private IP. You can use this IP to communicate with other instances running on the same cloud.

Public IP (Assign a public IP)

To assign a public IP, you need to select Associate Floating IP from the More button of the Actions column in the Instances list. If this is your first time through this Quick Start Guide, your tenant hasn't been assigned an external IP addresses yet. You need to click on the “+” sign to bring up the Allocate Floating IP dialog box. There is only one pool of public addresses, so the correct pool will already be selected; simply click on the blue Allocate IPbutton. The Manage Floating IP Associations screen is displayed, indicating the IP address and the port to which it is NATted; simply click on the blue Associate button.

 
Manage Floating IP (Click for larger image)

Firewall, Add Rules to Allow SSH

To connect to your instance via SSH, you will need to allow SSH to get through.

On the Security Groups tab, select Access & Security; on the default row, click  .

On the next screen, click  .

SSH rules are predefined. Simply select SSH in the Rules dropdown menu and leave CIDR' under Remote?.

If you know which address you are connecting from, type it in the CIDR text field; otherwise leave 0.0.0.0/0. This will allow universal access to your server via SSH.

Finally, click the blue Add button.

 
Add Rule (Click for larger image)

Connecting To Your Instance With SSH

If you created a key pair on the first step, you will need to know where it is.

If connecting from a Linux machine:

 
[name@server ~]$  ssh -i /path/where/your/key/is/my_key.key username@<public IP of your server>

Most common Linux distributions have standardized on the name of the distro as the username. To connect to the provided CentOS images, you would use:

 
[name@server ~]$ ssh -i /path/where/your/key/is/my_key.key centos@<public IP of your server>

where <public IP of your server> is the public IP you set in the previous step (Cloud Quick Start#Public IP (Assign a public IP)). The username for Ubuntu instances is “ubuntu” and Debian instances have the “debian” username. By default the preconfigured cloud username will have full sudo privileges. The root account is normally disabled.

You are now connected to your instance.

If connecting from a windows machine

see Connecting with PuTTY or Connecting with MobaXTerm

Where To Go From Here