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gnt-instance(8) Ganeti | Version @GANETI_VERSION@
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=================================================
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Name
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----
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gnt-instance - Ganeti instance administration
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Synopsis
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--------
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**gnt-instance** {command} [arguments...]
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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The **gnt-instance** command is used for instance administration in
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the Ganeti system.
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COMMANDS
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--------
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Creation/removal/querying
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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ADD
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^^^
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| **add**
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| {-t|--disk-template {diskless | file \| plain \| drbd}}
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| {--disk=*N*: {size=*VAL* \| adopt=*LV*}[,vg=*VG*][,metavg=*VG*][,mode=*ro\|rw*]
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|  \| {-s|--os-size} *SIZE*}
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| [--no-ip-check] [--no-name-check] [--no-start] [--no-install]
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| [--net=*N* [:options...] \| --no-nics]
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| [{-B|--backend-parameters} *BEPARAMS*]
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| [{-H|--hypervisor-parameters} *HYPERVISOR* [: option=*value*... ]]
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| [{-O|--os-parameters} *param*=*value*... ]
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| [--file-storage-dir *dir\_path*] [--file-driver {loop \| blktap}]
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| {{-n|--node} *node[:secondary-node]* \| {-I|--iallocator} *name*}
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| {{-o|--os-type} *os-type*}
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| [--submit]
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| {*instance*}
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Creates a new instance on the specified host. The *instance* argument
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must be in DNS, but depending on the bridge/routing setup, need not be
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in the same network as the nodes in the cluster.
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The ``disk`` option specifies the parameters for the disks of the
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instance. The numbering of disks starts at zero, and at least one disk
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needs to be passed. For each disk, either the size or the adoption
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source needs to be given, and optionally the access mode (read-only or
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the default of read-write) and the LVM volume group can also be
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specified (via the ``vg`` key). For DRBD devices, a different VG can
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be specified for the metadata device using the ``metavg`` key.  The
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size is interpreted (when no unit is given) in mebibytes. You can also
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use one of the suffixes *m*, *g* or *t* to specify the exact the units
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used; these suffixes map to mebibytes, gibibytes and tebibytes.
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When using the ``adopt`` key in the disk definition, Ganeti will
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reuse those volumes (instead of creating new ones) as the
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instance's disks. Ganeti will rename these volumes to the standard
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format, and (without installing the OS) will use them as-is for the
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instance. This allows migrating instances from non-managed mode
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(e.q. plain KVM with LVM) to being managed via Ganeti. Note that
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this works only for the \`plain' disk template (see below for
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template details).
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Alternatively, a single-disk instance can be created via the ``-s``
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option which takes a single argument, the size of the disk. This is
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similar to the Ganeti 1.2 version (but will only create one disk).
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The minimum disk specification is therefore ``--disk 0:size=20G`` (or
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``-s 20G`` when using the ``-s`` option), and a three-disk instance
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can be specified as ``--disk 0:size=20G --disk 1:size=4G --disk
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2:size=100G``.
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The ``--no-ip-check`` skips the checks that are done to see if the
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instance's IP is not already alive (i.e. reachable from the master
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node).
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The ``--no-name-check`` skips the check for the instance name via
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the resolver (e.g. in DNS or /etc/hosts, depending on your setup).
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Since the name check is used to compute the IP address, if you pass
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this option you must also pass the ``--no-ip-check`` option.
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If you don't wat the instance to automatically start after
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creation, this is possible via the ``--no-start`` option. This will
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leave the instance down until a subsequent **gnt-instance start**
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command.
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The NICs of the instances can be specified via the ``--net``
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option. By default, one NIC is created for the instance, with a
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random MAC, and set up according the the cluster level nic
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parameters. Each NIC can take these parameters (all optional):
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mac
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    either a value or 'generate' to generate a new unique MAC
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ip
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    specifies the IP address assigned to the instance from the Ganeti
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    side (this is not necessarily what the instance will use, but what
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    the node expects the instance to use)
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mode
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    specifies the connection mode for this nic: routed or bridged.
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link
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    in bridged mode specifies the bridge to attach this NIC to, in
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    routed mode it's intended to differentiate between different
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    routing tables/instance groups (but the meaning is dependent on
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    the network script, see gnt-cluster(8) for more details)
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Of these "mode" and "link" are nic parameters, and inherit their
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default at cluster level.  Alternatively, if no network is desired for
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the instance, you can prevent the default of one NIC with the
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``--no-nics`` option.
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The ``-o (--os-type)`` option specifies the operating system to be
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installed.  The available operating systems can be listed with
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**gnt-os list**.  Passing ``--no-install`` will however skip the OS
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installation, allowing a manual import if so desired. Note that the
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no-installation mode will automatically disable the start-up of the
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instance (without an OS, it most likely won't be able to start-up
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successfully).
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The ``-B (--backend-parameters)`` option specifies the backend
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parameters for the instance. If no such parameters are specified, the
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values are inherited from the cluster. Possible parameters are:
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memory
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    the memory size of the instance; as usual, suffixes can be used to
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    denote the unit, otherwise the value is taken in mebibites
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vcpus
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    the number of VCPUs to assign to the instance (if this value makes
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    sense for the hypervisor)
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auto\_balance
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    whether the instance is considered in the N+1 cluster checks
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    (enough redundancy in the cluster to survive a node failure)
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The ``-H (--hypervisor-parameters)`` option specified the hypervisor
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to use for the instance (must be one of the enabled hypervisors on the
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cluster) and optionally custom parameters for this instance. If not
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other options are used (i.e. the invocation is just -H *NAME*) the
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instance will inherit the cluster options. The defaults below show the
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cluster defaults at cluster creation time.
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The possible hypervisor options are as follows:
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boot\_order
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    A string value denoting the boot order. This has different meaning
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    for the Xen HVM hypervisor and for the KVM one.
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    For Xen HVM, The boot order is a string of letters listing the boot
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    devices, with valid device letters being:
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    a
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        floppy drive
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    c
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        hard disk
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    d
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        CDROM drive
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    n
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        network boot (PXE)
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    The default is not to set an HVM boot order which is interpreted
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    as 'dc'.
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    For KVM the boot order is either "floppy", "cdrom", "disk" or
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    "network".  Please note that older versions of KVM couldn't
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    netboot from virtio interfaces. This has been fixed in more recent
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    versions and is confirmed to work at least with qemu-kvm 0.11.1.
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blockdev\_prefix
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and PVM hypervisors.
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    Relevant to non-pvops guest kernels, in which the disk device names
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    are given by the host.  Allows one to specify 'xvd', which helps run
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    Red Hat based installers, driven by anaconda.
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floppy\_image\_path
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    The path to a floppy disk image to attach to the instance.  This
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    is useful to install Windows operating systems on Virt/IO disks
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    because you can specify here the floppy for the drivers at
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    installation time.
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cdrom\_image\_path
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    The path to a CDROM image to attach to the instance.
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cdrom2\_image\_path
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    The path to a second CDROM image to attach to the instance.
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    **NOTE**: This image can't be used to boot the system. To do that
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    you have to use the 'cdrom\_image\_path' option.
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nic\_type
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This parameter determines the way the network cards are presented
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    to the instance. The possible options are:
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    - rtl8139 (default for Xen HVM) (HVM & KVM)
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    - ne2k\_isa (HVM & KVM)
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    - ne2k\_pci (HVM & KVM)
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    - i82551 (KVM)
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    - i82557b (KVM)
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    - i82559er (KVM)
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    - pcnet (KVM)
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    - e1000 (KVM)
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    - paravirtual (default for KVM) (HVM & KVM)
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disk\_type
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This parameter determines the way the disks are presented to the
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    instance. The possible options are:
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    - ioemu [default] (HVM & KVM)
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    - ide (HVM & KVM)
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    - scsi (KVM)
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    - sd (KVM)
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    - mtd (KVM)
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    - pflash (KVM)
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cdrom\_disk\_type
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    This parameter determines the way the cdroms disks are presented
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    to the instance. The default behavior is to get the same value of
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    the eariler parameter (disk_type). The possible options are:
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    - paravirtual
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    - ide
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    - scsi
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    - sd
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    - mtd
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    - pflash
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vnc\_bind\_address
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    Specifies the address that the VNC listener for this instance
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    should bind to. Valid values are IPv4 addresses. Use the address
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    0.0.0.0 to bind to all available interfaces (this is the default)
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    or specify the address of one of the interfaces on the node to
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    restrict listening to that interface.
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vnc\_tls
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    A boolean option that controls whether the VNC connection is
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    secured with TLS.
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vnc\_x509\_path
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    If ``vnc_tls`` is enabled, this options specifies the path to the
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    x509 certificate to use.
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vnc\_x509\_verify
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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spice\_bind
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Specifies the address or interface on which the SPICE server will
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    listen. Valid values are:
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    - IPv4 addresses, including 0.0.0.0 and 127.0.0.1
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    - IPv6 addresses, including :: and ::1
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    - names of network interfaces
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    If a network interface is specified, the SPICE server will be bound
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    to one of the addresses of that interface.
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spice\_ip\_version
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Specifies which version of the IP protocol should be used by the
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    SPICE server.
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    It is mainly intended to be used for specifying what kind of IP
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    addresses should be used if a network interface with both IPv4 and
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    IPv6 addresses is specified via the ``spice_bind`` parameter. In
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    this case, if the ``spice_ip_version`` parameter is not used, the
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    default IP version of the cluster will be used.
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spice\_password\_file
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Specifies a file containing the password that must be used when
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    connecting via the SPICE protocol. If the option is not specified,
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    passwordless connections are allowed.
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spice\_image\_compression
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Configures the SPICE lossless image compression. Valid values are:
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    - auto_glz
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    - auto_lz
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    - quic
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    - glz
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    - lz
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    - off
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spice\_jpeg\_wan\_compression
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Configures how SPICE should use the jpeg algorithm for lossy image
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    compression on slow links. Valid values are:
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    - auto
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    - never
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    - always
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spice\_zlib\_glz\_wan\_compression
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Configures how SPICE should use the zlib-glz algorithm for lossy image
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    compression on slow links. Valid values are:
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    - auto
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    - never
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    - always
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spice\_streaming\_video
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Configures how SPICE should detect video streams. Valid values are:
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    - off
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    - all
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    - filter
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spice\_playback\_compression
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Configures whether SPICE should compress audio streams or not.
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acpi
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    A boolean option that specifies if the hypervisor should enable
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    ACPI support for this instance. By default, ACPI is disabled.
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pae
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    A boolean option that specifies if the hypervisor should enabled
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    PAE support for this instance. The default is false, disabling PAE
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    support.
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use\_localtime
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    Valid for the Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    A boolean option that specifies if the instance should be started
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    with its clock set to the localtime of the machine (when true) or
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    to the UTC (When false). The default is false, which is useful for
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    Linux/Unix machines; for Windows OSes, it is recommended to enable
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    this parameter.
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kernel\_path
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    Valid for the Xen PVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This option specifies the path (on the node) to the kernel to boot
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    the instance with. Xen PVM instances always require this, while
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    for KVM if this option is empty, it will cause the machine to load
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    the kernel from its disks.
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kernel\_args
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    Valid for the Xen PVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This options specifies extra arguments to the kernel that will be
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    loaded. device. This is always used for Xen PVM, while for KVM it
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    is only used if the ``kernel_path`` option is also specified.
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    The default setting for this value is simply ``"ro"``, which
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    mounts the root disk (initially) in read-only one. For example,
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    setting this to single will cause the instance to start in
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    single-user mode.
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initrd\_path
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    Valid for the Xen PVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This option specifies the path (on the node) to the initrd to boot
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    the instance with. Xen PVM instances can use this always, while
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    for KVM if this option is only used if the ``kernel_path`` option
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    is also specified. You can pass here either an absolute filename
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    (the path to the initrd) if you want to use an initrd, or use the
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    format no\_initrd\_path for no initrd.
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root\_path
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    Valid for the Xen PVM and KVM hypervisors.
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    This options specifies the name of the root device. This is always
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    needed for Xen PVM, while for KVM it is only used if the
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    ``kernel_path`` option is also specified.
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    Please note, that if this setting is an empty string and the
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    hypervisor is Xen it will not be written to the Xen configuration
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    file
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serial\_console
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    This boolean option specifies whether to emulate a serial console
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    for the instance.
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disk\_cache
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    The disk cache mode. It can be either default to not pass any
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    cache option to KVM, or one of the KVM cache modes: none (for
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    direct I/O), writethrough (to use the host cache but report
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    completion to the guest only when the host has committed the
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    changes to disk) or writeback (to use the host cache and report
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    completion as soon as the data is in the host cache). Note that
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    there are special considerations for the cache mode depending on
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    version of KVM used and disk type (always raw file under Ganeti),
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    please refer to the KVM documentation for more details.
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security\_model
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    The security model for kvm. Currently one of *none*, *user* or
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    *pool*. Under *none*, the default, nothing is done and instances
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    are run as the Ganeti daemon user (normally root).
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    Under *user* kvm will drop privileges and become the user
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    specified by the security\_domain parameter.
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    Under *pool* a global cluster pool of users will be used, making
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    sure no two instances share the same user on the same node. (this
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    mode is not implemented yet)
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security\_domain
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    Under security model *user* the username to run the instance
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    under.  It must be a valid username existing on the host.
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    Cannot be set under security model *none* or *pool*.
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kvm\_flag
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    If *enabled* the -enable-kvm flag is passed to kvm. If *disabled*
464
    -disable-kvm is passed. If unset no flag is passed, and the
465
    default running mode for your kvm binary will be used.
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mem\_path
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    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
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    This option passes the -mem-path argument to kvm with the path (on
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    the node) to the mount point of the hugetlbfs file system, along
472
    with the -mem-prealloc argument too.
473

    
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use\_chroot
475
    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
476

    
477
    This boolean option determines wether to run the KVM instance in a
478
    chroot directory.
479

    
480
    If it is set to ``true``, an empty directory is created before
481
    starting the instance and its path is passed via the -chroot flag
482
    to kvm. The directory is removed when the instance is stopped.
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484
    It is set to ``false`` by default.
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486
migration\_downtime
487
    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
488

    
489
    The maximum amount of time (in ms) a KVM instance is allowed to be
490
    frozen during a live migration, in order to copy dirty memory
491
    pages. Default value is 30ms, but you may need to increase this
492
    value for busy instances.
493

    
494
    This option is only effective with kvm versions >= 87 and qemu-kvm
495
    versions >= 0.11.0.
496

    
497
cpu\_mask
498
    Valid for the LXC hypervisor.
499

    
500
    The processes belonging to the given instance are only scheduled
501
    on the specified CPUs.
502

    
503
    The parameter format is a comma-separated list of CPU IDs or CPU
504
    ID ranges. The ranges are defined by a lower and higher boundary,
505
    separated by a dash. The boundaries are inclusive.
506

    
507
usb\_mouse
508
    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
509

    
510
    This option specifies the usb mouse type to be used. It can be
511
    "mouse" or "tablet". When using VNC it's recommended to set it to
512
    "tablet".
513

    
514
keymap
515
    Valid for the KVM hypervisor.
516

    
517
    This option specifies the keyboard mapping to be used. It is only
518
    needed when using the VNC console. For example: "fr" or "en-gb".
519

    
520
reboot\_behavior
521
    Valid for Xen PVM, Xen HVM and KVM hypervisors.
522

    
523
    Normally if an instance reboots, the hypervisor will restart it. If
524
    this option is set to ``exit``, the hypervisor will treat a reboot
525
    as a shutdown instead.
526

    
527
    It is set to ``reboot`` by default.
528

    
529

    
530
The ``-O (--os-parameters)`` option allows customisation of the OS
531
parameters. The actual parameter names and values depends on the OS
532
being used, but the syntax is the same key=value. For example, setting
533
a hypothetical ``dhcp`` parameter to yes can be achieved by::
534

    
535
    gnt-instance add -O dhcp=yes ...
536

    
537
The ``-I (--iallocator)`` option specifies the instance allocator
538
plugin to use. If you pass in this option the allocator will select
539
nodes for this instance automatically, so you don't need to pass them
540
with the ``-n`` option. For more information please refer to the
541
instance allocator documentation.
542

    
543
The ``-t (--disk-template)`` options specifies the disk layout type
544
for the instance.  The available choices are:
545

    
546
diskless
547
    This creates an instance with no disks. Its useful for testing only
548
    (or other special cases).
549

    
550
file
551
    Disk devices will be regular files.
552

    
553
plain
554
    Disk devices will be logical volumes.
555

    
556
drbd
557
    Disk devices will be drbd (version 8.x) on top of lvm volumes.
558

    
559

    
560
The optional second value of the ``-n (--node)`` is used for the drbd
561
template type and specifies the remote node.
562

    
563
If you do not want gnt-instance to wait for the disk mirror to be
564
synced, use the ``--no-wait-for-sync`` option.
565

    
566
The ``--file-storage-dir`` specifies the relative path under the
567
cluster-wide file storage directory to store file-based disks. It is
568
useful for having different subdirectories for different
569
instances. The full path of the directory where the disk files are
570
stored will consist of cluster-wide file storage directory + optional
571
subdirectory + instance name. Example:
572
``@RPL_FILE_STORAGE_DIR@``*/mysubdir/instance1.example.com*. This
573
option is only relevant for instances using the file storage backend.
574

    
575
The ``--file-driver`` specifies the driver to use for file-based
576
disks. Note that currently these drivers work with the xen hypervisor
577
only. This option is only relevant for instances using the file
578
storage backend. The available choices are:
579

    
580
loop
581
    Kernel loopback driver. This driver uses loopback devices to
582
    access the filesystem within the file. However, running I/O
583
    intensive applications in your instance using the loop driver
584
    might result in slowdowns. Furthermore, if you use the loopback
585
    driver consider increasing the maximum amount of loopback devices
586
    (on most systems it's 8) using the max\_loop param.
587

    
588
blktap
589
    The blktap driver (for Xen hypervisors). In order to be able to
590
    use the blktap driver you should check if the 'blktapctrl' user
591
    space disk agent is running (usually automatically started via
592
    xend).  This user-level disk I/O interface has the advantage of
593
    better performance. Especially if you use a network file system
594
    (e.g. NFS) to store your instances this is the recommended choice.
595

    
596

    
597
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
598
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
599
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
600

    
601
Example::
602

    
603
    # gnt-instance add -t file --disk 0:size=30g -B memory=512 -o debian-etch \
604
      -n node1.example.com --file-storage-dir=mysubdir instance1.example.com
605
    # gnt-instance add -t plain --disk 0:size=30g -B memory=512 -o debian-etch \
606
      -n node1.example.com instance1.example.com
607
    # gnt-instance add -t plain --disk 0:size=30g --disk 1:size=100g,vg=san \
608
      -B memory=512 -o debian-etch -n node1.example.com instance1.example.com
609
    # gnt-instance add -t drbd --disk 0:size=30g -B memory=512 -o debian-etch \
610
      -n node1.example.com:node2.example.com instance2.example.com
611

    
612

    
613
BATCH-CREATE
614
^^^^^^^^^^^^
615

    
616
**batch-create** {instances\_file.json}
617

    
618
This command (similar to the Ganeti 1.2 **batcher** tool) submits
619
multiple instance creation jobs based on a definition file. The
620
instance configurations do not encompass all the possible options for
621
the **add** command, but only a subset.
622

    
623
The instance file should be a valid-formed JSON file, containing a
624
dictionary with instance name and instance parameters. The accepted
625
parameters are:
626

    
627
disk\_size
628
    The size of the disks of the instance.
629

    
630
disk\_template
631
    The disk template to use for the instance, the same as in the
632
    **add** command.
633

    
634
backend
635
    A dictionary of backend parameters.
636

    
637
hypervisor
638
    A dictionary with a single key (the hypervisor name), and as value
639
    the hypervisor options. If not passed, the default hypervisor and
640
    hypervisor options will be inherited.
641

    
642
mac, ip, mode, link
643
    Specifications for the one NIC that will be created for the
644
    instance. 'bridge' is also accepted as a backwards compatibile
645
    key.
646

    
647
nics
648
    List of nics that will be created for the instance. Each entry
649
    should be a dict, with mac, ip, mode and link as possible keys.
650
    Please don't provide the "mac, ip, mode, link" parent keys if you
651
    use this method for specifying nics.
652

    
653
primary\_node, secondary\_node
654
    The primary and optionally the secondary node to use for the
655
    instance (in case an iallocator script is not used).
656

    
657
iallocator
658
    Instead of specifying the nodes, an iallocator script can be used
659
    to automatically compute them.
660

    
661
start
662
    whether to start the instance
663

    
664
ip\_check
665
    Skip the check for already-in-use instance; see the description in
666
    the **add** command for details.
667

    
668
name\_check
669
    Skip the name check for instances; see the description in the
670
    **add** command for details.
671

    
672
file\_storage\_dir, file\_driver
673
    Configuration for the file disk type, see the **add** command for
674
    details.
675

    
676

    
677
A simple definition for one instance can be (with most of the
678
parameters taken from the cluster defaults)::
679

    
680
    {
681
      "instance3": {
682
        "template": "drbd",
683
        "os": "debootstrap",
684
        "disk_size": ["25G"],
685
        "iallocator": "dumb"
686
      },
687
      "instance5": {
688
        "template": "drbd",
689
        "os": "debootstrap",
690
        "disk_size": ["25G"],
691
        "iallocator": "dumb",
692
        "hypervisor": "xen-hvm",
693
        "hvparams": {"acpi": true},
694
        "backend": {"memory": 512}
695
      }
696
    }
697

    
698
The command will display the job id for each submitted instance, as
699
follows::
700

    
701
    # gnt-instance batch-create instances.json
702
    instance3: 11224
703
    instance5: 11225
704

    
705
REMOVE
706
^^^^^^
707

    
708
**remove** [--ignore-failures] [--shutdown-timeout=*N*] [--submit]
709
[--force] {*instance*}
710

    
711
Remove an instance. This will remove all data from the instance and
712
there is *no way back*. If you are not sure if you use an instance
713
again, use **shutdown** first and leave it in the shutdown state for a
714
while.
715

    
716
The ``--ignore-failures`` option will cause the removal to proceed
717
even in the presence of errors during the removal of the instance
718
(e.g. during the shutdown or the disk removal). If this option is not
719
given, the command will stop at the first error.
720

    
721
The ``--shutdown-timeout`` is used to specify how much time to wait
722
before forcing the shutdown (e.g. ``xm destroy`` in Xen, killing the
723
kvm process for KVM, etc.). By default two minutes are given to each
724
instance to stop.
725

    
726
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
727
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
728
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
729

    
730
The ``--force`` option is used to skip the interactive confirmation.
731

    
732
Example::
733

    
734
    # gnt-instance remove instance1.example.com
735

    
736

    
737
LIST
738
^^^^
739

    
740
| **list**
741
| [--no-headers] [--separator=*SEPARATOR*] [--units=*UNITS*] [-v]
742
| [{-o|--output} *[+]FIELD,...*] [--filter] [instance...]
743

    
744
Shows the currently configured instances with memory usage, disk
745
usage, the node they are running on, and their run status.
746

    
747
The ``--no-headers`` option will skip the initial header line. The
748
``--separator`` option takes an argument which denotes what will be
749
used between the output fields. Both these options are to help
750
scripting.
751

    
752
The units used to display the numeric values in the output varies,
753
depending on the options given. By default, the values will be
754
formatted in the most appropriate unit. If the ``--separator`` option
755
is given, then the values are shown in mebibytes to allow parsing by
756
scripts. In both cases, the ``--units`` option can be used to enforce
757
a given output unit.
758

    
759
The ``-v`` option activates verbose mode, which changes the display of
760
special field states (see **ganeti(7)**).
761

    
762
The ``-o (--output)`` option takes a comma-separated list of output
763
fields. The available fields and their meaning are:
764

    
765
@QUERY_FIELDS_INSTANCE@
766

    
767
If the value of the option starts with the character ``+``, the new
768
field(s) will be added to the default list. This allows one to quickly
769
see the default list plus a few other fields, instead of retyping the
770
entire list of fields.
771

    
772
There is a subtle grouping about the available output fields: all
773
fields except for ``oper_state``, ``oper_ram``, ``oper_vcpus`` and
774
``status`` are configuration value and not run-time values. So if you
775
don't select any of the these fields, the query will be satisfied
776
instantly from the cluster configuration, without having to ask the
777
remote nodes for the data. This can be helpful for big clusters when
778
you only want some data and it makes sense to specify a reduced set of
779
output fields.
780

    
781
If exactly one argument is given and it appears to be a query filter
782
(see **ganeti(7)**), the query result is filtered accordingly. For
783
ambiguous cases (e.g. a single field name as a filter) the ``--filter``
784
(``-F``) option forces the argument to be treated as a filter (e.g.
785
``gnt-instance list -F admin_state``).
786

    
787
The default output field list is: ``name``, ``os``, ``pnode``,
788
``admin_state``, ``oper_state``, ``oper_ram``.
789

    
790

    
791
LIST-FIELDS
792
~~~~~~~~~~~
793

    
794
**list-fields** [field...]
795

    
796
Lists available fields for instances.
797

    
798

    
799
INFO
800
^^^^
801

    
802
**info** [-s \| --static] [--roman] {--all \| *instance*}
803

    
804
Show detailed information about the given instance(s). This is
805
different from **list** as it shows detailed data about the instance's
806
disks (especially useful for the drbd disk template).
807

    
808
If the option ``-s`` is used, only information available in the
809
configuration file is returned, without querying nodes, making the
810
operation faster.
811

    
812
Use the ``--all`` to get info about all instances, rather than
813
explicitly passing the ones you're interested in.
814

    
815
The ``--roman`` option can be used to cause envy among people who like
816
ancient cultures, but are stuck with non-latin-friendly cluster
817
virtualization technologies.
818

    
819
MODIFY
820
^^^^^^
821

    
822
| **modify**
823
| [{-H|--hypervisor-parameters} *HYPERVISOR\_PARAMETERS*]
824
| [{-B|--backend-parameters} *BACKEND\_PARAMETERS*]
825
| [--net add*[:options]* \| --net remove \| --net *N:options*]
826
| [--disk add:size=*SIZE*[,vg=*VG*][,metavg=*VG*] \| --disk remove \|
827
|  --disk *N*:mode=*MODE*]
828
| [{-t|--disk-template} plain | {-t|--disk-template} drbd -n *new_secondary*] [--no-wait-for-sync]
829
| [--os-type=*OS* [--force-variant]]
830
| [{-O|--os-parameters} *param*=*value*... ]
831
| [--submit]
832
| {*instance*}
833

    
834
Modifies the memory size, number of vcpus, ip address, MAC address
835
and/or nic parameters for an instance. It can also add and remove
836
disks and NICs to/from the instance. Note that you need to give at
837
least one of the arguments, otherwise the command complains.
838

    
839
The ``-H (--hypervisor-parameters)``, ``-B (--backend-parameters)``
840
and ``-O (--os-parameters)`` options specifies hypervisor, backend and
841
OS parameter options in the form of name=value[,...]. For details
842
which options can be specified, see the **add** command.
843

    
844
The ``-t (--disk-template)`` option will change the disk template of
845
the instance.  Currently only conversions between the plain and drbd
846
disk templates are supported, and the instance must be stopped before
847
attempting the conversion. When changing from the plain to the drbd
848
disk template, a new secondary node must be specified via the ``-n``
849
option. The option ``--no-wait-for-sync`` can be used when converting
850
to the ``drbd`` template in order to make the instance available for
851
startup before DRBD has finished resyncing.
852

    
853
The ``--disk add:size=``*SIZE* option adds a disk to the instance. The
854
optional ``vg=``*VG* option specifies LVM volume group other than
855
default vg to create the disk on. For DRBD disks, the ``metavg=``*VG*
856
option specifies the volume group for the metadata device. The
857
``--disk remove`` option will remove the last disk of the
858
instance. The ``--disk`` *N*``:mode=``*MODE* option will change the
859
mode of the Nth disk of the instance between read-only (``ro``) and
860
read-write (``rw``).
861

    
862
The ``--net add:``*options* option will add a new NIC to the
863
instance. The available options are the same as in the **add** command
864
(mac, ip, link, mode). The ``--net remove`` will remove the last NIC
865
of the instance, while the ``--net`` *N*:*options* option will change
866
the parameters of the Nth instance NIC.
867

    
868
The option ``-o (--os-type)`` will change the OS name for the instance
869
(without reinstallation). In case an OS variant is specified that is
870
not found, then by default the modification is refused, unless
871
``--force-variant`` is passed. An invalid OS will also be refused,
872
unless the ``--force`` option is given.
873

    
874
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
875
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
876
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
877

    
878
All the changes take effect at the next restart. If the instance is
879
running, there is no effect on the instance.
880

    
881
REINSTALL
882
^^^^^^^^^
883

    
884
| **reinstall** [{-o|--os-type} *os-type*] [--select-os] [-f *force*]
885
| [--force-multiple]
886
| [--instance \| --node \| --primary \| --secondary \| --all]
887
| [{-O|--os-parameters} *OS\_PARAMETERS*] [--submit] {*instance*...}
888

    
889
Reinstalls the operating system on the given instance(s). The
890
instance(s) must be stopped when running this command. If the ``-o
891
(--os-type)`` is specified, the operating system is changed.
892

    
893
The ``--select-os`` option switches to an interactive OS reinstall.
894
The user is prompted to select the OS template from the list of
895
available OS templates. OS parameters can be overridden using ``-O
896
(--os-parameters)`` (more documentation for this option under the
897
**add** command).
898

    
899
Since this is a potentially dangerous command, the user will be
900
required to confirm this action, unless the ``-f`` flag is passed.
901
When multiple instances are selected (either by passing multiple
902
arguments or by using the ``--node``, ``--primary``, ``--secondary``
903
or ``--all`` options), the user must pass the ``--force-multiple``
904
options to skip the interactive confirmation.
905

    
906
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
907
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
908
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
909

    
910
RENAME
911
^^^^^^
912

    
913
| **rename** [--no-ip-check] [--no-name-check] [--submit]
914
| {*instance*} {*new\_name*}
915

    
916
Renames the given instance. The instance must be stopped when running
917
this command. The requirements for the new name are the same as for
918
adding an instance: the new name must be resolvable and the IP it
919
resolves to must not be reachable (in order to prevent duplicate IPs
920
the next time the instance is started). The IP test can be skipped if
921
the ``--no-ip-check`` option is passed.
922

    
923
The ``--no-name-check`` skips the check for the new instance name via
924
the resolver (e.g. in DNS or /etc/hosts, depending on your setup) and
925
that the resolved name matches the provided name. Since the name check
926
is used to compute the IP address, if you pass this option you must also
927
pass the ``--no-ip-check`` option.
928

    
929
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
930
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
931
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
932

    
933
Starting/stopping/connecting to console
934
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
935

    
936
STARTUP
937
^^^^^^^
938

    
939
| **startup**
940
| [--force] [--ignore-offline]
941
| [--force-multiple] [--no-remember]
942
| [--instance \| --node \| --primary \| --secondary \| --all \|
943
| --tags \| --node-tags \| --pri-node-tags \| --sec-node-tags]
944
| [{-H|--hypervisor-parameters} ``key=value...``]
945
| [{-B|--backend-parameters} ``key=value...``]
946
| [--submit] [--paused]
947
| {*name*...}
948

    
949
Starts one or more instances, depending on the following options.  The
950
four available modes are:
951

    
952
--instance
953
    will start the instances given as arguments (at least one argument
954
    required); this is the default selection
955

    
956
--node
957
    will start the instances who have the given node as either primary
958
    or secondary
959

    
960
--primary
961
    will start all instances whose primary node is in the list of nodes
962
    passed as arguments (at least one node required)
963

    
964
--secondary
965
    will start all instances whose secondary node is in the list of
966
    nodes passed as arguments (at least one node required)
967

    
968
--all
969
    will start all instances in the cluster (no arguments accepted)
970

    
971
--tags
972
    will start all instances in the cluster with the tags given as
973
    arguments
974

    
975
--node-tags
976
    will start all instances in the cluster on nodes with the tags
977
    given as arguments
978

    
979
--pri-node-tags
980
    will start all instances in the cluster on primary nodes with the
981
    tags given as arguments
982

    
983
--sec-node-tags
984
    will start all instances in the cluster on secondary nodes with the
985
    tags given as arguments
986

    
987
Note that although you can pass more than one selection option, the
988
last one wins, so in order to guarantee the desired result, don't pass
989
more than one such option.
990

    
991
Use ``--force`` to start even if secondary disks are failing.
992
``--ignore-offline`` can be used to ignore offline primary nodes and
993
mark the instance as started even if the primary is not available.
994

    
995
The ``--force-multiple`` will skip the interactive confirmation in the
996
case the more than one instance will be affected.
997

    
998
The ``--no-remember`` option will perform the startup but not change
999
the state of the instance in the configuration file (if it was stopped
1000
before, Ganeti will still thinks it needs to be stopped). This can be
1001
used for testing, or for a one shot-start where you don't want the
1002
watcher to restart the instance if it crashes.
1003

    
1004
The ``-H (--hypervisor-parameters)`` and ``-B (--backend-parameters)``
1005
options specify temporary hypervisor and backend parameters that can
1006
be used to start an instance with modified parameters. They can be
1007
useful for quick testing without having to modify an instance back and
1008
forth, e.g.::
1009

    
1010
    # gnt-instance start -H kernel_args="single" instance1
1011
    # gnt-instance start -B memory=2048 instance2
1012

    
1013

    
1014
The first form will start the instance instance1 in single-user mode,
1015
and the instance instance2 with 2GB of RAM (this time only, unless
1016
that is the actual instance memory size already). Note that the values
1017
override the instance parameters (and not extend them): an instance
1018
with "kernel\_args=ro" when started with -H kernel\_args=single will
1019
result in "single", not "ro single".  The ``--submit`` option is used
1020
to send the job to the master daemon but not wait for its
1021
completion. The job ID will be shown so that it can be examined via
1022
**gnt-job info**.
1023

    
1024
The ``--paused`` option is only valid for Xen and kvm hypervisors.  This
1025
pauses the instance at the start of bootup, awaiting ``gnt-instance
1026
console`` to unpause it, allowing the entire boot process to be
1027
monitored for debugging.
1028

    
1029
Example::
1030

    
1031
    # gnt-instance start instance1.example.com
1032
    # gnt-instance start --node node1.example.com node2.example.com
1033
    # gnt-instance start --all
1034

    
1035

    
1036
SHUTDOWN
1037
^^^^^^^^
1038

    
1039
| **shutdown**
1040
| [--timeout=*N*]
1041
| [--force-multiple] [--ignore-offline] [--no-remember]
1042
| [--instance \| --node \| --primary \| --secondary \| --all \|
1043
| --tags \| --node-tags \| --pri-node-tags \| --sec-node-tags]
1044
| [--submit]
1045
| {*name*...}
1046

    
1047
Stops one or more instances. If the instance cannot be cleanly stopped
1048
during a hardcoded interval (currently 2 minutes), it will forcibly
1049
stop the instance (equivalent to switching off the power on a physical
1050
machine).
1051

    
1052
The ``--timeout`` is used to specify how much time to wait before
1053
forcing the shutdown (e.g. ``xm destroy`` in Xen, killing the kvm
1054
process for KVM, etc.). By default two minutes are given to each
1055
instance to stop.
1056

    
1057
The ``--instance``, ``--node``, ``--primary``, ``--secondary``,
1058
``--all``, ``--tags``, ``--node-tags``, ``--pri-node-tags`` and
1059
``--sec-node-tags`` options are similar as for the **startup** command
1060
and they influence the actual instances being shutdown.
1061

    
1062
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1063
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1064
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1065

    
1066
``--ignore-offline`` can be used to ignore offline primary nodes and
1067
force the instance to be marked as stopped. This option should be used
1068
with care as it can lead to an inconsistent cluster state.
1069

    
1070
The ``--no-remember`` option will perform the shutdown but not change
1071
the state of the instance in the configuration file (if it was running
1072
before, Ganeti will still thinks it needs to be running). This can be
1073
useful for a cluster-wide shutdown, where some instances are marked as
1074
up and some as down, and you don't want to change the running state:
1075
you just need to disable the watcher, shutdown all instances with
1076
``--no-remember``, and when the watcher is activated again it will
1077
restore the correct runtime state for all instances.
1078

    
1079
Example::
1080

    
1081
    # gnt-instance shutdown instance1.example.com
1082
    # gnt-instance shutdown --all
1083

    
1084

    
1085
REBOOT
1086
^^^^^^
1087

    
1088
| **reboot**
1089
| [{-t|--type} *REBOOT-TYPE*]
1090
| [--ignore-secondaries]
1091
| [--shutdown-timeout=*N*]
1092
| [--force-multiple]
1093
| [--instance \| --node \| --primary \| --secondary \| --all \|
1094
| --tags \| --node-tags \| --pri-node-tags \| --sec-node-tags]
1095
| [--submit]
1096
| [*name*...]
1097

    
1098
Reboots one or more instances. The type of reboot depends on the value
1099
of ``-t (--type)``. A soft reboot does a hypervisor reboot, a hard reboot
1100
does a instance stop, recreates the hypervisor config for the instance
1101
and starts the instance. A full reboot does the equivalent of
1102
**gnt-instance shutdown && gnt-instance startup**.  The default is
1103
hard reboot.
1104

    
1105
For the hard reboot the option ``--ignore-secondaries`` ignores errors
1106
for the secondary node while re-assembling the instance disks.
1107

    
1108
The ``--instance``, ``--node``, ``--primary``, ``--secondary``,
1109
``--all``, ``--tags``, ``--node-tags``, ``--pri-node-tags`` and
1110
``--sec-node-tags`` options are similar as for the **startup** command
1111
and they influence the actual instances being rebooted.
1112

    
1113
The ``--shutdown-timeout`` is used to specify how much time to wait
1114
before forcing the shutdown (xm destroy in xen, killing the kvm
1115
process, for kvm). By default two minutes are given to each instance
1116
to stop.
1117

    
1118
The ``--force-multiple`` will skip the interactive confirmation in the
1119
case the more than one instance will be affected.
1120

    
1121
Example::
1122

    
1123
    # gnt-instance reboot instance1.example.com
1124
    # gnt-instance reboot --type=full instance1.example.com
1125

    
1126

    
1127
CONSOLE
1128
^^^^^^^
1129

    
1130
**console** [--show-cmd] {*instance*}
1131

    
1132
Connects to the console of the given instance. If the instance is not
1133
up, an error is returned. Use the ``--show-cmd`` option to display the
1134
command instead of executing it.
1135

    
1136
For HVM instances, this will attempt to connect to the serial console
1137
of the instance. To connect to the virtualized "physical" console of a
1138
HVM instance, use a VNC client with the connection info from the
1139
**info** command.
1140

    
1141
For Xen/kvm instances, if the instance is paused, this attempts to
1142
unpause the instance after waiting a few seconds for the connection to
1143
the console to be made.
1144

    
1145
Example::
1146

    
1147
    # gnt-instance console instance1.example.com
1148

    
1149

    
1150
Disk management
1151
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1152

    
1153
REPLACE-DISKS
1154
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1155

    
1156
**replace-disks** [--submit] [--early-release] {-p} [--disks *idx*]
1157
{*instance*}
1158

    
1159
**replace-disks** [--submit] [--early-release] {-s} [--disks *idx*]
1160
{*instance*}
1161

    
1162
**replace-disks** [--submit] [--early-release] {--iallocator *name*
1163
\| --new-secondary *NODE*} {*instance*}
1164

    
1165
**replace-disks** [--submit] [--early-release] {--auto}
1166
{*instance*}
1167

    
1168
This command is a generalized form for replacing disks. It is
1169
currently only valid for the mirrored (DRBD) disk template.
1170

    
1171
The first form (when passing the ``-p`` option) will replace the disks
1172
on the primary, while the second form (when passing the ``-s`` option
1173
will replace the disks on the secondary node. For these two cases (as
1174
the node doesn't change), it is possible to only run the replace for a
1175
subset of the disks, using the option ``--disks`` which takes a list
1176
of comma-delimited disk indices (zero-based), e.g. 0,2 to replace only
1177
the first and third disks.
1178

    
1179
The third form (when passing either the ``--iallocator`` or the
1180
``--new-secondary`` option) is designed to change secondary node of
1181
the instance. Specifying ``--iallocator`` makes the new secondary be
1182
selected automatically by the specified allocator plugin, otherwise
1183
the new secondary node will be the one chosen manually via the
1184
``--new-secondary`` option.
1185

    
1186
The fourth form (when using ``--auto``) will automatically determine
1187
which disks of an instance are faulty and replace them within the same
1188
node. The ``--auto`` option works only when an instance has only
1189
faulty disks on either the primary or secondary node; it doesn't work
1190
when both sides have faulty disks.
1191

    
1192
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1193
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1194
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1195

    
1196
The ``--early-release`` changes the code so that the old storage on
1197
secondary node(s) is removed early (before the resync is completed)
1198
and the internal Ganeti locks for the current (and new, if any)
1199
secondary node are also released, thus allowing more parallelism in
1200
the cluster operation. This should be used only when recovering from a
1201
disk failure on the current secondary (thus the old storage is already
1202
broken) or when the storage on the primary node is known to be fine
1203
(thus we won't need the old storage for potential recovery).
1204

    
1205
Note that it is not possible to select an offline or drained node as a
1206
new secondary.
1207

    
1208
ACTIVATE-DISKS
1209
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1210

    
1211
**activate-disks** [--submit] [--ignore-size] {*instance*}
1212

    
1213
Activates the block devices of the given instance. If successful, the
1214
command will show the location and name of the block devices::
1215

    
1216
    node1.example.com:disk/0:/dev/drbd0
1217
    node1.example.com:disk/1:/dev/drbd1
1218

    
1219

    
1220
In this example, *node1.example.com* is the name of the node on which
1221
the devices have been activated. The *disk/0* and *disk/1* are the
1222
Ganeti-names of the instance disks; how they are visible inside the
1223
instance is hypervisor-specific. */dev/drbd0* and */dev/drbd1* are the
1224
actual block devices as visible on the node.  The ``--submit`` option
1225
is used to send the job to the master daemon but not wait for its
1226
completion. The job ID will be shown so that it can be examined via
1227
**gnt-job info**.
1228

    
1229
The ``--ignore-size`` option can be used to activate disks ignoring
1230
the currently configured size in Ganeti. This can be used in cases
1231
where the configuration has gotten out of sync with the real-world
1232
(e.g. after a partially-failed grow-disk operation or due to rounding
1233
in LVM devices). This should not be used in normal cases, but only
1234
when activate-disks fails without it.
1235

    
1236
Note that it is safe to run this command while the instance is already
1237
running.
1238

    
1239
DEACTIVATE-DISKS
1240
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1241

    
1242
**deactivate-disks** [-f] [--submit] {*instance*}
1243

    
1244
De-activates the block devices of the given instance. Note that if you
1245
run this command for an instance with a drbd disk template, while it
1246
is running, it will not be able to shutdown the block devices on the
1247
primary node, but it will shutdown the block devices on the secondary
1248
nodes, thus breaking the replication.
1249

    
1250
The ``-f``/``--force`` option will skip checks that the instance is
1251
down; in case the hypervisor is confused and we can't talk to it,
1252
normally Ganeti will refuse to deactivate the disks, but with this
1253
option passed it will skip this check and directly try to deactivate
1254
the disks. This can still fail due to the instance actually running or
1255
other issues.
1256

    
1257
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1258
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1259
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1260

    
1261
GROW-DISK
1262
^^^^^^^^^
1263

    
1264
**grow-disk** [--no-wait-for-sync] [--submit] {*instance*} {*disk*}
1265
{*amount*}
1266

    
1267
Grows an instance's disk. This is only possible for instances having a
1268
plain or drbd disk template.
1269

    
1270
Note that this command only change the block device size; it will not
1271
grow the actual filesystems, partitions, etc. that live on that
1272
disk. Usually, you will need to:
1273

    
1274
#. use **gnt-instance grow-disk**
1275

    
1276
#. reboot the instance (later, at a convenient time)
1277

    
1278
#. use a filesystem resizer, such as ext2online(8) or
1279
   xfs\_growfs(8) to resize the filesystem, or use fdisk(8) to change
1280
   the partition table on the disk
1281

    
1282
The *disk* argument is the index of the instance disk to grow. The
1283
*amount* argument is given either as a number (and it represents the
1284
amount to increase the disk with in mebibytes) or can be given similar
1285
to the arguments in the create instance operation, with a suffix
1286
denoting the unit.
1287

    
1288
Note that the disk grow operation might complete on one node but fail
1289
on the other; this will leave the instance with different-sized LVs on
1290
the two nodes, but this will not create problems (except for unused
1291
space).
1292

    
1293
If you do not want gnt-instance to wait for the new disk region to be
1294
synced, use the ``--no-wait-for-sync`` option.
1295

    
1296
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1297
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1298
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1299

    
1300
Example (increase the first disk for instance1 by 16GiB)::
1301

    
1302
    # gnt-instance grow-disk instance1.example.com 0 16g
1303

    
1304

    
1305
Also note that disk shrinking is not supported; use **gnt-backup
1306
export** and then **gnt-backup import** to reduce the disk size of an
1307
instance.
1308

    
1309
RECREATE-DISKS
1310
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1311

    
1312
**recreate-disks** [--submit] [--disks=``indices``] [-n node1:[node2]]
1313
  {*instance*}
1314

    
1315
Recreates the disks of the given instance, or only a subset of the
1316
disks (if the option ``disks`` is passed, which must be a
1317
comma-separated list of disk indices, starting from zero).
1318

    
1319
Note that this functionality should only be used for missing disks; if
1320
any of the given disks already exists, the operation will fail.  While
1321
this is suboptimal, recreate-disks should hopefully not be needed in
1322
normal operation and as such the impact of this is low.
1323

    
1324
Optionally the instance's disks can be recreated on different
1325
nodes. This can be useful if, for example, the original nodes of the
1326
instance have gone down (and are marked offline), so we can't recreate
1327
on the same nodes. To do this, pass the new node(s) via ``-n`` option,
1328
with a syntax similar to the **add** command. The number of nodes
1329
passed must equal the number of nodes that the instance currently
1330
has. Note that changing nodes is only allowed for 'all disk'
1331
replacement (when ``--disks`` is not passed).
1332

    
1333
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1334
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1335
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1336

    
1337
Recovery
1338
~~~~~~~~
1339

    
1340
FAILOVER
1341
^^^^^^^^
1342

    
1343
**failover** [-f] [--ignore-consistency] [--shutdown-timeout=*N*]
1344
[--submit] {*instance*}
1345

    
1346
Failover will stop the instance (if running), change its primary node,
1347
and if it was originally running it will start it again (on the new
1348
primary). This only works for instances with drbd template (in which
1349
case you can only fail to the secondary node) and for externally
1350
mirrored templates (shared storage) (which can change to any other
1351
node).
1352

    
1353
Normally the failover will check the consistency of the disks before
1354
failing over the instance. If you are trying to migrate instances off
1355
a dead node, this will fail. Use the ``--ignore-consistency`` option
1356
for this purpose. Note that this option can be dangerous as errors in
1357
shutting down the instance will be ignored, resulting in possibly
1358
having the instance running on two machines in parallel (on
1359
disconnected DRBD drives).
1360

    
1361
The ``--shutdown-timeout`` is used to specify how much time to wait
1362
before forcing the shutdown (xm destroy in xen, killing the kvm
1363
process, for kvm). By default two minutes are given to each instance
1364
to stop.
1365

    
1366
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1367
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1368
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1369

    
1370
Example::
1371

    
1372
    # gnt-instance failover instance1.example.com
1373

    
1374

    
1375
MIGRATE
1376
^^^^^^^
1377

    
1378
**migrate** [-f] {--cleanup} {*instance*}
1379

    
1380
**migrate** [-f] [--allow-failover] [--non-live]
1381
[--migration-mode=live\|non-live] {*instance*}
1382

    
1383
Migrate will move the instance to its secondary node without
1384
shutdown. It only works for instances having the drbd8 disk template
1385
type.
1386

    
1387
The migration command needs a perfectly healthy instance, as we rely
1388
on the dual-master capability of drbd8 and the disks of the instance
1389
are not allowed to be degraded.
1390

    
1391
The ``--non-live`` and ``--migration-mode=non-live`` options will
1392
switch (for the hypervisors that support it) between a "fully live"
1393
(i.e. the interruption is as minimal as possible) migration and one in
1394
which the instance is frozen, its state saved and transported to the
1395
remote node, and then resumed there. This all depends on the
1396
hypervisor support for two different methods. In any case, it is not
1397
an error to pass this parameter (it will just be ignored if the
1398
hypervisor doesn't support it). The option ``--migration-mode=live``
1399
option will request a fully-live migration. The default, when neither
1400
option is passed, depends on the hypervisor parameters (and can be
1401
viewed with the **gnt-cluster info** command).
1402

    
1403
If the ``--cleanup`` option is passed, the operation changes from
1404
migration to attempting recovery from a failed previous migration.  In
1405
this mode, Ganeti checks if the instance runs on the correct node (and
1406
updates its configuration if not) and ensures the instances's disks
1407
are configured correctly. In this mode, the ``--non-live`` option is
1408
ignored.
1409

    
1410
The option ``-f`` will skip the prompting for confirmation.
1411

    
1412
If ``--allow-failover`` is specified it tries to fallback to failover if
1413
it already can determine that a migration wont work (i.e. if the
1414
instance is shutdown). Please note that the fallback will not happen
1415
during execution. If a migration fails during execution it still fails.
1416

    
1417
Example (and expected output)::
1418

    
1419
    # gnt-instance migrate instance1
1420
    Migrate will happen to the instance instance1. Note that migration is
1421
    **experimental** in this version. This might impact the instance if
1422
    anything goes wrong. Continue?
1423
    y/[n]/?: y
1424
    * checking disk consistency between source and target
1425
    * ensuring the target is in secondary mode
1426
    * changing disks into dual-master mode
1427
     - INFO: Waiting for instance instance1 to sync disks.
1428
     - INFO: Instance instance1's disks are in sync.
1429
    * migrating instance to node2.example.com
1430
    * changing the instance's disks on source node to secondary
1431
     - INFO: Waiting for instance instance1 to sync disks.
1432
     - INFO: Instance instance1's disks are in sync.
1433
    * changing the instance's disks to single-master
1434
    #
1435

    
1436

    
1437
MOVE
1438
^^^^
1439

    
1440
**move** [-f] [--ignore-consistency]
1441
[-n *node*] [--shutdown-timeout=*N*] [--submit]
1442
{*instance*}
1443

    
1444
Move will move the instance to an arbitrary node in the cluster.  This
1445
works only for instances having a plain or file disk template.
1446

    
1447
Note that since this operation is done via data copy, it will take a
1448
long time for big disks (similar to replace-disks for a drbd
1449
instance).
1450

    
1451
The ``--shutdown-timeout`` is used to specify how much time to wait
1452
before forcing the shutdown (e.g. ``xm destroy`` in XEN, killing the
1453
kvm process for KVM, etc.). By default two minutes are given to each
1454
instance to stop.
1455

    
1456
The ``--ignore-consistency`` option will make Ganeti ignore any errors
1457
in trying to shutdown the instance on its node; useful if the
1458
hypervisor is broken and you want to recuperate the data.
1459

    
1460
The ``--submit`` option is used to send the job to the master daemon
1461
but not wait for its completion. The job ID will be shown so that it
1462
can be examined via **gnt-job info**.
1463

    
1464
Example::
1465

    
1466
    # gnt-instance move -n node3.example.com instance1.example.com
1467

    
1468

    
1469
CHANGE-GROUP
1470
~~~~~~~~~~~~
1471

    
1472
**change-group** [--iallocator *NAME*] [--to *GROUP*...] {*instance*}
1473

    
1474
This command moves an instance to another node group. The move is
1475
calculated by an iallocator, either given on the command line or as a
1476
cluster default.
1477

    
1478
If no specific destination groups are specified using ``--to``, all
1479
groups except the one containing the instance are considered.
1480

    
1481
Example::
1482

    
1483
    # gnt-instance change-group -I hail --to rack2 inst1.example.com
1484

    
1485

    
1486
TAGS
1487
~~~~
1488

    
1489
ADD-TAGS
1490
^^^^^^^^
1491

    
1492
**add-tags** [--from *file*] {*instancename*} {*tag*...}
1493

    
1494
Add tags to the given instance. If any of the tags contains invalid
1495
characters, the entire operation will abort.
1496

    
1497
If the ``--from`` option is given, the list of tags will be extended
1498
with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag).  In this
1499
case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line (if you do,
1500
both sources will be used). A file name of ``-`` will be interpreted
1501
as stdin.
1502

    
1503
LIST-TAGS
1504
^^^^^^^^^
1505

    
1506
**list-tags** {*instancename*}
1507

    
1508
List the tags of the given instance.
1509

    
1510
REMOVE-TAGS
1511
^^^^^^^^^^^
1512

    
1513
**remove-tags** [--from *file*] {*instancename*} {*tag*...}
1514

    
1515
Remove tags from the given instance. If any of the tags are not
1516
existing on the node, the entire operation will abort.
1517

    
1518
If the ``--from`` option is given, the list of tags to be removed will
1519
be extended with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag).
1520
In this case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line (if
1521
you do, tags from both sources will be removed). A file name of ``-``
1522
will be interpreted as stdin.
1523

    
1524
.. vim: set textwidth=72 :
1525
.. Local Variables:
1526
.. mode: rst
1527
.. fill-column: 72
1528
.. End: