Create user images for the Bare Metal service

Bare Metal provisioning requires two sets of images: the deploy images and the user images. The deploy images are used by the Bare Metal service to prepare the bare metal server for actual OS deployment. Whereas the user images are installed on the bare metal server to be used by the end user. There are two types of user images:

partition images

contain only the contents of the root partition. Additionally, two more images are used together with them: an image with a kernel and with an initramfs.

Warning

To use partition images with local boot, Grub2 must be installed on them.

whole disk images

contain a complete partition table with one or more partitions.

Warning

The kernel/initramfs pair must not be used with whole disk images, otherwise they’ll be mistaken for partition images.

Building user images

disk-image-builder

The disk-image-builder can be used to create user images required for deployment and the actual OS which the user is going to run.

  • Install diskimage-builder package (use virtualenv, if you don’t want to install anything globally):

    # pip install diskimage-builder
    
  • Build the image your users will run (Ubuntu image has been taken as an example):

    • Partition images

      $ disk-image-create ubuntu baremetal dhcp-all-interfaces grub2 -o my-image
      
    • Whole disk images

      $ disk-image-create ubuntu vm dhcp-all-interfaces -o my-image
      

The partition image command creates my-image.qcow2, my-image.vmlinuz and my-image.initrd files. The grub2 element in the partition image creation command is only needed if local boot will be used to deploy my-image.qcow2, otherwise the images my-image.vmlinuz and my-image.initrd will be used for PXE booting after deploying the bare metal with my-image.qcow2. For whole disk images only the main image is used.

If you want to use Fedora image, replace ubuntu with fedora in the chosen command.

Virtual machine

Virtual machine software can also be used to build user images. There are different software options available, qemu-kvm is usually a good choice on linux platform, it supports emulating many devices and even building images for architectures other than the host machine by software emulation. VirtualBox is another good choice for non-linux host.

The procedure varies depending on the software used, but the steps for building an image are similar, the user creates a virtual machine, and installs the target system just like what is done for a real hardware. The system can be highly customized like partition layout, drivers or software shipped, etc.

Usually libvirt and its management tools are used to make interaction with qemu-kvm easier, for example, to create a virtual machine with virt-install:

$ virt-install --name centos8 --ram 4096 --vcpus=2 -f centos8.qcow2 \
> --cdrom CentOS-8-x86_64-1905-dvd1.iso

Graphic frontend like virt-manager can also be utilized.

The disk file can be used as user image after the system is set up and powered off. The path of the disk file varies depending on the software used, usually it’s stored in a user-selected part of the local file system. For qemu-kvm or GUI frontend building upon it, it’s typically stored at /var/lib/libvirt/images.