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OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook, Third Edition

You're reading from   OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook, Third Edition Over 110 effective recipes to help you build and operate OpenStack cloud computing, storage, networking, and automation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782174783
Length 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Cody Bunch Cody Bunch
Author Profile Icon Cody Bunch
Cody Bunch
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Keystone – OpenStack Identity Service FREE CHAPTER 2. Glance – OpenStack Image Service 3. Neutron – OpenStack Networking 4. Nova – OpenStack Compute 5. Swift – OpenStack Object Storage 6. Using OpenStack Object Storage 7. Administering OpenStack Object Storage 8. Cinder – OpenStack Block Storage 9. More OpenStack 10. Using the OpenStack Dashboard 11. Production OpenStack Index

Using cloud-init to run post-installation commands

Cloud-init was originally developed by Canonical and is the de facto standard for running post-installation commands and configuration on a cloud instance. When an instance is launched, if cloud-init is part of the image being used, it will look for metadata information passed to it at launch time to do post-installation execution of commands. When a shell script is used (as demonstrated in the following How to do it… section of this recipe), it can be analogous to running commands in the /etc/rc.local working directory of a Linux machine. Cloud-init relies on data being sent from the nova-metadata API service. An instance looks for data associated with the particular instance and executes it accordingly. This section will cover the basics of using cloud-init.

Getting ready

Ensure that you are logged into a Ubuntu host that has access to our OpenStack environment on the 192.168.100.0/24 public network. This host will be used to run...

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