Difference between revisions of "Creating a base LDOM image"
Line 171: | Line 171: | ||
/usr/bin/rm /etc/rc0.d/K99mksysidcfg | /usr/bin/rm /etc/rc0.d/K99mksysidcfg | ||
− | 15. Create the script /etc/rc3.d/S99ldomreconfig to add host file entries | + | 15. Create the script [S99ldomreconfig /etc/rc3.d/S99ldomreconfig] to add host file entries and sendmail configs |
[[S99ldomreconfig]] | [[S99ldomreconfig]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | 16. |
Revision as of 05:44, 1 June 2011
Now that the Control domain is setup, you can start creating LDOM's at will. The idea here is to create a base LDOM image that can be cloned to quickly provision new servers.
1. Create a ZFS file system to store the disk image for our LDOM
zfs create storage/base
This will create a ZFS file system called storage/base that will be mounted at /storage/base
2. Create a ZFS disk image to hold the LDOM's data
zfs create -V 36gb storage/base/disk0
This will create a 36Gb disk image. You can see the results in the zfs list output:
# zfs list NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT rpool 25.4G 109G 93K /rpool rpool/ROOT 5.36G 109G 18K legacy rpool/ROOT/s10s_u7wos_08 5.36G 109G 5.36G / rpool/dump 10.0G 109G 10.0G - rpool/swap 10G 118G 16.4M - storage 37.1G 630G 36.5K /storage storage/base 37.1G 630G 34.9K /storage/base storage/base/disk0 37.1G 667G 26.6K -
3. Create the new LDOM
ldm add-domain base
4. Assign virtual CPU's to the new LDOM
ldm add-vcpu 8 base
5. Assign memory to the new LDOM
ldm add-memory 2G base
6. Create a virtual disk device and assign it to the new LDOM
ldm add-vdsdev /dev/zvol/dsk/storage/base/disk0 base-vol1@primary-vds0 ldm add-vdisk vdisk1 base-vol1@primary-vds0 base
This creates a virtual disk device called base-vol1@primary-vds0 that is then assigned to the LDOM base. ldm list-services should now look like this:
# ldm list-services VCC NAME LDOM PORT-RANGE primary-vcc0 primary 5000-5100 VSW NAME LDOM MAC NET-DEV ID DEVICE LINKPROP DEFAULT-VLAN-ID PVID VID MTU MODE primary-vsw0 primary 00:14:4f:fa:40:c8 e1000g0 0 switch@0 1 1 1500 VDS NAME LDOM VOLUME OPTIONS MPGROUP DEVICE primary-vds0 primary base-vol1 /dev/zvol/dsk/storage/base/disk0
7. Add a virtual network interface to the new LDOM
ldm add-vnet vnet1 primary-vsw0 base
8. Adjust boot parameters of the LDOM so that it will automatically boot when the host system starts up and it knows that the vdisk1 device is it's boot device:
# ldm set-var auto-boot\?=true base # ldm set-var boot-device=vdisk1 base svcadm enable vntsd
You can also change other boot parameters as you see fit
# ldm set-var boot-file="-v -mverbose" base
9. Bind the new LDOM
ldm bind base
10. Check the parameters associated with your LDOM
# ldm list-bindings base NAME STATE FLAGS CONS VCPU MEMORY UTIL UPTIME base bound ------ 5000 8 2G UUID 16277b70-4c8c-c240-da5b-f73075ba2a89 MAC 00:14:4f:f9:33:a5 HOSTID 0x84f933a5 CONTROL failure-policy=ignore
DEPENDENCY master= CORE CID CPUSET 1 (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15) VCPU VID PID CID UTIL STRANDK99mksysidcfg 0 8 1 100% 1 9 1 100% 2 10 1 100% 3 11 1 100% 4 12 1 100% 5 13 1 100% 6 14 1 100% 7 15 1 100% MEMORY RA PA SIZE 0x8000000 0x88000000 2G VARIABLES auto-boot?=true boot-device=vdisk1 boot-file=-v -mverbose NETWORK NAME SERVICE ID DEVICE MAC MODE PVID VID MTU LINKPROP vnet1 prod-vsw0@primary 0 network@0 00:14:4f:f8:78:9c 1 1500 PEER MAC MODE PVID VID MTU LINKPROP prod-vsw0@primary 00:14:4f:fa:40:c8 1 1500 DISK NAME VOLUME TOUT ID DEVICE SERVER MPGROUP vdisk1 base-vol1@primary-vds0 0 disk@0 primary VCONS NAME SERVICE PORT base primary-vcc0@primary 5000
This shows that the console port for telnet is 5000, the MAC address of the virtual NIC is 00:14:4f:f8:78:9c, amongst other valuable information :-)
11. Start the new LDOM
ldm start-domain base
12. Log on to the console of the new LDOM. It should be waiting at the OK prompt for you to do a Jumpstart install. Use the MAC address you got from the previous step and Jumpstart install an OS on the LDOM over the network.
telnet localhost 5000
NOTE: The MAC address that you get from the OBP banner command is NOT the MAC adderess of the vnet1 interface! You will need the MAC address you got from the previous step!
13. Once you've built the LDOM OS and have customized it to your liking, you will need to create a sysidcfg file. However, in this instance make the file /etc/sysidcfg.bk. The reasons will become evident shortly.
You can find details of how to create a sysidcfg using man sysidcfg. My sysidcfg file looks like this:
system_locale=en_US.UTF-8 timezone=Australia/Victoria timeserver=localhost terminal=vt100 name_service=DNS{domain_name=mydomain.com.au name_server=192.168.1.101 search=mydomain.com.au} network_interface=PRIMARY {default_route=192.168.1.1 netmask=255.255.255.0 protocol_ipv6=no} security_policy=NONE root_password=my_password_hash nfs4_domain=dynamic
14. Create the script /etc/rc0.d/K99mksysidcfg with the following contents
#!/bin/sh /usr/bin/cp -p /etc/sysidcfg.bk /etc/sysidcfg /usr/bin/rm /etc/rc0.d/K99mksysidcfg
15. Create the script [S99ldomreconfig /etc/rc3.d/S99ldomreconfig] to add host file entries and sendmail configs
S99ldomreconfig
16.