The module lifecycle stageGeneral Availability

How to install an operating system in a virtual machine from an iso-image?

Let’s consider installing an operating system in a virtual machine from an iso-image, using Windows OS installation as an example.

To install the OS we will need an iso-image of Windows OS. We need to download it and publish it on some http-service available from the cluster.

  1. Create an empty disk for OS installation:

    d8 k apply -f -<<EOF
    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: VirtualDisk
    metadata:
      name: win-disk
      namespace: default
    spec:
      persistentVolumeClaim:
        size: 100Gi
        storageClassName: local-path
    EOF
    
  2. Create resources with iso-images of Windows OS and virtio drivers:

    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: ClusterVirtualImage
    metadata:
      name: win-11-iso
    spec:
      dataSource:
        type: HTTP
        http:
          url: "http://example.com/win11.iso"
    
    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: ClusterVirtualImage
    metadata:
      name: win-virtio-iso
    spec:
      dataSource:
        type: HTTP
        http:
          url: "https://fedorapeople.org/groups/virt/virtio-win/direct-downloads/stable-virtio/virtio-win.iso"
    
  3. Create a virtual machine:

    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: VirtualMachine
    metadata:
      name: win-vm
      namespace: default
      labels:
        vm: win
    spec:
      virtualMachineClassName: generic
      runPolicy: Manual
      osType: Windows
      bootloader: EFI
      cpu:
        cores: 6
        coreFraction: 50%
      memory:
        size: 8Gi
      enableParavirtualization: true
      blockDeviceRefs:
        - kind: VirtualDisk
          name: win-disk
        - kind: ClusterVirtualImage
          name: win-11-iso
        - kind: ClusterVirtualImage
          name: win-virtio-iso
    
  4. After creating the resource, start the VM:

    d8 v start win-vm
    
  5. You need to connect to it and use the graphical wizard to add the virtio drivers and perform the OS installation.

    d8 v vnc -n default win-vm
    
  6. After the installation is complete, restart the virtual machine.

  7. To continue working with it, use the following command:

    d8 v vnc -n default win-vm
    

How to provide windows answer file(Sysprep)?

To perform an unattended installation of Windows, create answer file (usually named unattend.xml or autounattend.xml). For example, let’s take a file that allows you to:

  • Add English language and keyboard layout
  • Specify the location of the virtio drivers needed for the installation (hence the order of disk devices in the VM specification is important)
  • Partition the disks for installing windows on a VM with EFI
  • Create an user with name cloud and the password cloud in the Administrators group
  • Create a non-privileged user with name user and the password user
autounattend.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<unattend xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:unattend" xmlns:wcm="http://schemas.microsoft.com/WMIConfig/2002/State">
  <settings pass="offlineServicing"></settings>
  <settings pass="windowsPE">
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-International-Core-WinPE" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <SetupUILanguage>
        <UILanguage>en-US</UILanguage>
      </SetupUILanguage>
      <InputLocale>0409:00000409</InputLocale>
      <SystemLocale>en-US</SystemLocale>
      <UILanguage>en-US</UILanguage>
      <UserLocale>en-US</UserLocale>
    </component>
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-PnpCustomizationsWinPE" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <DriverPaths>
        <PathAndCredentials wcm:keyValue="4b29ba63" wcm:action="add">
          <Path>E:\amd64\w11</Path>
        </PathAndCredentials>
        <PathAndCredentials wcm:keyValue="25fe51ea" wcm:action="add">
          <Path>E:\NetKVM\w11\amd64</Path>
        </PathAndCredentials>
      </DriverPaths>
    </component>
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-Setup" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <DiskConfiguration>
        <Disk wcm:action="add">
          <DiskID>0</DiskID>
          <WillWipeDisk>true</WillWipeDisk>
          <CreatePartitions>
            <!-- Recovery partition -->
            <CreatePartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>1</Order>
              <Type>Primary</Type>
              <Size>250</Size>
            </CreatePartition>
            <!-- EFI system partition (ESP) -->
            <CreatePartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>2</Order>
              <Type>EFI</Type>
              <Size>100</Size>
            </CreatePartition>
            <!-- Microsoft reserved partition (MSR) -->
            <CreatePartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>3</Order>
              <Type>MSR</Type>
              <Size>128</Size>
            </CreatePartition>
            <!-- Windows partition -->
            <CreatePartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>4</Order>
              <Type>Primary</Type>
              <Extend>true</Extend>
            </CreatePartition>
          </CreatePartitions>
          <ModifyPartitions>
            <!-- Recovery partition -->
            <ModifyPartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>1</Order>
              <PartitionID>1</PartitionID>
              <Label>Recovery</Label>
              <Format>NTFS</Format>
              <TypeID>de94bba4-06d1-4d40-a16a-bfd50179d6ac</TypeID>
            </ModifyPartition>
            <!-- EFI system partition (ESP) -->
            <ModifyPartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>2</Order>
              <PartitionID>2</PartitionID>
              <Label>System</Label>
              <Format>FAT32</Format>
            </ModifyPartition>
            <!-- MSR partition does not need to be modified -->
            <!-- Windows partition -->
            <ModifyPartition wcm:action="add">
              <Order>3</Order>
              <PartitionID>4</PartitionID>
              <Label>Windows</Label>
              <Letter>C</Letter>
              <Format>NTFS</Format>
            </ModifyPartition>
          </ModifyPartitions>
        </Disk>
        <WillShowUI>OnError</WillShowUI>
      </DiskConfiguration>
      <ImageInstall>
        <OSImage>
          <InstallTo>
            <DiskID>0</DiskID>
            <PartitionID>4</PartitionID>
          </InstallTo>
        </OSImage>
      </ImageInstall>
      <UserData>
        <ProductKey>
          <Key>VK7JG-NPHTM-C97JM-9MPGT-3V66T</Key>
          <WillShowUI>OnError</WillShowUI>
        </ProductKey>
        <AcceptEula>true</AcceptEula>
      </UserData>
      <UseConfigurationSet>false</UseConfigurationSet>
    </component>
  </settings>
  <settings pass="generalize"></settings>
  <settings pass="specialize">
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-Deployment" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <RunSynchronous>
        <RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>1</Order>
          <Path>powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "$xml = [xml]::new(); $xml.Load('C:\Windows\Panther\unattend.xml'); $sb = [scriptblock]::Create( $xml.unattend.Extensions.ExtractScript ); Invoke-Command -ScriptBlock $sb -ArgumentList $xml;"</Path>
        </RunSynchronousCommand>
        <RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>2</Order>
          <Path>powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "Get-Content -LiteralPath 'C:\Windows\Setup\Scripts\Specialize.ps1' -Raw | Invoke-Expression;"</Path>
        </RunSynchronousCommand>
        <RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>3</Order>
          <Path>reg.exe load "HKU\DefaultUser" "C:\Users\Default\NTUSER.DAT"</Path>
        </RunSynchronousCommand>
        <RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>4</Order>
          <Path>powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "Get-Content -LiteralPath 'C:\Windows\Setup\Scripts\DefaultUser.ps1' -Raw | Invoke-Expression;"</Path>
        </RunSynchronousCommand>
        <RunSynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>5</Order>
          <Path>reg.exe unload "HKU\DefaultUser"</Path>
        </RunSynchronousCommand>
      </RunSynchronous>
    </component>
  </settings>
  <settings pass="auditSystem"></settings>
  <settings pass="auditUser"></settings>
  <settings pass="oobeSystem">
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-International-Core" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <InputLocale>0409:00000409</InputLocale>
      <SystemLocale>en-US</SystemLocale>
      <UILanguage>en-US</UILanguage>
      <UserLocale>en-US</UserLocale>
    </component>
    <component name="Microsoft-Windows-Shell-Setup" processorArchitecture="amd64" publicKeyToken="31bf3856ad364e35" language="neutral" versionScope="nonSxS">
      <UserAccounts>
        <LocalAccounts>
          <LocalAccount wcm:action="add">
            <Name>cloud</Name>
            <DisplayName>cloud</DisplayName>
            <Group>Administrators</Group>
            <Password>
              <Value>cloud</Value>
              <PlainText>true</PlainText>
            </Password>
          </LocalAccount>
          <LocalAccount wcm:action="add">
            <Name>User</Name>
            <DisplayName>user</DisplayName>
            <Group>Users</Group>
            <Password>
              <Value>user</Value>
              <PlainText>true</PlainText>
            </Password>
          </LocalAccount>
        </LocalAccounts>
      </UserAccounts>
      <AutoLogon>
        <Username>cloud</Username>
        <Enabled>true</Enabled>
        <LogonCount>1</LogonCount>
        <Password>
          <Value>cloud</Value>
          <PlainText>true</PlainText>
        </Password>
      </AutoLogon>
      <OOBE>
        <ProtectYourPC>3</ProtectYourPC>
        <HideEULAPage>true</HideEULAPage>
        <HideWirelessSetupInOOBE>true</HideWirelessSetupInOOBE>
        <HideOnlineAccountScreens>false</HideOnlineAccountScreens>
      </OOBE>
      <FirstLogonCommands>
        <SynchronousCommand wcm:action="add">
          <Order>1</Order>
          <CommandLine>powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "Get-Content -LiteralPath 'C:\Windows\Setup\Scripts\FirstLogon.ps1' -Raw | Invoke-Expression;"</CommandLine>
        </SynchronousCommand>
      </FirstLogonCommands>
    </component>
  </settings>
</unattend>

Create a secret from this xml file:

d8 k create secret generic sysprep-config --type="provisioning.virtualization.deckhouse.io/sysprep" --from-file=./autounattend.xml

Then you can create a virtual machine that will use an answer file during installation. To provide the Windows virtual machine with the answer file, you need to specify provisioning with the type SysprepRef. You can also specify here other files in base64 format, that you need to successfully execute scripts inside the answer file.

apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
kind: VirtualMachine
metadata:
  name: win-vm
  namespace: default
  labels:
    vm: win
spec:
  virtualMachineClassName: generic
  provisioning:
    type: SysprepRef
    sysprepRef:
      kind: Secret
      name: sysprep-config
  runPolicy: AlwaysOn
  osType: Windows
  bootloader: EFI
  cpu:
    cores: 6
    coreFraction: 50%
  memory:
    size: 8Gi
  enableParavirtualization: true
  blockDeviceRefs:
    - kind: VirtualDisk
      name: win-disk
    - kind: ClusterVirtualImage
      name: win-11-iso
    - kind: ClusterVirtualImage
      name: win-virtio-iso

How to use cloud-init to configure virtual machines?

Cloud-Init is a tool for automatically configuring virtual machines on first boot. The configuration is written in YAML format and must start with the #cloud-config header.

Updating and installing packages

Example configuration for updating the system and installing packages:

#cloud-config
# Update package lists
package_update: true
# Upgrade installed packages to latest versions
package_upgrade: true
# List of packages to install
packages:
  - nginx
  - curl
  - htop
# Commands to run after package installation
runcmd:
  - systemctl enable --now nginx.service

Creating a user

Example configuration for creating a user with a password and SSH key:

#cloud-config
# List of users to create
users:
  - name: cloud                    # Username
    passwd: "$6$rounds=4096$saltsalt$..."  # Password hash (SHA-512)
    lock_passwd: false            # Do not lock the account
    sudo: ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL  # Sudo privileges without password prompt
    shell: /bin/bash              # Default shell
    ssh-authorized-keys:          # SSH keys for access
      - ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC... your-public-key ...
# Allow password authentication via SSH
ssh_pwauth: true

To generate a password hash, use the mkpasswd --method=SHA-512 --rounds=4096 command.

Creating a file with required permissions

Example configuration for creating a file with specified access permissions:

#cloud-config
# List of files to create
write_files:
  - path: /opt/scripts/start.sh    # File path
    content: |                     # File content
      #!/bin/bash
      echo "Starting application"
    owner: cloud:cloud            # File owner (user:group)
    permissions: '0755'           # Access permissions (octal format)

Configuring disk and filesystem

Example configuration for disk partitioning, filesystem creation, and mounting:

#cloud-config
# Disk partitioning setup
disk_setup:
  /dev/sdb:                        # Disk device
    table_type: gpt                # Partition table type (gpt or mbr)
    layout: true                   # Automatically create partitions
    overwrite: false               # Do not overwrite existing partitions

# Filesystem setup
fs_setup:
  - label: data                    # Filesystem label
    filesystem: ext4               # Filesystem type
    device: /dev/sdb1              # Partition device
    partition: auto                # Automatically detect partition

# Filesystem mounting
mounts:
  # [device, mount_point, fs_type, options, dump, pass]
  - ["/dev/sdb1", "/mnt/data", "ext4", "defaults", "0", "2"]

How to use Ansible to provision virtual machines?

Ansible is an automation tool that helps you to run tasks on remote servers via SSH. In this example, we will show you how to use Ansible to manage virtual machines in a demo-app project.

The following assumptions will be used:

  • There is a frontend virtual machine in a demo-app project.
  • A cloud user is set up on the virtual machine for SSH access.
  • The SSH private key for the cloud user is stored in the /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa file on the Ansible server.

Ansible inventory file example:

---
all:
  vars:
    ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o ProxyCommand="d8 v port-forward --stdio=true %h %h %p"'
    # Default user for SSH access.
    ansible_user: cloud
    # Path to private key.
    ansible_ssh_private_key_file: /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa
  hosts:
    # Host name in the format <VM name>.<project name>.
    frontend.demo-app:

To check the virtual machine’s uptime value, use the following command:

ansible -m shell -a "uptime" -i inventory.yaml all
# frontend.demo-app | CHANGED | rc=0 >>
# 12:01:20 up 2 days, 4:59, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00

If you prefer not to use the inventory file, you can specify and pass all the parameters directly in the command line:

ansible -m shell -a "uptime" \
  -i "frontend.demo-app," \
  -e "ansible_ssh_common_args='-o ProxyCommand=\"d8 v port-forward --stdio=true %h %p %p\"'" \
  -e "ansible_user=cloud" \
  -e "ansible_ssh_private_key_file=/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa" \
  all

How to automatically generate inventory for Ansible?

The d8 v ansible-inventory command requires d8 version v0.27.0 or higher.

The command works only for virtual machines with the main cluster network (Main) connected.

Instead of manually creating an inventory file, you can use the d8 v ansible-inventory command, which automatically generates an Ansible inventory from virtual machines in the specified namespace. The command is compatible with the ansible inventory script interface.

The command includes only virtual machines with assigned IP addresses in the Running state. Host names are formatted as <vmname>.<namespace> (for example, frontend.demo-app).

If necessary, configure host variables through annotations (for example, SSH user):

d8 k -n demo-app annotate vm frontend provisioning.virtualization.deckhouse.io/ansible_user="cloud"

Use the command directly:

ANSIBLE_INVENTORY_ENABLED=yaml ansible -m shell -a "uptime" all -i <(d8 v ansible-inventory -n demo-app -o yaml)

The <(...) construct is necessary because Ansible expects a file or script as the source of the host list. Simply specifying the command in quotes will not work — Ansible will try to execute the string as a script. The <(...) construct passes the command output as a file that Ansible can read.

Or save the inventory to a file:

d8 v ansible-inventory --list -o yaml -n demo-app > inventory.yaml
ansible -m shell -a "uptime" -i inventory.yaml all

How to redirect traffic to a virtual machine?

The virtual machine operates within a Kubernetes cluster, so directing network traffic to it is similar to routing traffic to pods. To route network traffic to a virtual machine, Kubernetes uses a standard mechanism — the Service resource, which selects target objects using labels selectors.

  1. Create a Service with the required settings.

    For example, consider a virtual machine with the label vm: frontend-0, an HTTP service exposed on ports 80 and 443, and SSH access on port 22:

    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: VirtualMachine
    metadata:
      name: frontend-0
      namespace: dev
      labels:
        vm: frontend-0
    spec: ...
    
  2. To route network traffic to the virtual machine’s ports, create the following Service:

    This Service listens on ports 80 and 443 and forwards traffic to the target virtual machine’s ports 80 and 443. SSH access from outside the cluster is provided on port 2211.

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: frontend-0-svc
      namespace: dev
    spec:
      type: LoadBalancer
      ports:
      - name: ssh
        port: 2211
        protocol: TCP
        targetPort: 22
      - name: http
        port: 80
        protocol: TCP
        targetPort: 80
      - name: https
        port: 443
        protocol: TCP
        targetPort: 443
      selector:
        vm: frontend-0
    

How to increase the DVCR size?

To increase the disk size for DVCR, you must set a larger size in the virtualization module configuration than the current size.

  1. Check the current DVCR size:

    d8 k get mc virtualization -o jsonpath='{.spec.settings.dvcr.storage.persistentVolumeClaim}'
    

    Example output:

    {"size":"58G","storageClass":"linstor-thick-data-r1"}
    
  2. Set the size:

    d8 k patch mc virtualization \
      --type merge -p '{"spec": { "settings": { "dvcr": { "storage": { "persistentVolumeClaim": {"size": "59G"}}}}}}'
    

    Example output:

    moduleconfig.deckhouse.io/virtualization patched
    
  3. Check the resizing:

    d8 k get mc virtualization -o jsonpath='{.spec.settings.dvcr.storage.persistentVolumeClaim}'
    

    Example output:

    {"size":"59G","storageClass":"linstor-thick-data-r1"}
    
  4. Check the current status of the DVCR:

    d8 k get pvc dvcr -n d8-virtualization
    

    Example output:

    NAME STATUS VOLUME                                    CAPACITY    ACCESS MODES   STORAGECLASS           AGE
    dvcr Bound  pvc-6a6cedb8-1292-4440-b789-5cc9d15bbc6b  57617188Ki  RWO            linstor-thick-data-r1  7d
    

How to create a golden image for Linux?

A golden image is a pre-configured virtual machine image that can be used to quickly create new VMs with pre-installed software and settings.

  1. Create a virtual machine, install the required software on it, and perform all necessary configurations.

  2. Install and configure qemu-guest-agent (recommended):

    • For RHEL/CentOS:

      yum install -y qemu-guest-agent
      
    • For Debian/Ubuntu:

      apt-get update
      apt-get install -y qemu-guest-agent
      
  3. Enable and start the service:

    systemctl enable qemu-guest-agent
    systemctl start qemu-guest-agent
    
  4. Set the VM run policy to runPolicy: AlwaysOnUnlessStoppedManually. This is required to be able to shut down the VM.

  5. Prepare the image. Clean unused filesystem blocks:

    fstrim -v /
    fstrim -v /boot
    
  6. Clean network settings:

    • For RHEL:

      nmcli con delete $(nmcli -t -f NAME,DEVICE con show | grep -v ^lo: | cut -d: -f1)
      rm -f /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth*
      
    • For Debian/Ubuntu:

      rm -f /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
      
  7. Clean system identifiers:

    echo -n > /etc/machine-id
    rm -f /var/lib/dbus/machine-id
    ln -s /etc/machine-id /var/lib/dbus/machine-id
    
  8. Remove SSH host keys:

    rm -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*
    
  9. Clean systemd journal:

    journalctl --vacuum-size=100M --vacuum-time=7d
    
  10. Clean package manager cache:

    • For RHEL:

      yum clean all
      
    • For Debian/Ubuntu:

      apt-get clean
      
  11. Clean temporary files:

    rm -rf /tmp/*
    rm -rf /var/tmp/*
    
  12. Clean logs:

    find /var/log -name "*.log" -type f -exec truncate -s 0 {} \;
    
  13. Clean command history:

    history -c
    

    For RHEL: reset and restore SELinux contexts (choose one of the following):

    • Option 1: Check and restore contexts immediately:

      restorecon -R /
      
    • Option 2: Schedule relabel on next boot:

      touch /.autorelabel
      
  14. Verify that /etc/fstab uses UUID or LABEL instead of device names (e.g., /dev/sdX). To check, run:

    blkid
    cat /etc/fstab
    
  15. Clean cloud-init state, logs, and seed (recommended method):

    cloud-init clean --logs --seed
    
  16. Perform final synchronization and buffer cleanup:

    sync
    echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
    
  17. Shut down the virtual machine:

    poweroff
    
  18. Create a VirtualImage resource from the prepared VM disk:

    d8 k apply -f -<<EOF
    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: VirtualImage
    metadata:
      name: <image-name>
      namespace: <namespace>
    spec:
      dataSource:
        type: ObjectRef
        objectRef:
          kind: VirtualDisk
          name: <source-disk-name>
    EOF
    

    Alternatively, create a ClusterVirtualImage to make the image available at the cluster level for all projects:

    d8 k apply -f -<<EOF
    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: ClusterVirtualImage
    metadata:
      name: <image-name>
    spec:
      dataSource:
        type: ObjectRef
        objectRef:
          kind: VirtualDisk
          name: <source-disk-name>
          namespace: <namespace>
    EOF
    
  19. Create a VM disk from the created image:

    d8 k apply -f -<<EOF
    apiVersion: virtualization.deckhouse.io/v1alpha2
    kind: VirtualDisk
    metadata:
      name: <vm-disk-name>
      namespace: <namespace>
    spec:
      dataSource:
        type: ObjectRef
        objectRef:
          kind: VirtualImage
          name: <image-name>
    EOF
    

After completing these steps, you will have a golden image that can be used to quickly create new virtual machines with pre-installed software and configurations.