Automating management tasks
- About Red Hat Ansible Automation
- Automating virtual machine creation
- Example: Ansible Playbook for creating virtual machines
You can automate OKD Virtualization management tasks by using Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform. Learn the basics by using an Ansible Playbook to create a new virtual machine.
About Red Hat Ansible Automation
Ansible is an automation tool used to configure systems, deploy software, and perform rolling updates. Ansible includes support for OKD Virtualization, and Ansible modules enable you to automate cluster management tasks such as template, persistent volume claim, and virtual machine operations.
Ansible provides a way to automate OKD Virtualization management, which you can also accomplish by using the oc
CLI tool or APIs. Ansible is unique because it allows you to integrate KubeVirt modules with other Ansible modules.
Automating virtual machine creation
You can use the kubevirt_vm
Ansible Playbook to create virtual machines in your OKD cluster using Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform.
Prerequisites
- Red Hat Ansible Engine version 2.8 or newer
Procedure
Edit an Ansible Playbook YAML file so that it includes the
kubevirt_vm
task:kubevirt_vm:
namespace:
name:
cpu_cores:
memory:
disks:
- name:
volume:
containerDisk:
image:
disk:
bus:
This snippet only includes the
kubevirt_vm
portion of the playbook.Edit the values to reflect the virtual machine you want to create, including the
namespace
, the number ofcpu_cores
, thememory
, and thedisks
. For example:kubevirt_vm:
namespace: default
name: vm1
cpu_cores: 1
memory: 64Mi
disks:
- name: containerdisk
volume:
containerDisk:
image: kubevirt/cirros-container-disk-demo:latest
disk:
bus: virtio
If you want the virtual machine to boot immediately after creation, add
state: running
to the YAML file. For example:kubevirt_vm:
namespace: default
name: vm1
state: running (1)
cpu_cores: 1
1 Changing this value to state: absent
deletes the virtual machine, if it already exists.Run the
ansible-playbook
command, using your playbook’s file name as the only argument:$ ansible-playbook create-vm.yaml
Review the output to determine if the play was successful:
Example output
(...)
TASK [Create my first VM] ************************************************************************
changed: [localhost]
PLAY RECAP ********************************************************************************************************
localhost : ok=2 changed=1 unreachable=0 failed=0 skipped=0 rescued=0 ignored=0
If you did not include
state: running
in your playbook file and you want to boot the VM now, edit the file so that it includesstate: running
and run the playbook again:$ ansible-playbook create-vm.yaml
To verify that the virtual machine was created, try to access the VM console.
Example: Ansible Playbook for creating virtual machines
You can use the kubevirt_vm
Ansible Playbook to automate virtual machine creation.
The following YAML file is an example of the kubevirt_vm
playbook. It includes sample values that you must replace with your own information if you run the playbook.
---
- name: Ansible Playbook 1
hosts: localhost
connection: local
tasks:
- name: Create my first VM
kubevirt_vm:
namespace: default
name: vm1
cpu_cores: 1
memory: 64Mi
disks:
- name: containerdisk
volume:
containerDisk:
image: kubevirt/cirros-container-disk-demo:latest
disk:
bus: virtio
Additional information