Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

Version 1 Next »

You can only attach a volume to one instances at a time.

Web Interface

Click the drop-down menu on the right hand side (in Actions column) and select MANAGE ATTACHMENTS

Select the right instance and press ATTACH VOLUME

Note the path in the Attached To column of the volume

1.Click the drop-down menu on the right hand side (in Actions column) and select MANAGE ATTACHMENTS
2.Select the right instance and press ATTACH VOLUME
3.Note the path in the Attached To column of the volume

Command-Line

Get the Server ID (Instances) and Volume ID (Volume) using command


Run


Accessing the volume

  1. Log-in to the attached instance using SSH
  2. (Optional only for new volume) Format the volume (we use ext4 here and assume the attach point is /dev/vdb) (Formatting will wipe your data)

    sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/vdb
  3. Use lsblk to confirm the device path (usually type disk). The value shown in OpenStack can be inaccurate.

    $ lsblk
    
    NAME    MAJ:MIN RM  SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
    loop0     7:0    0 73.1M  1 loop /snap/lxd/21902
    loop1     7:1    0 55.4M  1 loop /snap/core18/2128
    loop3     7:3    0 72.6M  1 loop /snap/lxd/21750
    loop4     7:4    0 61.9M  1 loop /snap/core20/1169
    loop5     7:5    0 32.5M  1 loop /snap/snapd/13640
    loop7     7:7    0 42.2M  1 loop /snap/snapd/14066
    loop8     7:8    0 55.5M  1 loop /snap/core18/2253
    loop9     7:9    0 61.9M  1 loop /snap/core20/1242
    sr0      11:0    1  470K  0 rom  /mnt/context
    vda     252:0    0   20G  0 disk
    ├─vda1  252:1    0 19.9G  0 part /
    ├─vda14 252:14   0    4M  0 part
    └─vda15 252:15   0  106M  0 part /boot/efi
    vdc     252:32   0    3G  0 disk
  4. Mount the volume (we use the folder /mnt/test-volume as example)

    sudo mkdir /mnt/test-volume
  5. Add this mount point to /etc/fstab, so it will be mounted automatically on startup 

    sudo vim /etc/fstab 
  6. Add/edit the following line: 

    /dev/vdb /mnt/test-volume ext4 defaults 0 0
  7. You still need to manually mount it now 

    sudo mount /mnt/test-volume
  8. (Optional)You may also want to change the permission of the directory using chmod to enable read/write without sudo
     chmod
  • No labels