I am using openstack to create a VM using 'nova boot' command. My image is cloud-init enabled. I pass a --user-data script which is a bash shell format for cloud-init to run during VM boot up time. All this happens successfully. Now my use-case is to re-run cloud-init to execute the same user-data script without rebooting the VM. I saw /usr/bin/cloud-init options and they do talk about running specific modules but nothing is able to make it execute the same user-data script. How can this be achieved ? Any help would be appreciated.
5 Answers
While re-running all of cloud-init without reboot isn't a recommended approach, the following commands will allow you to accomplish this on a system.
The commands have been updated so to re-run you need to clean
out the existing config:
sudo cloud-init clean --logs
cloud-init typically runs multiple boot stages in order due to systemd service dependencies. If you want to repeat that process without a reboot you can run the following 4 commands:
Detect local datasource (cloud platform):
sudo cloud-init init --local
Detect any datasources which require network up and run "cloud_init_modules" defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init init
Run all cloud_config_modules defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init modules --mode=config
Run all cloud_final_modules defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init modules --mode=final
Beware: things like ssh host keys maybe regenerated.
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2Thank you. I've been looking for a way to force cloud-init to fully run on the next boot.
cloud-init clean
is what I've been looking for. Everywhere else suggests deleting files under /var/lib/cloud, which doesn't reset SSH keys (and likely some other things). Jun 21, 2019 at 21:48
In order for cloud-init to reset, you need to execute rm -rf /var/lib/cloud/instances
.
Then re run the cloud-init start
and it will run the full boot script process again.
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12
start
does not seem to be a valid parameter on current versions Sep 11, 2019 at 12:26 -
I see no point in copypasting another answer over your one. If your one is outdated the more updated one will just get more upvotes eventually. If you don't want your answer to be then delete it but I would preserve it for the history.– NakilonJul 30, 2021 at 13:14
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Makes sense. Perhaps a note in my answer stating to check the below for more recent versions would be more appropriate?– benh57Aug 3, 2021 at 2:19
Since this keeps popping up in search results, what works for me:
Delete semaphores in
/var/lib/cloud/instances/i-xxxxxxx/sem
. Cloud-init will not re-run if these files are present.Edit
/var/lib/cloud/instances/i-xxxxxxxx/scripts/part-001
. This is your user-data script.Execute only the user scripts module of cloud-init. This will not re-download user data but execute the already downloaded (and now, modified) script from step 2.
sudo /usr/bin/cloud-init single -n cc_scripts_user
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CentOS 7.3.1611, cloud-init 0.7.5, I don't have anything in /var/lib/cloud/instances/i-xxxxxxxx/scripts @kadrach– ArtemJul 20, 2017 at 21:43
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Did you replace
i-xxxxxxxxxx
with the appropriate folder? It should be the identifier of the instance you are running this on (I've never seen more than one folder in there).– kadrachJul 21, 2017 at 6:32 -
yes I did, I figured out the issue by narrowing it down already, but cloud-init logs are way too minimalistic and very-well done– ArtemJul 23, 2017 at 1:01
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1I also have nothing inside
/var/lib/cloud/instances/i-xxxxxxxx/scripts
. I have got the correct instance, but all the user data (entered by me when creating a VM in OpenStack) is incloud-config.txt
anduser-data.txt
. When I follow the instructions, #3 doesn't work, maybe because there's nothing inside the/scripts
folder? Any ideas? @kadrach @Artem Apr 5, 2019 at 13:44 -
1Just to add a precision. In the case you want to run the module
cc_scripts_user
, delete the corresponding semaphore withrm /var/lib/cloud/instance/sem/config_cc_scripts_user
Nov 21, 2019 at 15:33
Given that this post was actively touched 6 months ago I wanted to provide a more complete answer here from cloud-init upstream.
The original question: "how to re-run a user-data script again at a later time with cloud-init" Generally user-scripts are only run once per-instance by the config module config-user-scripts. If the instance-id in metadata doesn't change it won't re-run.
The per-instance semaphores can be bypassed with the following command line by telling it to run the user-scripts module regardless of instance-id:
sudo cloud-init single --name scripts-user --frequency always
Per the other suggesting to re-running all of cloud-init without system reboot. It isn't a recommended approach because some parts of cloud-init are run at systemd generator timeframe to detect new datasource types. That said, the following commands will allow you to accomplish this without reboot on a system.
cloud-init supports a clean
subcommand to remove all semaphore files and allow cloud-init to re-run all config modules again. Beware that this will mean SSH host-keys are regenerated and .ssh config files re-written so it could impact your ability to get back into the VM.
To clean all semaphores so cloud-init modules will all re-run on next boot:
sudo cloud-init clean --logs
cloud-init typically runs multiple boot stages in sequence due to systemd service dependencies. If you want to repeat that process without a reboot you can run the following 4 commands:
Detect local datasource (cloud platform):
sudo cloud-init init --local
Detect any datasources which require network up and run "cloud_init_modules" defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init init
Run all cloud_config_modules defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init modules --mode=config
Run all cloud_final_modules defined in /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg:
sudo cloud-init modules --mode=final
To run the packages module of cloud-config part of cloud-init, you can run
# cloud-init-cfg all config
To run the runcmd module of cloud-config part of cloud-init, you can run
# cloud-init-cfg all final
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1CentOS 7.3.1611, cloud-init 0.7.5, I don't have cloud-init-cfg on filesystem @jrwren– ArtemJul 20, 2017 at 21:48
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1