Deploy a virtual machine from a template
Introduction
This guide will show you how to utilize Ansible to clone a virtual machine from already existing VMware template or existing VMware guest.
Scenario Requirements
-
Software
- Ansible 2.5 or later must be installed
- The Python module
Pyvmomi
must be installed on the Ansible (or Target host if not executing against localhost) - Installing the latest
Pyvmomi
viapip
is recommended [as the OS provided packages are usually out of date and incompatible]
-
Hardware
- vCenter Server with at least one ESXi server
-
Access / Credentials
- Ansible (or the target server) must have network access to the either vCenter server or the ESXi server you will be deploying to
- Username and Password
-
Administrator user with following privileges
-
Datastore.AllocateSpace
on the destination datastore or datastore folder -
Network.Assign
on the network to which the virtual machine will be assigned -
Resource.AssignVMToPool
on the destination host, cluster, or resource pool -
VirtualMachine.Config.AddNewDisk
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.AddRemoveDevice
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Interact.PowerOn
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Inventory.CreateFromExisting
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Provisioning.Clone
on the virtual machine you are cloning -
VirtualMachine.Provisioning.Customize
on the virtual machine or virtual machine folder if you are customizing the guest operating system -
VirtualMachine.Provisioning.DeployTemplate
on the template you are using -
VirtualMachine.Provisioning.ReadCustSpecs
on the root vCenter Server if you are customizing the guest operating system
Depending on your requirements, you could also need one or more of the following privileges:
-
VirtualMachine.Config.CPUCount
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.Memory
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.DiskExtend
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.Annotation
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.AdvancedConfig
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.EditDevice
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.Resource
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.Settings
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Config.UpgradeVirtualHardware
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Interact.SetCDMedia
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Interact.SetFloppyMedia
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder -
VirtualMachine.Interact.DeviceConnection
on the datacenter or virtual machine folder
-
Assumptions
- All variable names and VMware object names are case sensitive
- VMware allows creation of virtual machine and templates with same name across datacenters and within datacenters
- You need to use Python 2.7.9 version in order to use
validate_certs
option, as this version is capable of changing the SSL verification behaviours
Caveats
- Hosts in the ESXi cluster must have access to the datastore that the template resides on.
- Multiple templates with the same name will cause module failures.
- In order to utilize Guest Customization, VMWare Tools must be installed on the template. For Linux, the
open-vm-tools
package is recommended, and it requires thatPerl
be installed.
Example Description
In this use case / example, we will be selecting a virtual machine template and cloning it into a specific folder in our Datacenter / Cluster. The following Ansible playbook showcases the basic parameters that are needed for this.
--- - name: Create a VM from a template hosts: localhost gather_facts: no tasks: - name: Clone the template vmware_guest: hostname: "{{ vcenter_ip }}" username: "{{ vcenter_username }}" password: "{{ vcenter_password }}" validate_certs: False name: testvm_2 template: template_el7 datacenter: "{{ datacenter_name }}" folder: /DC1/vm state: poweredon cluster: "{{ cluster_name }}" wait_for_ip_address: yes
Since Ansible utilizes the VMware API to perform actions, in this use case we will be connecting directly to the API from our localhost. This means that our playbooks will not be running from the vCenter or ESXi Server. We do not necessarily need to collect facts about our localhost, so the gather_facts
parameter will be disabled. You can run these modules against another server that would then connect to the API if your localhost does not have access to vCenter. If so, the required Python modules will need to be installed on that target server.
To begin, there are a few bits of information we will need. First and foremost is the hostname of the ESXi server or vCenter server. After this, you will need the username and password for this server. For now, you will be entering these directly, but in a more advanced playbook this can be abstracted out and stored in a more secure fashion using ansible-vault or using Ansible Tower credentials. If your vCenter or ESXi server is not setup with proper CA certificates that can be verified from the Ansible server, then it is necessary to disable validation of these certificates by using the validate_certs
parameter. To do this you need to set validate_certs=False
in your playbook.
Now you need to supply the information about the virtual machine which will be created. Give your virtual machine a name, one that conforms to all VMware requirements for naming conventions. Next, select the display name of the template from which you want to clone new virtual machine. This must match what’s displayed in VMware Web UI exactly. Then you can specify a folder to place this new virtual machine in. This path can either be a relative path or a full path to the folder including the Datacenter. You may need to specify a state for the virtual machine. This simply tells the module which action you want to take, in this case you will be ensure that the virtual machine exists and is powered on. An optional parameter is wait_for_ip_address
, this will tell Ansible to wait for the virtual machine to fully boot up and VMware Tools is running before completing this task.
What to expect
- You will see a bit of JSON output after this playbook completes. This output shows various parameters that are returned from the module and from vCenter about the newly created VM.
{ "changed": true, "instance": { "annotation": "", "current_snapshot": null, "customvalues": {}, "guest_consolidation_needed": false, "guest_question": null, "guest_tools_status": "guestToolsNotRunning", "guest_tools_version": "0", "hw_cores_per_socket": 1, "hw_datastores": [ "ds_215" ], "hw_esxi_host": "192.0.2.44", "hw_eth0": { "addresstype": "assigned", "ipaddresses": null, "label": "Network adapter 1", "macaddress": "00:50:56:8c:19:f4", "macaddress_dash": "00-50-56-8c-19-f4", "portgroup_key": "dvportgroup-17", "portgroup_portkey": "0", "summary": "DVSwitch: 50 0c 5b 22 b6 68 ab 89-fc 0b 59 a4 08 6e 80 fa" }, "hw_files": [ "[ds_215] testvm_2/testvm_2.vmx", "[ds_215] testvm_2/testvm_2.vmsd", "[ds_215] testvm_2/testvm_2.vmdk" ], "hw_folder": "/DC1/vm", "hw_guest_full_name": null, "hw_guest_ha_state": null, "hw_guest_id": null, "hw_interfaces": [ "eth0" ], "hw_is_template": false, "hw_memtotal_mb": 512, "hw_name": "testvm_2", "hw_power_status": "poweredOff", "hw_processor_count": 2, "hw_product_uuid": "420cb25b-81e8-8d3b-dd2d-a439ee54fcc5", "hw_version": "vmx-13", "instance_uuid": "500cd53b-ed57-d74e-2da8-0dc0eddf54d5", "ipv4": null, "ipv6": null, "module_hw": true, "snapshots": [] }, "invocation": { "module_args": { "annotation": null, "cdrom": {}, "cluster": "DC1_C1", "customization": {}, "customization_spec": null, "customvalues": [], "datacenter": "DC1", "disk": [], "esxi_hostname": null, "folder": "/DC1/vm", "force": false, "guest_id": null, "hardware": {}, "hostname": "192.0.2.44", "is_template": false, "linked_clone": false, "name": "testvm_2", "name_match": "first", "networks": [], "password": "VALUE_SPECIFIED_IN_NO_LOG_PARAMETER", "port": 443, "resource_pool": null, "snapshot_src": null, "state": "present", "state_change_timeout": 0, "template": "template_el7", "username": "[email protected]", "uuid": null, "validate_certs": false, "vapp_properties": [], "wait_for_ip_address": true } } }
- State is changed to
True
which notifies that the virtual machine is built using given template. The module will not complete until the clone task in VMware is finished. This can take some time depending on your environment. - If you utilize the
wait_for_ip_address
parameter, then it will also increase the clone time as it will wait until virtual machine boots into the OS and an IP Address has been assigned to the given NIC.
Troubleshooting
Things to inspect
- Check if the values provided for username and password are correct
- Check if the datacenter you provided is available
- Check if the template specified exists and you have permissions to access the datastore
- Ensure the full folder path you specified already exists. It will not create folders automatically for you
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.8/scenario_guides/vmware_scenarios/scenario_clone_template.html