Chapter 3. Deploying a Red Hat Enterprise Linux image as a Google Compute Engine instance on Google Cloud Platform

To deploy a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9) as a Google Compute Engine (GCE) instance on Google Cloud Platform (GCP), follow the information below. This chapter:

  • Discusses your options for choosing an image
  • Lists or refers to system requirements for your host system and virtual machine (VM)
  • Provides procedures for creating a custom VM from an ISO image, uploading it to GCE, and launching an instance
Note

For a list of Red Hat product certifications for GCP, see Red Hat on Google Cloud Platform.

Important

You can create a custom VM from an ISO image, but Red Hat recommends that you use the Red Hat Image Builder product to create customized images for use on specific cloud providers. See Composing a Customized RHEL System Image for more information.

Prerequisites

  • You need a Red Hat Customer Portal account to complete the procedures in this chapter.
  • Create an account with GCP to access the Google Cloud Platform Console. See Google Cloud for more information.

3.1. Red Hat Enterprise Linux image options on GCP

The following table lists image choices for RHEL 9 on Google Cloud Platform and the differences in the image options.

Table 3.1. Image options

Image optionSubscriptionsSample scenarioConsiderations

Deploy a Red Hat Gold Image.

Use your existing Red Hat subscriptions.

Select a Red Hat Gold Image on Google Cloud Platform. For details on Gold Images and how to access them on Google Cloud Platform, see the Red Hat Cloud Access Reference Guide.

The subscription includes the Red Hat product cost; you pay Google for all other instance costs. Red Hat provides support directly for custom RHEL images.

Deploy a custom image that you move to GCP.

Use your existing Red Hat subscriptions.

Upload your custom image and attach your subscriptions.

The subscription includes the Red Hat product cost; you pay all other instance costs. Red Hat provides support directly for custom RHEL images.

Deploy an existing GCP image that includes RHEL.

The GCP images include a Red Hat product.

Choose a RHEL image when you launch an instance on the GCP Compute Engine, or choose an image from the Google Cloud Platform Marketplace.

You pay GCP hourly on a pay-as-you-go model. Such images are called "on-demand" images. GCP offers support for on-demand images through a support agreement.

Note

You can create a custom image for GCP by using Red Hat Image Builder. See Composing a Customized RHEL System Image for more information.

Important

You cannot convert an on-demand instance to a custom RHEL instance. To change from an on-demand image to a custom RHEL bring-your-own-subscription (BYOS) image:

  1. Create a new custom RHEL instance and migrate data from your on-demand instance.
  2. Cancel your on-demand instance after you migrate your data to avoid double billing.

3.2. Understanding base images

To create a base VM from an ISO image, you can use preconfigured base images and their configuration settings.

3.2.1. Using a custom base image

To manually configure a virtual machine (VM), first create a base (starter) VM image. Then, you can modify configuration settings and add the packages the VM requires to operate on the cloud. You can make additional configuration changes for your specific application after you upload the image.

Additional resources

3.2.2. Virtual machine configuration settings

Cloud VMs must have the following configuration settings.

Table 3.2. VM configuration settings

SettingRecommendation

ssh

ssh must be enabled to provide remote access to your VMs.

dhcp

The primary virtual adapter should be configured for dhcp.

3.3. Creating a base VM from an ISO image

To create a RHEL 9 base image from an ISO image, enable your host machine for virtualization and create a RHEL virtual machine (VM).

Prerequisites

3.3.1. Creating a VM from the RHEL ISO image

Procedure

  1. Ensure that you have enabled your host machine for virtualization. See Enabling virtualization in RHEL 9 for information and procedures.
  2. Create and start a basic Red Hat Enterprise Linux VM. For instructions, see Creating virtual machines.

    1. If you use the command line to create your VM, ensure that you set the default memory and CPUs to the capacity you want for the VM. Set your virtual network interface to virtio.

      For example, the following command creates a kvmtest VM by using the /home/username/Downloads/rhel9.iso image:

      # virt-install \
          --name kvmtest --memory 2048 --vcpus 2 \
          --cdrom /home/username/Downloads/rhel9.iso,bus=virtio \
          --os-variant=rhel9.0
    2. If you use the web console to create your VM, follow the procedure in Creating virtual machines by using the web console, with these caveats:

      • Do not check Immediately Start VM.
      • Change your Memory size to your preferred settings.
      • Before you start the installation, ensure that you have changed Model under Virtual Network Interface Settings to virtio and change your vCPUs to the capacity settings you want for the VM.

3.3.2. Completing the RHEL installation

To finish the installation of a RHEL system that you want to deploy on Amazon Web Services (AWS), customize the Installation Summary view, begin the installation, and enable root access once the VM launches.

Procedure

  1. Choose the language you want to use during the installation process.
  2. On the Installation Summary view:

    1. Click Software Selection and check Minimal Install.
    2. Click Done.
    3. Click Installation Destination and check Custom under Storage Configuration.

      • Verify at least 500 MB for /boot. You can use the remaining space for root /.
      • Standard partitions are recommended, but you can use Logical Volume Management (LVM).
      • You can use xfs, ext4, or ext3 for the file system.
      • Click Done when you are finished with changes.
  3. Click Begin Installation.
  4. Set a Root Password. Create other users as applicable.
  5. Reboot the VM and log in as root once the installation completes.
  6. Configure the image.

    1. Register the VM and enable the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 repository.

      # subscription-manager register --auto-attach
    2. Ensure that the cloud-init package is installed and enabled.

      # dnf install cloud-init
      # systemctl enable --now cloud-init.service
  7. Power down the VM.

3.4. Uploading the RHEL image to GCP

To upload your RHEL 9 image to Google Cloud Platform (GCP), follow the procedures in this section.

3.4.1. Creating a new project on GCP

Complete the following steps to create a new project on Google Cloud Platform (GCP).

Prerequisites

  • You must have an account with GCP. If you do not, see Google Cloud for more information.

Procedure

  1. Launch the GCP Console.
  2. Click the drop-down menu to the right of Google Cloud Platform.
  3. From the pop-up menu, click NEW PROJECT.
  4. From the New Project window, enter a name for your new project.
  5. Check Organization. Click the drop-down menu to change the organization, if necessary.
  6. Confirm the Location of your parent organization or folder. Click Browse to search for and change this value, if necessary.
  7. Click CREATE to create your new GCP project.

    Note

    Once you have installed the Google Cloud SDK, you can use the gcloud projects create CLI command to create a project. For example:

    # gcloud projects create my-gcp-project3 --name project3

    The example creates a project with the project ID my-gcp-project3 and the project name project3. See gcloud project create for more information.

3.4.2. Installing the Google Cloud SDK

Complete the following steps to install the Google Cloud SDK.

Procedure

  1. Follow the GCP instructions for downloading and extracting the Google Cloud SDK archive. See the GCP document Quickstart for Linux for details.
  2. Follow the same instructions for initializing the Google Cloud SDK.

    Note

    Once you have initialized the Google Cloud SDK, you can use the gcloud CLI commands to perform tasks and obtain information about your project and instances. For example, you can display project information with the gcloud compute project-info describe --project <project-name> command.

3.4.3. Creating SSH keys for Google Compute Engine

Perform the following procedure to generate and register SSH keys with GCE so that you can SSH directly into an instance by using its public IP address.

Procedure

  1. Use the ssh-keygen command to generate an SSH key pair for use with GCE.

    # ssh-keygen -t rsa -f ~/.ssh/google_compute_engine
  2. From the GCP Console Dashboard page, click the Navigation menu to the left of the Google Cloud Console banner and select Compute Engine and then select Metadata.
  3. Click SSH Keys and then click Edit.
  4. Enter the output generated from the ~/.ssh/google_compute_engine.pub file and click Save.

    You can now connect to your instance by using standard SSH.

    # ssh -i ~/.ssh/google_compute_engine <username>@<instance_external_ip>
Note

You can run the gcloud compute config-ssh command to populate your config file with aliases for your instances. The aliases allow simple SSH connections by instance name. For information about the gcloud compute config-ssh command, see gcloud compute config-ssh.

3.4.4. Creating a storage bucket in GCP Storage

Importing to GCP requires a GCP Storage Bucket. Complete the following steps to create a bucket.

Procedure

  1. If you are not already logged in to GCP, log in with the following command.

    # gcloud auth login
  2. Create a storage bucket.

    # gsutil mb gs://bucket_name
    Note

    Alternatively, you can use the Google Cloud Console to create a bucket. See Create a bucket for information.

Additional resources

3.4.5. Converting and uploading your image to your GCP Bucket

Complete the following procedure to convert and upload your image to your GCP Bucket. The samples are representative; they convert an qcow2 image to raw format and then tar that image for upload.

Procedure

  1. Run the qemu-img command to convert your image. The converted image must have the name disk.raw.

    # qemu-img convert -f qcow2 -O raw rhel-{ProductNumber}.0-sample.qcow2 disk.raw
  2. Tar the image.

    # tar --format=oldgnu -Sczf disk.raw.tar.gz disk.raw
  3. Upload the image to the bucket you created previously. Upload could take a few minutes.

    # gsutil cp disk.raw.tar.gz gs://bucket_name
  4. From the Google Cloud Platform home screen, click the collapsed menu icon and select Storage and then select Browser.
  5. Click the name of your bucket.

    The tarred image is listed under your bucket name.

    Note

    You can also upload your image by using the GCP Console. To do so, click the name of your bucket and then click Upload files.

3.4.6. Creating an image from the object in the GCP bucket

Perform the following procedure to create an image from the object in your GCP bucket.

Procedure

  1. Run the following command to create an image for GCE. Specify the name of the image you are creating, the bucket name, and the name of the tarred image.

    # gcloud compute images create my-image-name --source-uri gs://my-bucket-name/disk.raw.tar.gz
    Note

    Alternatively, you can use the Google Cloud Console to create an image. See Creating, deleting, and deprecating custom images for more information.

  2. Optionally, find the image in the GCP Console.

    1. Click the Navigation menu to the left of the Google Cloud Console banner.
    2. Select Compute Engine and then Images.

3.4.7. Creating a Google Compute Engine instance from an image

Complete the following steps to configure a GCE VM instance by using the GCP Console.

Note

The following procedure provides instructions for creating a basic VM instance by using the GCP Console. See Creating and starting a VM instance for more information about GCE VM instances and their configuration options.

Procedure

  1. From the GCP Console Dashboard page, click the Navigation menu to the left of the Google Cloud Console banner and select Compute Engine and then select Images.
  2. Select your image.
  3. Click Create Instance.
  4. On the Create an instance page, enter a Name for your instance.
  5. Choose a Region and Zone.
  6. Choose a Machine configuration that meets or exceeds the requirements of your workload.
  7. Ensure that Boot disk specifies the name of your image.
  8. Optionally, under Firewall, select Allow HTTP traffic or Allow HTTPS traffic.
  9. Click Create.

    Note

    These are the minimum configuration options necessary to create a basic instance. Review additional options based on your application requirements.

  10. Find your image under VM instances.
  11. From the GCP Console Dashboard, click the Navigation menu to the left of the Google Cloud Console banner and select Compute Engine and then select VM instances.

    Note

    Alternatively, you can use the gcloud compute instances create CLI command to create a GCE VM instance from an image. A simple example follows.

    gcloud compute instances create myinstance3 --zone=us-central1-a --image test-iso2-image

    The example creates a VM instance named myinstance3 in zone us-central1-a based upon the existing image test-iso2-image. See gcloud compute instances create for more information.

3.4.8. Connecting to your instance

Perform the following procedure to connect to your GCE instance using its public IP address.

Procedure

  1. Run the following command to ensure that your instance is running. The command lists information about your GCE instance, including whether the instance is running, and, if so, the public IP address of the running instance.

    # gcloud compute instances list
  2. Connect to your instance by using standard SSH. The example uses the google_compute_engine key created earlier.

    # ssh -i ~/.ssh/google_compute_engine <user_name>@<instance_external_ip>
    Note

    GCP offers a number of ways to SSH into your instance. See Connecting to instances for more information. You can also connect to your instance using the root account and password you set previously.

3.4.9. Attaching Red Hat subscriptions

Using the subscription-manager command, you can register and attach your Red Hat subscription to a RHEL instance.

Prerequisites

  • You must have enabled your subscriptions.

Procedure

  1. Register your system.

    # subscription-manager register --auto-attach
  2. Attach your subscriptions.

  3. Optional: To collect various system metrics about the instance in the Red Hat Hybrid Cloud Console, you can register the instance with Red Hat Insights.

    # insights-client register --display-name <display-name-value>

    For information on further configuration of Red Hat Insights, see Client Configuration Guide for Red Hat Insights.

3.5. Additional resources