his is a short summary of steps you can use to successfully build CentOS and Fedora images capable of take advantage of Openstack's elasticity.
In the end, you'll have images that resize the root partition automatically and small enough to serve as base for your instances.
I'm showing two different methods since for CentOS I used Linux rootfs resize and for Fedora I used cloud-utils-growpart.
For the steps shown here, be sure you have at least the following requirements already:
A Linux host of course (I used Fedora 20 x64 on a dual core machine)
libvirt, virt-manager. Get it with:
yum groupinstall -y @virtualization
Libguestfs tools. Get it with:
yum install -y libguestfs-tools-c
A CentOS 6.5 minimal ISO, you can get one from here: mirror.globo.com/centos/6.5/isos/x86_64
A Text editor if you want to change kickstarts
Special thanks to Allan St. George, Kashyap and the RDO maillist for the tips when I was asking about this topic. :) Steps to create a CentOS image
Use virt-manager to install CentOS with a small disk (I used one of 10 GB) and do a minimal install, make special note of the name as it will be used later, for this guide the name chosen is centos-6.5. Also, during installation you need to create only one partition for / in ext4 format (this means, no lvm, no swap, etc.)
Install cloud-init packages and git (this one is required to install linux rootfs resize)
yum install -y cloud-utils cloud-init parted git
Install linux rootfs resize
cd /tmp git clone https://github.com/flegmatik/linux-rootfs-resize.git cd linux-rootfs-resize ./install
Edit /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg and under cloud_init_modules add:
- resolv-conf
Add the following line to /etc/sysconfig/network (this is to avoid problems accessing the EC2 metadata service)
NOZERCONF=yes
Poweroff the vm
$ poweroff
Reset and clean the image so it can be reused without issues
$ virt-sysprep -d centos-6.5
Reduce image size by zero-in unused blocks in the virtual disk (Run as root to avoid issues changing selinux context on the final step)
$ virt-sparsify --compress /tmp/centos-6.5-working.qcow2 centos-6.5-cloud.qcow2 You're done!
The image centos-6.5-cloud.qcow2 is ready to be uploaded to Openstack.
An extra note though, virt-sparsify by default uses /tmp as temporary directory to make the sparse by creating an overlay temporary file which, depending on the original image, can be quite large, also some systems mount /tmp in tmpfs which mean it'll use your ram. If you don't have enough space you can export the variable TMPDIR pointing to a dir with enough space before runing virt-sparsify, as in:
$ export TMPDIR="/some/dir/with/enough/space"