Hello,
I downloaded the OpenStack Fedora 20 and the username is supposed to be fedora; however, no password has been assiged to this username. Does anyone now what the username and password is to "Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2"?
Thank you,
Brian
Hello Brian, the image hasn't default password, you might upload your public key (from your laptop or workstation) to Openstack first, then create the instance with your key and connect via ssh to fedora user, good luck
2014-11-13 19:54 GMT-05:00 Brian Afshar brianafshar@gmail.com:
Hello,
I downloaded the OpenStack Fedora 20 and the username is supposed to be fedora; however, no password has been assiged to this username. Does anyone now what the username and password is to "Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2"?
Thank you,
Brian
infrastructure mailing list infrastructure@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/infrastructure
On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 04:54:30PM -0800, Brian Afshar wrote:
I downloaded the OpenStack Fedora 20 and the username is supposed to be fedora; however, no password has been assiged to this username. Does anyone now what the username and password is to "Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2"?
There's no username. It's intended to boot in a cloud environment like Amazon EC2 or OpenStack, where there is a metadata service which provides an ssh public key.
To test in a VM, you can either set a password locally (using guestfish or virt-customize from libguestfs-tools), or you can run a little metadata service locally.
On 11/14/2014 03:53 AM, Matthew Miller wrote:
On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 04:54:30PM -0800, Brian Afshar wrote:
I downloaded the OpenStack Fedora 20 and the username is supposed to be fedora; however, no password has been assiged to this username. Does anyone now what the username and password is to "Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2"?
There's no username. It's intended to boot in a cloud environment like Amazon EC2 or OpenStack, where there is a metadata service which provides an ssh public key.
To test in a VM, you can either set a password locally (using guestfish or virt-customize from libguestfs-tools), or you can run a little metadata service locally.
If you want to test it locally your best bet is libguestfs, as Matthew pointed out.
To change the root password [0]:
virt-sysprep --root-password password:1234 -a Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2
To disable cloud init services [1]:
guestfish -a Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2 -i ln-sf /dev/null /etc/systemd/system/cloud-init.service
[0] http://rwmj.wordpress.com/2013/08/02/new-in-virt-sysprep-set-root-and-user-p... [1] http://rwmj.wordpress.com/2013/12/10/masking-systemd-services-in-a-guest/
On 14/11/14 01:54, Brian Afshar wrote:
Hello,
I downloaded the OpenStack Fedora 20 and the username is supposed to be fedora; however, no password has been assiged to this username. Does anyone now what the username and password is to "Fedora-x86_64-20-20140407-sda.qcow2"?
Usually, your ssh key is injected into the image, esp. when using OpenStack services.
Matthias
infrastructure@lists.fedoraproject.org