Use one of the following methods to stop and start an instance.
Pause and unpause an instance
To pause an instance, run the following command:
$ openstack server pause INSTANCE_NAME
This command stores the state of the VM in RAM. A paused instance continues to run in a frozen state.
To unpause an instance, run the following command:
$ openstack server unpause INSTANCE_NAME
Suspend and resume an instance
To initiate a hypervisor-level suspend operation, run the following command:
$ openstack server suspend INSTANCE_NAME
To resume a suspended instance, run the following command:
$ openstack server resume INSTANCE_NAME
Shelve and unshelve an instance
Shelving is useful if you have an instance that you are not using, but would like retain in your list of servers. For example, you can stop an instance at the end of a work week, and resume work again at the start of the next week. All associated data and resources are kept; however, anything still in memory is not retained. If a shelved instance is no longer needed, it can also be entirely removed.
You can run the following shelving tasks:
-
Shelve an instance - Shuts down the instance, and stores it together with associated data and resources (a snapshot is taken if not volume backed). Anything in memory is lost.
$ openstack server shelve SERVERNAMENote: By default, the openstack server shelve command gives the guest operating system a chance to perform a controlled shutdown before the instance is powered off. The shutdown behavior is configured by the shutdown_timeout parameter that can be set in the nova.conf file. Its value stands for the overall period (in seconds) a guest operation system is allowed to complete the shutdown. The default timeout is 60 seconds.
The timeout value can be overridden on a per image basis by means of os_shutdown_timeout that is an image metadata setting allowing different types of operating systems to specify how much time they need to shut down cleanly. -
Unshelve an instance - Restores the instance.
$ openstack server unshelve SERVERNAME