Configuring stateful IP addresses in MIGs


By configuring stateful IP addresses in a managed instance group (MIG), you ensure that IP addresses are preserved when VM instances in the group are autohealed, updated, and recreated.

You can preserve internal and external IPv4 addresses. You can configure IP addresses to be assigned automatically or assign specific IP addresses to each VM instance in a MIG.

Before you begin

  • Review when to use stateful MIGs and how stateful MIGs work.
  • If you haven't already, set up authentication. Authentication is the process by which your identity is verified for access to Google Cloud services and APIs. To run code or samples from a local development environment, you can authenticate to Compute Engine as follows.

    Select the tab for how you plan to use the samples on this page:

    Console

    When you use the Google Cloud console to access Google Cloud services and APIs, you don't need to set up authentication.

    gcloud

    1. Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:

      gcloud init
    2. Set a default region and zone.

    Terraform

    To use the Terraform samples on this page from a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.

    1. Install the Google Cloud CLI.
    2. To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:

      gcloud init
    3. Create local authentication credentials for your Google Account:

      gcloud auth application-default login

    For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

    REST

    To use the REST API samples on this page in a local development environment, you use the credentials you provide to the gcloud CLI.

      Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:

      gcloud init

Limitations

A MIG with stateful IP addresses has the following limitations:

  • IPv6 addresses are not supported.

  • Internal IP addresses are not supported in networks that have no subnetworks–for example, legacy networks.

A MIG with stateful configuration—a stateful MIG—has the following limitations:

  • You cannot use autoscaling if your MIG has stateful configuration.
  • If you want to use automated rolling updates, you must set the replacement method to RECREATE.
  • For stateful regional MIGs, you must disable proactive redistribution (set the redistribution type to NONE) to prevent deletion of stateful instances by automatic cross-zone redistribution.
  • If you use an all-instances configuration to override instance template properties, you cannot specify those properties in any per-instance configuration and at the same time in the group's all-instances configuration.

Pricing

You are charged for external IP addresses according to networking pricing.

When to use stateful IP addresses

Preserving instances' IP addresses is useful in the following scenarios:

  • Your application requires an IP address to remain static after it has been assigned—for example, Kafka.
  • Your application's configuration depends on specific IP addresses—for example, a DNS server.
  • Users, including other applications, access your server through a dedicated static IP address—for example, a file server.
  • You need to migrate existing workloads without changing network configuration.

Configuring stateful IP addresses for all VMs in a group

Configuring stateful IP addresses for all VMs in a MIG is useful in the following scenarios:

  • Your application requires an IP address to remain static after it has been assigned. But your application doesn't require assigning specific IP addresses to specific instances. IP addresses can be auto-assigned on instance creation.
  • Your users, including other applications, access your servers through static IP addresses that you publish after deploying your application.
  • You would like to benefit from instance autohealing and automated updates while preserving the static IP address that is auto-assigned on instance creation.

To maintain static internal or external IP addresses for existing and future VM instances in the group, configure that in the stateful policy.

When you add stateful IP address configuration to the group's stateful policy, the MIG applies the configuration in the following way:

  • For new instances, the MIG automatically assigns and reserves static IP addresses.
  • For existing instances, the MIG promotes in-use ephemeral internal or external IP addresses to static addresses by reserving the corresponding static IP addresses.
  • For existing instances without external IP addresses, the MIG assigns and reserves static IP addresses, and adds access configuration to the corresponding network interface with the following default values:

    "accessConfigs": [
      {
        "kind": "compute#accessConfig",
        "name": "External NAT",
        "natIP": "XX.XX.XX.XX",
        "networkTier": "PREMIUM",
        "type": "ONE_TO_ONE_NAT"
      }
    ]
    

To reserve a static IP address, the MIG creates an Address resource.

Configuring stateful IP addresses on MIG creation

Use the Google Cloud console, gcloud CLI, Terraform, or REST.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance groups page.

    Go to Instance groups

  2. Select your project and click Continue.

  3. Click Create instance group.

  4. Select New managed instance group (stateful).

  5. Specify a Name for the instance group.

  6. Select an Instance template.

  7. Under Number of instances, specify the number of instances that you want to include in the managed instance group.

  8. Under Stateful configuration, expand the External IP and the Internal IP that you want to make stateful.

    1. Under Stateful, select Yes.
    2. From the On permanent instance deletion drop-down, select the action to perform on the stateful IP address when the VM instance is deleted. The available options are:
      • Detach IP: (Default.) Unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
      • Delete IP: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group—for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.
    3. After you finish the stateful configuration, click Done.
  9. Click Create.

gcloud

When creating a MIG, to specify which IP addresses in network interfaces from the instance template should be stateful, use one or multiple of the following flags with the gcloud compute instance-groups managed create command:

  • --stateful-internal-ip to mark an internal IP address of a given network interface as stateful.
  • --stateful-external-ip to mark an external IP address of a given network interface as stateful.
gcloud compute instance-groups managed create INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --template INSTANCE_TEMPLATE \
    --size SIZE \
    --instance-redistribution-type NONE \
    --stateful-internal-ip [enabled | interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    --stateful-external-ip [enabled | interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG to create.
  • INSTANCE_TEMPLATE: The name of the instance template to use when creating new instances.
  • SIZE: The initial number of instances you need in this group.
  • NI_NAME: (Optional.) Network interface name. If not provided, then the enabled option is required and the primary network interface named nic0 is assumed by default. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify this flag for each IP in each network interface.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to the associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • never: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • on-permanent-instance-deletion: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

Example

You need to create a regional group of VM instances with static internal IP addresses for the default and custom networks and static external IP addresses only for the default network. You want the addresses to be assigned automatically, but need them to be preserved through instance autohealing, updates, and recreation events. You store instance configuration in an instance template named node-template.

To create the group, run the following command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed create example-group \
    --region us-east1 \
    --template node-template \
    --base-instance-name node \
    --instance-redistribution-type NONE \
    --size 3 \
    --stateful-internal-ip interface-name=nic0,auto-delete=on-permanent-instance-deletion
    --stateful-internal-ip interface-name=nic1,auto-delete=on-permanent-instance-deletion
    --stateful-external-ip enabled,auto-delete=on-permanent-instance-deletion

The internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and the external IP within the nic0 network interface are configured as stateful for all instances in the group. The group automatically reserves static internal and external IP addresses for each instance. Because the auto-delete flag is set to on-permanent-instance-deletion, the group will automatically delete the static IP address reservations when you delete the associated instances or the whole group.

To verify that the internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and the external IP within the nic0 network interface are configured as stateful, run the following command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed describe example-group \
    --zone us-east1-c

The output resembles the following:

baseInstanceName: node
...
name: example-group
...
statefulPolicy:
  preservedState:
    internalIPs:
      nic0:
        autoDelete: ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION
      nic1:
        autoDelete: ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION
    externalIPs:
      nic0:
        autoDelete: ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION
...

You can see that the group's stateful policy declares internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and external IPs within the nic0 network interface as stateful with the rule to delete static IP reservations on permanent instance deletion.

Terraform

If you haven't already created an instance template, which specifies the machine type, boot disk image, network, and other VM properties that you want for each VM in your MIG, create an instance template.

When creating a MIG, to specify which IP addresses within network interfaces from the instance template should be stateful, use one or multiple of the following blocks:

  • stateful_internal_ip to mark an internal IP address of a given network interface as stateful.
  • stateful_external_ip to mark an external IP address of a given network interface as stateful.

The following sample configures stateful IP addresses when creating a regional MIG. For more information about the resource used in the sample, see google_compute_region_instance_group_manager resource.

resource "google_compute_region_instance_group_manager" "default" {
  name               = "example-group"
  base_instance_name = "node"
  target_size        = 3
  region             = "us-east1"

  version {
    instance_template = google_compute_instance_template.default.id
    name              = "primary"
  }
  update_policy {
    type                         = "OPPORTUNISTIC"
    minimal_action               = "REFRESH"
    instance_redistribution_type = "NONE"
    max_unavailable_fixed        = 3
  }
  stateful_internal_ip {
    interface_name = "nic0"
    delete_rule    = "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION"
  }
  stateful_internal_ip {
    interface_name = "nic1"
    delete_rule    = "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION"
  }
  stateful_external_ip {
    interface_name = "nic0"
    delete_rule    = "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION"
  }
}

To learn how to apply or remove a Terraform configuration, see Basic Terraform commands.

REST

When creating a MIG, to specify which IP addresses within network interfaces from the instance template should be stateful, include them in the statefulPolicy field in the request body of the instanceGroupManagers.insert or regionInstanceGroupManagers.insert method:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers

{
  "name": "INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME",
  "versions": [
    {
      "instanceTemplate": "global/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE"
    }
  ],
  "targetSize": SIZE,
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "internalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": {"autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE" }
      },
      "externalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": {"autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE" }
      }
    }
  },
  "updatePolicy": {
    "instanceRedistributionType": "NONE"
  }
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT: The project ID for the request.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • NAME: The name of the MIG to create.
  • INSTANCE_TEMPLATE: The name of the instance template to use when creating new instances.
  • SIZE: The initial number of instances you need in this group.
  • NI_NAME: (Optional.) Network interface name. If not provided, then the enabled option is required and the primary network interface named nic0 is assumed by default. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • NEVER: (Default) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

Example

You need to create a regional group of VM instances with static internal IP addresses for the default and custom networks and static external IP addresses only for the default network. You want the addresses to be assigned automatically, but need them to be preserved through instance autohealing, updates, and recreation events. You store instance configuration in an instance template named node-template.

To create the group, use the regionInstanceGroupManagers.insert method:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers

{
  "name": "example-group",
  "baseInstanceName": "node",
  "versions": [
    {
      "instanceTemplate": "global/instanceTemplates/node-template"
    }
  ],
  "targetSize": 3,
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "internalIPs": {
        "nic0": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" },
        "nic1": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" }
      }
      "externalIPs": {
        "nic0": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" }
      }
    }
  },
  "updatePolicy": {
    "instanceRedistributionType": "NONE"
  }
}

The internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and the external IPs within the nic0 network interface are configured as stateful for all instances in the group. The group automatically reserves static internal and external IP addresses for each instance. Because the auto-delete field is set to ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION, the group will automatically delete the static IP address reservations when you delete associated instances or the whole group.

Use the regionInstanceGroupManagers.get method to verify that the internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and external IPs within the nic0 network interface are configured in the stateful policy of the new regionInstanceGroupManagers resource:

GET https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/example-group

The response contains the configured stateful policy:

{
  "name": "example-group",
  "baseInstanceName": "node",
  ...
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "internalIPs": {
        "nic0": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" },
        "nic1": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" }
      }
      "externalIPs": {
        "nic0": {"autoDelete": "ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION" }
      }
    }
  }
  ...
}

You can see that the group's stateful policy declares internal IPs within the nic0 and nic1 network interfaces and external IPs within the nic0 network interface as stateful with the rule to delete the associated static IP address reservations on permanent instance deletion.

Setting and updating stateful configuration for IP addresses in existing MIG

If you run a workload on a stateless MIG (a MIG without any stateful configuration) and the workload requires static IP addresses, you can configure IP addresses already assigned to the managed VM instances to become stateful. This ensures that the IP addresses of your existing VMs are preserved on instance autohealing, updates, and recreation events. You can optionally keep the static IP address reservations after the instances have been deleted.

By configuring a stateful policy for IP addresses in an existing MIG, you can do the following:

  • Configure IP addresses as stateful for all existing and future instances in the group. This promotes the corresponding ephemeral IP addresses of all existing instances to static IP addresses.
  • Update the existing stateful configuration for IP addresses.

The MIG applies the updated configuration in the stateful policy automatically and asynchronously to all instances. Updates to IP address configurations in a stateful policy don't disrupt running VM instances. To learn more, read about applying stateful policy updates.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance groups page.

    Go to Instance groups

  2. Click the name of the instance group for which you want to specify stateful IP addresses.

  3. Click Edit to modify the managed instance group.

  4. Under Stateful configuration, expand the External IP and the Internal IP that you want to make stateful.

    1. Under Stateful, select Yes.
    2. From the On permanent instance deletion drop-down, select the action to perform on the stateful IP address when the VM instance is deleted. The available options are:
      • Detach IP: (Default.) Unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
      • Delete IP: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group— for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.
    3. After you update the stateful configuration, click Done.
    4. Click Save to complete the update.

gcloud

To specify which IP addresses should be stateful or to update the stateful IP configuration for an existing MIG, use one or multiple --stateful-internal-ip or --stateful-external-ip flags with the gcloud compute instance-groups managed update command.

gcloud compute instance-groups managed update INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --stateful-internal-ip [enabled | interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    --stateful-external-ip [enabled | interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG to update.
  • NI_NAME: (Optional.) Network interface name. If not provided, then the enabled option is required and the primary network interface named nic0 is assumed by default. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify this flag for each IP in each network interface.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • never: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • on-permanent-instance-deletion: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

If a specified IP address is already configured in the stateful policy for a given network interface, the command updates the configuration.

Example

You need to expose a file server, running on a stateful MIG named example-fs-group, to external users through static external IP addresses. The instances in the group have ephemeral external IP addresses. You must make sure that the IP addresses are preserved on instance autohealing and updates so that external users have continuous access to the servers through the published IP addresses. You also need to keep the IP addresses reserved for continuity in the event of unintended group deletion.

Update the MIG to define the external IP addresses as stateful by using the following command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed update example-fs-group \
    --stateful-external-ip enabled

As a result, the group promotes ephemeral external IP addresses within the nic0 network interface to static IP addresses for all managed instances asynchronously.

The external IP addresses are now preserved on instance autohealing, update, and recreation events. The associated static IP address reservations are unassigned and preserved on instance deletion because the unspecified auto-delete rule is set to never by default.

You can verify that the stateful external IP is configured in the stateful policy by running the gcloud compute instance-groups managed describe example-fs-group command.

REST

To specify which IP addresses should be stateful or to update the stateful IP configuration for an existing MIG, use the instanceGroupManagers.patch or regionInstanceGroupManagers.patch method:

PATCH https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME

{
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "internalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": {"autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE" }
      },
      "externalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": {"autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE" }
      }
    }
  }
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT: The project ID for the request.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • NAME: The name of the MIG to create.
  • NI_NAME: (Required) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • NEVER: (Default) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

If a specified IP address is already configured in the stateful policy, the method patches the configuration.

Example

You need to expose a file server, running on a stateful MIG named example-fs-group, to external users through static external IP addresses. The instances in the group have ephemeral external IP addresses. You must make sure that the IP addresses are preserved on instance autohealing and updates so that external users have continuous access to the servers through the published network interface. You also need to keep the IP addresses reserved for continuity in the event of unintended group deletion.

Patch the MIG to define the external IP addresses as stateful:

PATCH https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/example-fs-group

{
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "externalIPs": {
        "nic0": {"autoDelete": "NEVER" }
      }
    }
  }
}

As a result, the group promotes ephemeral external IP addresses within the nic0 network interface to static IP addresses for all managed instances asynchronously.

The external IP addresses are now preserved on instance autohealing, update, and recreation events. The associated static IP address reservations will be unassigned and preserved on instance deletion because the autoDelete rule is set to NEVER.

Verify that the external IP address is configured in the stateful policy by viewing the regionInstanceGroupManagers resource, returned by the regionInstanceGroupManagers.get method.

Declaring previously stateful IP addresses as stateless

You might need to configure a stateful IP address to become ephemeral–for example, for the following reasons:

  • You rearchitect your app to no longer rely on static IP addresses.
  • You configured the IP to be stateful by mistake and would like to revert it.

You can remove stateful IP configuration from the group's stateful policy to declare an IP address within a given network interface as ephemeral for all managed instances.

When you remove stateful IP configuration from the stateful policy, the MIG removes the IP addresses automatically and asynchronously from the preserved state of all instances in the group. This operation does not disrupt running VM instances. The IP addresses remain active on the instances, but are no longer stateful. When you recreate or update the instances, or when the instances are autohealed, the MIG unassigns the associated static IP addresses and auto-assigns ephemeral addresses. If you no longer need to keep the static external IP address reservations, you can now release them.

To learn more, read the following documents:

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance groups page.

    Go to Instance groups

  2. Click the name of the instance group from which you want to remove the stateful configuration for IP addresses.

  3. Click Edit to modify the managed instance group.

  4. Under Stateful configuration, expand the External IP and the Internal IP that you want to make stateless.

    1. Change the Stateful option to No.
    2. Click Done.
  5. After you make the changes, click Save.

gcloud

To specify which IP addresses from a MIG's stateful policy to make ephemeral, use the --remove-stateful-internal-ips or --remove-stateful-external-ips flag with the gcloud compute instance-groups managed update command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed update INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --remove-stateful-internal-ips NI_NAME[,NI_NAME,...] \
    --remove-stateful-external-ips NI_NAME[,NI_NAME,...]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG to update.
  • NI_NAME: (Required.) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you've multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.

If you need to turn a stateful IP address from the default primary network interface named nic0 into an ephemeral IP address, you can also use the following command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed update INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --stateful-internal-ip disabled \
    --stateful-external-ip disabled

Example

Your application has been exposed to users through published static external IP addresses of the VM instances in a MIG called example-group. You have rearchitected your service by deploying a load balancer in front of the MIG and routing the traffic to the managed VMs through it. You no longer need to maintain the static external IP addresses and would like to make the external IP addresses of the VMs ephemeral.

To make the stateful external IP addresses of the VMs in a MIG ephemeral, run the following command:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed update example-group \
    --remove-stateful-external-ips nic0

The MIG removes the static external IP addresses of the nic0 network interface automatically and asynchronously from the preserved state of all instances in the group. The external IP addresses remain active on the instances, but are no longer stateful. When you recreate or update the instances, or when the instances are autohealed, the MIG unassigns the associated static IP addresses and auto-assigns ephemeral addresses. If you no longer need to keep the static external IP address reservations, you can now release them.

REST

To specify which IP addresses from a MIG's stateful policy to make ephemeral, remove each IP's configuration from the MIG's stateful policy using the instanceGroupManagers.patch or regionInstanceGroupManagers.patch method:

PATCH https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME

{
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "internalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": null
      },
      "externalIPs": {
        "NI_NAME": null
      }
    }
  }
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT: The project ID for the request.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG to create.
  • NI_NAME: (Required) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.

Example

Your application has been exposed to users through published static external IP addresses of the VM instances in a MIG called example-group. You have rearchitected your service by deploying a load balancer in front of the MIG and routing the traffic to the managed VMs through it. You no longer need to maintain the static external IP addresses and would like to make the external IP addresses of the VMs ephemeral.

To make the stateful external IP addresses of the VMs in a MIG ephemeral, patch the MIG:

PATCH https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/example-group

{
  "statefulPolicy": {
    "preservedState": {
      "externalIPs": {
        "nic0": null
      }
    }
  }
}

The MIG removes the static external IP addresses of the nic0 network interface automatically and asynchronously from the preserved state of all instances in the group. The external IP addresses remain active on the instances, but are no longer stateful. When you recreate or update the instances, or when the instances are autohealed, the MIG unassigns the associated static IP addresses and auto-assigns ephemeral addresses. If you no longer need to keep the static external IP address reservations, you can now release them.

Configuring stateful IP addresses individually for VMs in a MIG

Configuring stateful IP addresses individually for VMs in a MIG is useful in the following scenarios:

  • Migrating existing workloads (bringing existing reserved static IP addresses) from standalone VM instances to stateful MIGs in order to benefit from autohealing and automated updates.
  • Assigning specific reserved static IP addresses required by the architecture or workload configuration.

Configuring static IP addresses on VM creation in a MIG

You can reserve and assign static IP addresses to specific instances when individually creating those instances in a MIG. This is useful for migrating a stateful application from existing standalone VMs to a stateful MIG in a situation when architecture, configuration, or users rely on specific static IP addresses.

When you manually create an instance in a MIG and supply a static IP address, the MIG performs the following actions:

  1. Creates a static internal or external IP address reservation for the supplied IP addresses if they don't exist yet.
  2. Creates an instance from the instance template using the provided instance name and IP addresses.
  3. Creates a per-instance configuration with the provided stateful configuration for the IP addresses.

gcloud

To create an instance with a predefined static IP address, use the gcloud compute instance-groups managed create-instance command with one or multiple of the following flags:

  • --stateful-internal-ip to set a static internal IP address of a given network interface.
  • --stateful-external-ip to set a static external IP address of a given network interface.
gcloud compute instance-groups managed create-instance INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --instance INSTANCE_NAME \
    --stateful-internal-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    --stateful-external-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: The name of the instance to create.
  • NI_NAME: (Optional.) Network interface name. If not provided, the primary network interface named nic0 is assumed by default. If you've multiple network interfaces, you can specify this flag for each IP in each network interface.
  • ADDRESS: (Required.) Static IP address to assign to the instance in one of the following formats:

    • Address. URL of a static IP address reservation–for example: "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/example-ip-name".
    • Literal–for example: "130.211.181.55".
      • If the provided IP address is not yet reserved, the MIG automatically creates a corresponding IP address reservation.
      • If the provided IP address is reserved, the MIG assigns the reservation to the instance.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • never: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • on-permanent-instance-deletion: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

Example

You need to add one more VM instance to your proxy server cluster, running on a MIG named proxy-cluster. You have created a static internal IP address reservation named proxy-node-03-ip and need to assign it to the new node. You want to keep the IP address reservation even if you decide to delete the node in the future.

Run the following command to create the node:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed create-instance proxy-cluster \
    --instance proxy-node-03 \
    --stateful-internal-ip address="projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/proxy-node-03-ip",auto-delete=never

The command creates an instance named proxy-node-03, assigns the provided static internal IP address named proxy-node-03-ip to the instance, and stores stateful configuration for the IP in the corresponding per-instance configuration. Because the auto-delete flag is set to never, the IP remains reserved if you delete the instance later.

Terraform

To create a VM with a predefined static IP address, use one or multiple of the following blocks:

  • preserved_state.internal_ip to mark an internal IP address of a given network interface as stateful.
  • preserved_state.external_ip to mark an external IP address of a given network interface as stateful.

The following sample configures static IP addresses on VM creation in a regional MIG. For more information about the resource used in the sample, see google_compute_region_per_instance_config resource. For a zonal MIG, use the google_compute_per_instance_config resource.

resource "google_compute_region_per_instance_config" "default" {
  region_instance_group_manager = google_compute_region_instance_group_manager.default.name
  region                        = google_compute_region_instance_group_manager.default.region
  name                          = "proxy-node-03-ip"
  preserved_state {
    internal_ip {
      interface_name = "nic0"
      auto_delete    = "NEVER"
      ip_address {
        address = google_compute_address.default.id
      }
    }
  }
}

To learn how to apply or remove a Terraform configuration, see Basic Terraform commands.

REST

To create one or multiple instances in a MIG, set custom instance names, and assign predefined static IP addresses to these instances, use the instanceGroupManagers.createInstances or regionInstanceGroupManagers.createInstances method.

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME/createInstances

{
  "instances": [
    {
      "name": "INSTANCE_NAME",
      "preservedState" : {
        "internalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        "externalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        ...
      }
    },
    ...
  ]
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: The project ID for the request.
  • NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: The name of the instance to create.
  • NI_NAME: (Required.) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • ADDRESS: (Optional.) Static IP address to assign to the instance in the format of a URL of a static IP address reservation–for example: "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/example-ip-name". You must and can only set one field at a time, either address or literal, when assigning a static IP address.
  • LITERAL: (Optional.) Static IP address to assign to the instance in the literal format–for example: "130.211.181.55". You must and can only set one field at a time, either address or literal, when assigning a static IP address.
    • If the provided literal IP address is not yet reserved, the MIG automatically creates a corresponding IP address reservation.
    • If the provided literal IP address is reserved, the MIG assigns the reservation to the instance.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • NEVER: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

Example

You need to add one more VM instance to your proxy server cluster, running on a MIG named proxy-cluster. You have created a static internal IP address reservation named proxy-node-03-ip and need to assign it to the new node. You want to keep the IP address reservation even if you decide to delete the node in the future.

Call the regionInstanceGroupManagers.createInstances method to create an additional instance:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/proxy-cluster/createInstances

{
  "instances": [
    {
      "name": "proxy-node-03",
      "preservedState" : {
        "internalIPs": {
          "nic0" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/proxy-node-03-ip"
            },
            "autoDelete": "NEVER"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

The method creates an instance named proxy-node-03, assigns the provided static internal IP address named proxy-node-03-ip to the instance, and stores stateful configuration for the IP in the corresponding per-instance configuration. Because the autoDelete field is set to NEVER, the IP remains reserved if you delete the instance later.

Configuring static IP addresses for an existing VM in a MIG

You can set a predefined static IP address or update the stateful IP configuration for a managed instance individually–for example:

  • Assign a static IP address to an existing instance in a MIG. For static external IPs, this operation requires instance refresh, and for static internal IPs, this requires instance recreation.
  • Update the deletion rule for an already assigned static IP address. This operation can be done without disrupting the running instance.

For an existing instance without an external IP address, for which you configure an external stateful IP, the MIG adds access configuration to the corresponding network interface with the following default values:

"accessConfigs": [
  {
    "kind": "compute#accessConfig",
    "name": "External Nat",
    "natIP": "XX.XX.XX.XX",
    "networkTier": "PREMIUM",
    "type": "ONE_TO_ONE_NAT"
  }
]

gcloud

To configure a stateful IP address individually for a VM instance in a MIG, add or update stateful IP configuration in the associated per-instance configuration.

If a per-instance configuration doesn't yet exist for the instance, use the gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs create command with one or multiple of the following flags:

  • --stateful-internal-ip to set a static internal IP address of a given network interface.
  • --stateful-external-ip to set a static external IP address of a given network interface.
gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs create INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --instance INSTANCE_NAME \
    --stateful-internal-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    --stateful-external-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    [--no-update-instance | --update-instance]
    [--instance-update-minimal-action MINIMAL_ACTION]

If a per-instance configuration already exists for the instance, use the gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update command with one or multiple --stateful-internal-ip or --stateful-external-ip flags:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --instance INSTANCE_NAME \
    --stateful-internal-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    --stateful-external-ip address=ADDRESS[,interface-name=NI_NAME][,auto-delete=DELETE_RULE] \
    [--no-update-instance | --update-instance]
    [--instance-update-minimal-action MINIMAL_ACTION]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: The name of the instance for which to configure stateful IP addresses.
  • NI_NAME: (Optional.) Network interface name. If not provided, the primary network interface named nic0 is assumed by default. If you've multiple network interfaces, you can specify this flag for each IP in each network interface.
  • ADDRESS: Static IP address to assign to the instance in one of the following formats:
    • Address. URL of a static IP address reservation–for example: "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/example-ip-name".
    • Literal. For example: "130.211.181.55".
      • If the provided IP address is not yet reserved, the MIG automatically creates a corresponding IP address reservation.
      • If the provided IP address is reserved, the MIG assigns the reservation to the instance.
    • This subflag is optional if the address is already defined in the instance's per-instance configuration. Otherwise it is required.
    • If omitted, the configured address remains unchanged.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • never: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • on-permanent-instance-deletion: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.
    • If omitted, the default value is set for a new stateful IP configuration; the value remains unchanged in an existing configuration.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

  • --update-instance: (Optional. Default.) Apply the changes immediately to the instance. If you use the --no-update-instance flag, the changes remain unapplied and will be applied when you recreate or apply the update to the instance later.

  • MINIMAL_ACTION: (Optional.) Perform at least the specified action when applying per-instance configuration update to the instance. Must be used together with --update-instance flag. The value must be one of the following:

    • none: No action.
    • refresh: Apply updates that are possible to apply without stopping the instance.
    • restart: Stop the instance and then start it again.
    • replace: Recreate the instance.

If omitted, the least disruptive action required by the update is used.

Example

You have a file server instance called file-server, which is a single instance in a stateful MIG called fs-group. The group has a corresponding per-instance configuration, where a stateful data disk is configured. The file server has only been accessible internally, but now you have users who need to access it externally through a static IP address. You have reserved the static external IP by creating file-server-ip address reservation. Now you need to assign this IP to the file server instance.

Run the following command to configure the stateful external IP for the file server instance:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update fs-group \
    --instance file-server \
    --stateful-external-ip interface-name=nic0,address="projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/file-server-ip",auto-delete=never \
    --update-instance

The command does the following:

  1. Updates the per-instance configuration for the file-server instance:
    1. Adds stateful external IP configuration, pointing to the file-server-ip address reservation.
    2. Keeps the existing stateful data disk configuration unchanged.
  2. Applies the per-instance configuration update to the file-server instance immediately because the --update-instance flag is included: refreshes the instance and assigns the static external IP address from file-server-ip reservation.

REST

To configure stateful IPs individually for VM instances in a MIG, add or update the stateful IP configuration in the associated per-instance configurations.

If per-instance configurations don't yet exist for the given instances, use the instanceGroupManagers.updatePerInstanceConfigs method or regionInstanceGroupManagers.updatePerInstanceConfigs method with stateful configuration for one or multiple IP addresses:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME/updatePerInstanceConfigs

{
  "perInstanceConfigs": [
    {
      "name": "INSTANCE_NAME",
      "preservedState" : {
        "internalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        "externalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        ...
      },
      "fingerprint: "FINGERPRINT"
    },
    ...
  ]
}

If per-instance configurations already exist for the given instances, use the instanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs method or regionInstanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs method with stateful configuration for one or multiple IP addresses:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME/patchPerInstanceConfigs

{
  "perInstanceConfigs": [
    {
      "name": "INSTANCE_NAME",
      "preservedState" : {
        "internalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        "externalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "ADDRESS",
              "literal": "LITERAL"
            },
            "autoDelete": "DELETE_RULE"
          },
          ...
        },
        ...
      },
      "fingerprint: "FINGERPRINT"
    },
    ...
  ]
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: The project ID for the request.
  • NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: (Required.) The name of the instance for which to configure stateful IPs.
  • NI_NAME: (Required.) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • ADDRESS: (Optional.) Static IP address to assign to the instance in the format of a URL of a static IP address reservation–for example: "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/example-ip-name". You must and can only set one field at a time, either address or literal, when assigning a static IP address.
  • LITERAL: (Optional.) Static IP address to assign to the instance in the literal format. For example: "130.211.181.55". You must and can only set one field at a time, either address or literal, when assigning a static IP address.
    • If the provided literal IP address is not yet reserved, the MIG automatically creates a corresponding IP address reservation.
    • If the provided literal IP address is reserved, the MIG assigns the reservation to the instance.
  • DELETE_RULE: (Optional.) Prescribes what should happen to an associated static Address resource when a VM instance is permanently deleted. The available options are as follows:

    • NEVER: (Default.) Never delete the static IP address. Instead, unassign the address on instance deletion and keep the address reserved.
    • ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION: Delete the static IP address reservation when an instance is permanently deleted from the instance group–for example, when you delete an instance manually or decrease the group's size.
    • If omitted, the default value is set for a new stateful IP configuration; the value remains unchanged in an existing configuration.

    Regardless of the value of the delete rule, the group always preserves stateful IP addresses on instance autohealing, update, and recreation operations.

  • FINGERPRINT: (Optional.) The fingerprint for the given configuration if it already exists. Used for optimistic locking. The operation fails if the fingerprint is different than provided, as it indicates that the per-instance configuration was changed since it was last read. To see the latest fingerprint, see the output of the listPerInstanceConfigs method for a regional or zonal MIG. If fingerprint is omitted, the operation proceeds without fingerprint comparison.

The updatePerInstanceConfigs and patchPerInstanceConfigs methods update the specified per-instance configurations but don't apply the configuration updates to the associated managed instances. The changes are applied to an instance when the MIG is instructed to recreate or update the instance. You can apply the update manually to apply the changes to an instance.

Example

You have a file server instance called file-server, which is a single instance in a stateful MIG called fs-group. The group has a corresponding per-instance configuration, where a stateful data disk is configured. The file server has only been accessible internally, but now you have users who need to access it externally through a static IP address. You have reserved the static external IP by creating file-server-ip address reservation. Now you need to assign this IP to the file server instance.

To update the per-instance configuration for file-server with the new stateful external IP, call the patchPerInstanceConfigs method:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/fs-group/patchPerInstanceConfigs

{
  "perInstanceConfigs": [
    {
      "name": "file-server",
      "preservedState" : {
        "externalIPs": {
          "nic0" : {
            "ipAddress": {
              "address": "projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/addresses/file-server-ip"
            },
            "autoDelete": "NEVER"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

The method patches the per-instance configuration for file-server instance:

  1. Adds stateful external IP configuration, pointing to the file-server-ip address reservation.
  2. Keeps the existing stateful data disk configuration unchanged.

The configuration update is not yet applied to the file-server VM instance. The MIG will apply the configuration update when you recreate or apply the update to the instance later.

To apply the per-instance configuration update to file-server VM instance, call the regionInstanceGroupManagers.applyUpdatesToInstances method for the instance:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/gs-group/applyUpdatesToInstances

{
  "instances": ["/zones/us-east1-b/instances/file-server"]
}

The method assigns the configured static external IP address from file-server-ip reservation to the managed instance. The method refreshes the file-server instance to assign an external IP address.

Because autoDelete is set to NEVER in the stateful IP configuration, the IP will remain reserved if you delete the instance later.

Disassociating static IP addresses from an existing VM in a MIG

You might need to disassociate a static IP address from an existing VM, making the network interface ephemeral for the VM. This is useful in the following scenarios:

  • You rearchitect your app to no longer rely on static IP addresses.
  • You configured the IP to be stateful by mistake and would like to revert it.

You can disassociate a static IP address from an existing VM in MIG and make the IP address ephemeral for an individual VM by removing the IP's stateful configuration from the associated per-instance configuration or deleting the entire per-instance configuration if it doesn't contain any other state. Applying the change has the following effects:

  • The IP address remains active on the instance, but is no longer stateful.
  • When you recreate or update the instance, or when the instance is autohealed, the MIG unassigns the associated static IP address reservation and auto-assigns an ephemeral address.
  • After having been unassigned, the static IP address remains reserved.

Removing a stateful IP configuration from a per-instance configuration does not disrupt running VM instances, unless you explicitly choose to do so.

To learn more, see the following documents:

gcloud

To remove a stateful IP configuration from the associated per-instance configuration, use the gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update command with the --remove-stateful-internal-ips or --remove-stateful-external-ips flags:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME \
    --instance INSTANCE_NAME \
    --remove-stateful-internal-ips NI_NAME[,NI_NAME,...] \
    --remove-stateful-external-ips NI_NAME[,NI_NAME,...]
    [--no-update-instance | --update-instance] \
    [--instance-update-minimal-action MINIMAL_ACTION]

Replace the following:

  • INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: (Required.) The name of the instance for which to remove stateful IP configuration.
  • NI_NAME: (Required.) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you've multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • --update-instance: (Optional. Default.) Apply the changes immediately to the instance. If you use the --no-update-instance flag, the changes remain unapplied and will be applied when you recreate or apply the update to the instance later.
  • MINIMAL_ACTION: (Optional.) Perform at least the specified action when applying per-instance configuration update to the instance. This flag can only be used together with --update-instance flag. The value must be one of the following:

    • none: No action.
    • refresh: Apply updates that are possible to apply without stopping the instance.
    • restart: Stop the instance and then start it again.
    • replace: Recreate the instance.

    If omitted, the least disruptive action required by the update is used.

Example

Your application has been exposed to users through specific published static external IP addresses of the VM instances in a MIG called example-group. You have rearchitected your service by deploying a load balancer in front of the MIG and routing the traffic to the managed VMs through it. You no longer need to maintain the static external IP addresses and would like to make the external IP addresses of the VMs ephemeral.

To make the stateful external IP addresses of the VMs in a MIG ephemeral, run the following command for each instance, for example, for node-1:

gcloud compute instance-groups managed instance-configs update example-group \
    --instance node-1 \
    --remove-stateful-external-ips nic0 \
    --update-instance

The command does the following:

  1. Removes stateful configuration for the external IP address within the nic0 network interface from the per-instance configuration for node-1.
  2. Applies the per-instance configuration update to node-1 VM instance immediately because the --update-instance flag is included. The VM instance is not disrupted and keeps serving from the same IP, which is no longer stateful. The MIG removes the reference to static IP reservation from the managed instance's preservedStateFromConfig and treats the external IP address as ephemeral. The MIG will auto-assign an external IP on subsequent instance recreation, update, or autohealing events.
  3. After having been unassigned, the original static IP remains reserved. You can release the IP if you no longer need it.

REST

To remove a stateful IP configuration from the associated per-instance configuration, use the instanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs method or regionInstanceGroupManagers.patchPerInstanceConfigs method:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/regions/REGION/instanceGroupManagers/INSTANCE_GROUP_NAME/patchPerInstanceConfigs

{
  "perInstanceConfigs": [
    {
      "name": "INSTANCE_NAME",
      "preservedState" : {
        "internalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : null
        },
        "externalIPs": {
          "NI_NAME" : null
        }
      },
      "fingerprint: "FINGERPRINT"
    },
    ...
  ]
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: The project ID for the request.
  • NAME: The name of the MIG.
  • REGION: For regional MIGs, the region where the group is located. For zonal MIGs, replace regions/REGION with zones/ZONE and specify the zone where the MIG is located.
  • INSTANCE_NAME: (Required.) The name of the instance for which to remove stateful IP configuration.
  • NI_NAME: (Required.) Network interface name. The primary network interface is named nic0. If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify multiple NI_NAMES.
  • FINGERPRINT: (Optional.) The fingerprint for the given configuration if it already exists. Used for optimistic locking. The operation fails if the fingerprint is different than provided, as it indicates that the per-instance configuration was changed since it was last read. To see the latest fingerprint, see the output of the listPerInstanceConfigs method for a regional or zonal MIG. If fingerprint is omitted, the operation proceeds without fingerprint comparison.

The patchPerInstanceConfigs method updates the specified per-instance configurations but does not apply the configuration updates to the associated managed instances. The changes are applied to an instance when the MIG is instructed to recreate or update the instance. You can apply the update manually to apply the changes to an instance.

Example

Your application has been exposed to users through specific published static external IP addresses of the VM instances in a MIG called example-group. You have rearchitected your service by deploying a load balancer in front of the MIG and routing the traffic to the managed VMs through it. You no longer need to maintain the static external IP addresses and would like to make the external IP addresses of the VMs ephemeral.

To make the stateful external IP addresses of the VMs in a MIG ephemeral, run the following method for each instance, for example, for node-1, and provide null value to the network interface's stateful configuration:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/example-group/patchPerInstanceConfigs

{
  "perInstanceConfigs": [
    {
      "name": "node-1",
      "preservedState" : {
        "externalIPs": {
          "nic0" : null
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

The method removes configuration for the stateful IP address within nic0 network interface from the per-instance configuration for node-1. The configuration update is not yet applied to the node-1 VM instance. The MIG applies the configuration update on the next instance recreation or update.

To apply the per-instance configuration update to the node-1 VM instance, run the regionInstanceGroupManagers.applyUpdatesToInstances method for the instance:

POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/regions/us-east1/instanceGroupManagers/example-group/applyUpdatesToInstances

{
  "instances": ["/zones/us-east1-c/instances/node-1"]
}

The MIG removes the reference to static IP reservation from the preservedStateFromConfig field for the node-1 instance and treats the IP address as ephemeral. The MIG will auto-assign an external IP on subsequent instance recreation, update, or autohealing events.

After having been unassigned, the original static IP remains reserved. You can release the IP if you no longer need it.

Removing stateful configuration

To remove configuration from a stateful policy for all VMs in a MIG, see the following documents:

To remove configuration from a per-instance configuration for a specific VM in a MIG, see the following documents:

Cleaning up unused static IP addresses

When configuring stateful IP address for managed instances in a group, you can choose whether to release the associated static IP address reservations manually or automatically when an instance is permanently deleted:

  • To release static IP address reservations automatically on permanent instance deletion, set the autoDelete parameter to ON_PERMANENT_INSTANCE_DELETION.
  • To release static IP address reservations manually, set the autoDelete parameter to NEVER. To clean up unused static IP address reservations, for example, in order to avoid unnecessary charges, see the following documents:

If you have instructed the MIG to never delete the associated IP reservations, the static IP addresses remain reserved after the corresponding instances or the MIG ceases to exist.

Feedback

We want to learn about your use cases, challenges, and feedback about stateful MIGs. You can share your feedback with our team at mig-discuss@google.com.

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