This document explains how to create shared reservations, which are reservations shared across multiple projects, and manage which projects in your organization can consume the shared reservations.
A shared reservation can be used by the project that hosts the reservation (owner project) and by the projects the reservation is shared with (consumer projects). Use shared reservations if your organization has multiple projects that need virtual machine (VM) instances with the same properties reserved. By using shared reservations, you can improve the utilization of your reservations and reduce the number of reservations that you need to create and manage. To learn more about reservations, see Reservations of Compute Engine zonal resources.
For other methods of creating reservations, see instead the following pages:
If you have any 1-year or 3-years commitments in the current project, then your reserved resources automatically receive any applicable committed use discounts (CUDs). You can also create and attach a reservation to a commitment when you purchase the commitment. To learn more, see Attach reservations to commitments.
To create a reservation that can only be used by a single project, see Create a reservation for a single project.
Before you begin
- Review the requirements and restrictions for reservations.
- Review the quota requirements and restrictions for shared reservations.
- Make sure the project you use to create shared reservations has been added
to the allowlist for the Shared Reservations Owner Projects
(
compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
) organization policy constraint by an organization policy administrator. This allowlist is empty by default, so you can't create shared reservations until your organization grants this permission to one or more projects. For more details on viewing and editing the organization policy constraint, see Allowing and restricting projects from creating and modifying shared reservations in this document. -
If you haven't already, then 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 by selecting one of the following options:
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
-
Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:
gcloud init
- Set a default region and zone.
Terraform
To use the Terraform samples on this page in a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.
For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.
Go
To use the Go samples on this page in a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.
For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.
Java
To use the Java samples on this page in a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.
For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.
Node.js
To use the Node.js samples on this page in a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.
For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.
Python
To use the Python samples on this page in a local development environment, install and initialize the gcloud CLI, and then set up Application Default Credentials with your user credentials.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
If you're using a local shell, then create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
You don't need to do this if you're using Cloud Shell.
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
For more information, see Authenticate for using REST in the Google Cloud authentication documentation.
-
Required roles
To get the permissions that you need to create shared reservations, ask your administrator to grant you the following IAM roles:
-
Compute Admin (
roles/compute.admin
) on the project -
To view and edit organization policies:
Organization Policy Administrator (
roles/orgpolicy.policyAdmin
) on the organization
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
These predefined roles contain the permissions required to create shared reservations. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:
Required permissions
The following permissions are required to create shared reservations:
-
compute.reservations.create
on the project -
To view organization policies:
orgpolicy.policy.get
on the organization -
To edit organization policies:
orgpolicy.policy.set
on the organization -
To specify an instance template:
compute.instanceTemplates.useReadOnly
on the instance template
You might also be able to get these permissions with custom roles or other predefined roles.
Best practices
When creating shared reservations, the following best practices are recommended. By following them, you can help optimize the manageability and utilization of shared reservations in your organization.
-
Have the owner project create the shared reservation but not consume it.
- To spread spendings across projects, it's recommended to only have consumer projects consume a shared reservation. The owner project should only be used to create the shared reservation.
- When creating a shared reservation, the owner project must have sufficient quota for the total resources to reserve. Then, after the reservation is created, the owner project must have quota for any reserved resources that it wants to consume. For more information, see Additional quota requirements for shared reservations.
-
Minimize the number of projects in your organization that you allow to
create shared reservations. You can control this through the Shared
Reservations Owner Projects
(
compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
) organization policy constraint.- You can only list the reservations created by each project. This means that shared reservations are only listed in the owner project—you cannot list the reservations shared with each project or list all shared reservations in each organization—so having only a few owner projects makes it easier to monitor and manage your shared reservations.
- Limit the sharing of a shared reservation to a few projects only to manage the quota of your reserved resources more easily.
- For more information, see Allow and restrict projects from creating and modifying shared reservations.
-
Minimize the number of separate shared reservations with identical VM
properties.
- An organization can have up to 100 shared reservations for each unique combination of VM properties. As a result, minimizing the number of shared reservations with identical VM properties that you create helps mitigate this limit.
- Having fewer shared reservations improves manageability.
-
Only share reservations between projects with the same Cloud Billing
account.
- Limit each shared reservation to only be shared with consumer projects that have the same Cloud Billing account as the owner project. This makes it easier for you to see if a reservation was consumed and how it was billed.
- If you enabled CUD sharing and you're eligible to receive CUDs at the Cloud Billing account level, then, to maximize the CUDs you receive for your consumed reservations, limit your shared reservations to that commitment's Cloud Billing account. Doing this lets you maintain consistent billing across projects that create and consume shared reservations.
-
For future reservation requests, carefully review the total count of VMs
that you request.
- If you are creating a
future
reservation request, ensure that you request a total count of
VMs that accounts for all of the following:
- All matching reserved VMs that will already exist at the future date.
- All matching unreserved VMs that will already exist at the future date.
- Any matching unused on-demand reservations that will already exist at the future date.
- The increase in usage that you want to reserve at the future date.
For example, suppose you need 10 additional VMs at the future date and you'll already have the following resources at the future date:
- 40 matching reserved VMs
- 50 matching unreserved VMs
or
- 40 matching reserved VMs
- 50 matching unused on-demand reservations
Because your existing usage at the future date already adds up to 90 matching VMs and reservations, and you need an additional ten VMs, you must specify a total count of
100
in your future reservation request.For more information, see Count and provision reserved resources.
- If you are creating a
future
reservation request, ensure that you request a total count of
VMs that accounts for all of the following:
Allow and restrict projects from creating and modifying shared reservations
By default, no projects are allowed to create or modify shared reservations
in an organization. Add projects to the
Shared Reservations Owner Projects (compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
) organization policy constraint
to allow them to create and modify shared reservations. For more information
about organization policy constraints, see
Introduction to the Organization Policy Service.
Use the following steps to view and edit the
Shared Reservations Owner Projects (compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
)
organization policy constraint.
View the shared reservations organization policy constraint
To see which projects are allowed to create and modify shared reservations, use the Google Cloud console or gcloud CLI.
Console
Follow the steps for Viewing organization policies using the Shared Reservations Owner Projects constraint.
gcloud
To see which projects the compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
constraint allows to create and modify shared reservations:
Download the policy for your organization as a file named
policy.yaml
, using thegcloud resource-manager org-policies describe
command:gcloud resource-manager org-policies describe compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID > policy.yaml
Replace ORGANIZATION_ID with the organization ID of your organization.
Use a text editor to open the
policy.yaml
file and view thecompute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
constraint. The projects that are allowed to create and modify shared reservations are listed under itsallowedValues
:... constraint: constraints/compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects listPolicy: allowedValues: - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_1 - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_2 - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_3 ...
where PROJECT_NUMBER_1, PROJECT_NUMBER_2, and PROJECT_NUMBER_3 are the project numbers of the only projects in your organization that are allowed to create shared reservations.
Optional: Delete the
policy.yaml
file.If you are using a Linux or macOS terminal, use the following command:
rm policy.yaml
If you are using a Windows terminal, use the following command:
del policy.yaml
Edit the shared reservations organization policy constraint
To edit which projects are allowed to create and modify shared reservations, use the Google Cloud console or gcloud CLI.
Console
Follow the steps for Customizing policies for list constraints using the Shared Reservations Owner Projects constraint.
gcloud
To edit which projects the compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
constraint allows to create and modify shared reservations,
use one of the following methods:
To grant permission to a single project to create and modify shared reservations, use the
gcloud resource-manager org-policies allow
command. You can repeat this command for each project that you want to grant this permission to.gcloud resource-manager org-policies allow compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects projects/PROJECT_NUMBER \ --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
Replace the following:
- PROJECT_NUMBER: the project number (not project ID) of a project in your organization that you want to allow to create and modify shared reservations.
- ORGANIZATION_ID: the organization ID of your organization.
To grant or revoke the permissions for multiple projects to create and modify shared reservations, replace the organization policy constraint:
To download the policy for your organization as a file named
policy.yaml
, use thegcloud resource-manager org-policies describe
command:gcloud resource-manager org-policies describe compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID > policy.yaml
Replace ORGANIZATION_ID with the organization ID of your organization.
Use a text editor to modify the
policy.yaml
file so that thecompute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects
constraint lists all of the projects that you want to be allowed to create and modify shared reservations under itsallowedValues
.- For each project that you want to grant the permission to create
and modify shared reservations, add the project in a new line under
allowedValues
. - For each project that you want to revoke the permission to create and modify shared reservations, delete the line for that project.
When you are finished, make sure the
policy.yaml
file looks similar to the following:... constraint: constraints/compute.sharedReservationsOwnerProjects listPolicy: allowedValues: - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_1 - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_2 - projects/PROJECT_NUMBER_3 ...
where PROJECT_NUMBER_1, PROJECT_NUMBER_2, and PROJECT_NUMBER_3 are the project numbers (not project IDs) of all of the projects in your organization that you want to be allowed to create and modify shared reservations.
- For each project that you want to grant the permission to create
and modify shared reservations, add the project in a new line under
Save the
policy.yaml
file and close the text editor.To update the policy for your organization with your changes, use the
gcloud resource-manager org-policies set-policy
command:gcloud resource-manager org-policies set-policy --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID policy.yaml
Replace ORGANIZATION_ID with the organization ID of your organization.
Optional: Delete the
policy.yaml
file.If you are using a Linux or macOS terminal, use the following command:
rm policy.yaml
If you are using a Windows terminal, use the following command:
del policy.yaml
You might need to wait a few minutes for the edit to take effect.
Create a shared reservation
This section explains how to create shared reservations. After you create a shared reservation, it can be modified only by the owner project, but the resources for a shared reservation can be consumed by the owner project or any consumer projects.
To consume a reservation, a VM must have properties that exactly match that reservation. To specify the properties of the VMs that you want to reserve, select one of the following sections in this document:
Recommended: Specify an instance template
This section explains how to use an instance template to define the properties of a shared reservation. By using an instance template, you can define the properties of a reservation and the VMs that can consume the reservation in the same place. However, because templates are project-specific, you can't use the same template to create VMs that can consume the reservation outside of the project that created the reservation. For the projects the reservation is shared with, you must create similar templates in those projects or create VMs by specifying properties directly.
-
This section explains how to use an existing VM to define the properties of a reservation. By using the properties of an existing VM, you can consume the reservation by creating VMs with properties that match the reference VM.
-
This section explains how to directly define the properties of a shared reservation. This method requires you to manually ensure that the properties of your VMs and reservations match exactly—any mismatched properties prevent consumption.
By default, a reservation can be automatically consumed by any VMs with properties that match it. If you want to control reservation consumption, do one or more of the following:
Create a reservation that can only be consumed by VMs that specifically target it, as explained in the following sections in this document. Then, configure VMs to consume that specific reservation.
Configure VMs that can't consume any reservations.
Specify an instance template
Before creating a reservation by specifying an instance template, make sure of the following:
An instance template contains project-specific settings, so you can only access and use an instance template within the same project. If you create a shared reservation by specifying an instance template, then you can't use the same template to create VMs that can consume the reservation outside of the project that created the reservation.
Create your reservation in the same region and zone as the resources within the instance template. Any regional or zonal resources specified in an instance template—such as a machine type or a Persistent Disk volume—restrict the use of the template to the locations where those resources exist. For example, if your instance template specifies an existing Persistent Disk volume in zone
us-central1-a
, then you can only create your reservation in the same zone. To check if an existing template specifies any resources that bind the template to a specific region or zone, view the details of the instance template and look for references to regional or zonal resources inside of it.
To create a shared reservation by specifying an instance template, select one of the following options:
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Reservations page.
The Reservations page appears.
Click
Create reservation.The Create a reservation page appears.
For Name, enter a name for your reservation.
For Region and Zone, select where you want to reserve resources.
In the Share type section, do the following:
To specify a shared reservation, select Shared.
Click
Add projects, and then select the projects from the current project's organization that you want to share the reservation with. You can select up to 100 consumer projects.
Optional: To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, in the Google Cloud services section, select Share reservation.
In the Use with VM instance section, select one of the following options:
To allow matching VM instances to automatically use this reservation, select Use reservation automatically if it's not already selected.
To consume this reservation's resources only when creating matching VMs that specifically target this reservation by name, select Select specific reservation.
For Number of VM instances, enter the number of VMs that you want to reserve.
In the Machine configuration section, select Use instance template, and then select the instance template of your choice. If you select a regional instance template, then you can only reserve resources within the same region as the template's region.
In the Auto-delete section, you can enable the auto-delete option to let Compute Engine automatically delete the reservation at a specific date and time. Automatically deleting reservations can be useful to avoid unnecessary charges when you stop consuming the reservation.
To create the reservation, click Create.
The Reservations page opens. Creating the shared reservation might take up to a minute to complete.
gcloud
To create a shared reservation, use the
gcloud compute reservations create
command
with the --share-setting=projects
and --share-with
flags.
To create a shared reservation by specifying an instance template and without including any optional flags, run the following command:
gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \
--share-setting=projects \
--share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \
--source-instance-template=projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \
--vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \
--zone=ZONE
Replace the following:
RESERVATION_NAME
: the name of the reservation to create.PROJECT_ID
: the ID of the project where you want to reserve resources and where the instance template exists.CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS
: a comma-separated list of IDs of projects that can consume this reservation—for example,project-1,project-2
. You can include up to 100 consumer projects. These projects must be in the same organization as the owner project. Don't include the owner project. By default, it's already allowed to consume the reservation.LOCATION
: the location of the instance template. Specify one of the following values:For a global instance template:
global
.For a regional instance template:
regions/REGION
. ReplaceREGION
with the region where the instance template is located. If you specify a regional instance template, then you can only reserve VMs within the same region as the template's region.
INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME
: the name of an existing instance template. If the instance template specifies an A3 machine type, then you must include the--require-specific-reservation
flag. This indicates that only VMs that specifically target the reservation can consume it. For more information, see Consume VMs from a specific reservation.NUMBER_OF_VMS
: the number of VMs to reserve.ZONE
: the zone in which to reserve resources.
For example, to create a reservation by specifying a global instance
template in zone us-central1-a
, share the reservation with projects
project-1
and project-2
, and reserve ten VMs that each use an N2
predefined machine type with 4 vCPUs, run the following command:
gcloud compute reservations create my-reservation \
--share-setting=projects \
--share-with=project-1,project-2 \
--source-instance-template=projects/example-project/global/example-instance-template \
--vm-count=10 \
--zone=us-central1-a
Optionally, you can do one or more of the following:
To specify that only VMs that specifically target this reservation can consume it, include the
--require-specific-reservation
flag.gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --require-specific-reservation \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --source-instance-template=projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--reservation-sharing-policy=ALLOW_ALL
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --reservation-sharing-policy=ALLOW_ALL \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --source-instance-template=projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
To enable Compute Engine to automatically delete the reservation, select one of the following methods:
To delete the reservation at a specific date and time, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--delete-at-time
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --delete-at-time=DELETE_AT_TIME \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --source-instance-template=projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
DELETE_AT_TIME
with a date and time formatted as an RFC 3339 timestamp, which must be as follows:YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSOFFSET
Replace the following:
YYYY-MM-DD
: a date formatted as a 4-digit year, 2-digit month, and a 2-digit day of the month, separated by hyphens (-
).HH:MM:SS
: a time formatted as a 2-digit hour using a 24-hour time, 2-digit minutes, and 2-digit seconds, separated by colons (:
).OFFSET
: the time zone formatted as an offset of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). For example, to use the Pacific Standard Time (PST), specify-08:00
. Alternatively, to use no offset, specifyZ
.
To delete the reservation after a specific duration, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--delete-after-duration
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --delete-after-duration=DELETE_AFTER_DURATION \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --source-instance-template=projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
DELETE_AFTER_DURATION
with a duration in days, hours, minutes, or seconds. For example, specify30m
for 30 minutes, or1d2h3m4s
for 1 day, 2 hours, 3 minutes, and 4 seconds.
Go
Java
Node.js
Python
REST
To create a shared reservation, make a POST
request to the
reservations.insert
method.
In the request body, include the following:
The
projectMap
field.The
shareType
field set toSPECIFIC_PROJECTS
.
For example, to create a shared reservation by specifying an instance
template without including any optional fields, and share the reservation
with two consumer projects, make the following POST
request:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations
{
"name": "RESERVATION_NAME",
"shareSettings": {
"shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS",
"projectMap": {
"CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": {
"projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1"
},
"CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": {
"projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2"
}
}
},
"specificReservation": {
"count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS",
"sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME"
}
}
Replace the following:
PROJECT_ID
: the ID of the project where you want to reserve resources and where the instance template exists.ZONE
: the zone in which to reserve resources.RESERVATION_NAME
: the name of the reservation to create.CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1
andCONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2
: the IDs of projects that can consume this reservation. You can include up to 100 consumer projects. These projects must be in the same organization as the owner project. Don't include the owner project. By default, it is already allowed to consume the reservation.NUMBER_OF_VMS
: the number of VMs to reserve.LOCATION
: the location of the instance template. Specify one of the following values:For a global instance template:
global
.For a regional instance template:
regions/REGION
. ReplaceREGION
with the region where the instance template is located. If you specify a regional instance template, then you can only reserve VMs within the same region as the template's region.
INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME
: the name of an existing instance template. If the instance template specifies an A3 machine type, you must include thespecificReservationRequired
field in the request body, and set the field totrue
. This indicates that only VMs that specifically target this reservation can consume it. For more information, see Consume VMs from a specific reservation.
For example, to create a reservation for ten VMs in zone us-central1-a
by
specifying a global instance template, and share the reservation with
projects project-1
and project-2
, make the following POST
request:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/zones/us-central1-a/reservations
{
"name": "my-reservation",
"shareSettings": {
"shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS",
"projectMap": {
"project-1": {
"projectId": "project-1"
},
"project-2": {
"projectId": "project-2"
}
}
},
"specificReservation": {
"count": "10",
"sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/example-project/global/instanceTemplates/example-instance-template"
}
}
Optionally, you can do one or more of the following:
To specify that only VMs that specifically target this reservation can consume it, include the
specificReservationRequired
field in the request body, and set the field totrue
.For example, to create a specific reservation by specifying an instance template, and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME" }, "specificReservationRequired": true }
To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include theserviceShareType
field and set it toALLOW_ALL
.POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "reservationSharingPolicy": { "serviceShareType": "ALLOW_ALL" }, "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME" } }
To enable Compute Engine to automatically delete the reservation, select one of the following methods:
To delete the reservation at a specific date and time, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include thedeleteAtTime
field.For example, to create a reservation by specifying an instance template, auto delete the reservation at a specific date and time, and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "deleteAtTime": "DELETE_AT_TIME", "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME" } }
Replace
DELETE_AT_TIME
with a date and time formatted as an RFC 3339 timestamp, which must be as follows:YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSOFFSET
Replace the following:
YYYY-MM-DD
: a date formatted as a 4-digit year, 2-digit month, and a 2-digit day of the month, separated by hyphens (-
).HH:MM:SS
: a time formatted as a 2-digit hour using a 24-hour time, 2-digit minutes, and 2-digit seconds, separated by colons (:
).OFFSET
: the time zone formatted as an offset of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). For example, to use the Pacific Standard Time (PST), specify-08:00
. Alternatively, to use no offset, specifyZ
.
To delete the reservation after a specific duration, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include thedeleteAfterDuration
field.For example, to create a reservation by specifying an instance template, auto delete the reservation after a specific duration, and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "deleteAfterDuration": { "seconds": "DELETE_AFTER_DURATION" }, "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "sourceInstanceTemplate": "projects/PROJECT_ID/LOCATION/instanceTemplates/INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME" } }
Replace
DELETE_AFTER_DURATION
with a duration in seconds. For example, specify86400
for 86,400 seconds (1 day).
Specify an existing VM
You can only create a shared reservation based on an existing VM in the same project and zone as the VM.
After creating the reservation, you can consume it by creating VMs with properties that match the reference VM. You can do this by doing one of the following:
Create and use an instance template as follows:
Create an instance template based on the reference VM without overriding the reference VM's properties.
Create VMs using the newly-created template by doing one or both of the following:
Create a VM with properties that exactly match the reference VM as follows:
In the owner project, create a VM based on the reference VM without changing the properties of the VM that you're creating.
In the consumer projects, create a VM while manually ensuring that its properties and the reference VM's properties match.
To create a shared reservation that uses the properties of an existing VM, do the following:
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Reservations page.
On the On-demand reservations tab (default), click
Create reservation.The Create a reservation page opens.
For Name, enter a name for your reservation.
For Region and Zone, select where you want to reserve resources.
In the Share type section, do the following:
To specify a shared reservation, select Shared.
Click
Add projects, and then select the projects from the current project's organization that you want to share the reservation with. You can select up to 100 consumer projects.
In the Use with VM instance section, select one of the following options:
To allow matching VMs to automatically consume this reservation, select Use reservation automatically if it's not already selected.
To consume this reservation's resources only when creating matching VMs that specifically target this reservation by name, select Select specific reservation.
For Number of VM instances, enter the number of VMs that you want to reserve.
In the Machine configuration section, do the following:
Select Use existing VM.
For Existing VM, select the VM which properties you want to use to create the reservation.
In the Auto-delete section, you can enable the auto-delete option to let Compute Engine automatically delete the reservation at a specific date and time. Automatically deleting reservations can be useful to avoid unnecessary charges when you stop consuming the reservation.
To create the reservation, click Create.
The Reservations page opens. Creating the reservation might take up to a minute to complete.
Specify properties directly
To create a shared reservation by specifying properties directly, select one of the following options:
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Reservations page.
On the On-demand reservations tab (default), click
Create reservation.Click
Create reservation.The Create a reservation page appears.
For Name, enter a name for your reservation.
For Region and Zone, select where you want to reserve resources.
In the Share type section, do the following:
To specify a shared reservation, select Shared.
Click
Add projects, and then select the projects from the current project's organization that you want to share the reservation with. You can select up to 100 consumer projects.
Optional: To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, in the Google Cloud services section, select Share reservation.
In the Use with VM instance section, select one of the following options:
To allow matching VMs to automatically consume this reservation, select Use reservation automatically (default).
To consume this reservation's resources only when creating matching VMs that specifically target this reservation by name, select Select specific reservation.
For Number of VM instances, enter the number of VMs that you want to reserve.
In the Machine configuration section, select Specify machine type, and then specify the following:
For Machine family, Series, and Machine type, select a machine family, series, and machine type.
Optional: To specify a minimum CPU platform or attach GPUs to N1 VMs, do the following:
To expand the CPU Platform and GPU section, click the
expander arrow.Optional: To specify a minimum CPU platform, for CPU Plaform, select an option.
Optional: To attach GPUs to N1 VMs, click
Add GPU. Then, for GPU type and Number of GPUs, select the type and number of GPUs to attach to each N1 VM.
Optional: To add Local SSD disks, do the following:
For Number of disks, select the number of Local SSD disks for each VM.
For Interface type, select the interface for the Local SSD disks.
In the Auto-delete section, you can enable the auto-delete option to let Compute Engine automatically delete the reservation at a specific date and time. Automatically deleting reservations can be useful to avoid unnecessary charges when you stop consuming the reservation.
To create the reservation, click Create.
The Reservations page opens. Creating the shared reservation might take up to a minute time to complete.
gcloud
To create a shared reservation, use the
gcloud compute reservations create
command
with the --share-setting=projects
and --share-with
flags.
To create a shared reservation by specifying properties directly and without including any optional flags, run the following command:
gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \
--machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \
--share-setting=projects \
--share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \
--vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \
--zone=ZONE
Replace the following:
RESERVATION_NAME
: the name of the reservation to create.MACHINE_TYPE
: a machine type to use for each VM. If you specify an A3 machine type, then you must include the--require-specific-reservation
flag. This indicates that only VMs that specifically target the reservation can consume it. For more information, see Consume VMs from a specific reservation.CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS
: a comma-separated list of IDs of projects that can consume this reservation—for example,project-1,project-2
. You can include up to 100 consumer projects. These projects must be in the same organization as the owner project. Don't include the owner project. By default, it is already allowed to consume the reservation.NUMBER_OF_VMS
: the number of VMs to reserve.ZONE
: the zone in which to reserve resources.
For example, to create a reservation in zone us-central1-a
for ten VMs
that each use an N2 predefined machine type with 4 vCPUs, and share the
reservation with projects project-1
and project-2
, run the following
command:
gcloud compute reservations create my-reservation \
--machine-type=n2-standard-4 \
--share-setting=projects \
--share-with=project-1,project-2 \
--vm-count=10 \
--zone=us-central1-a
Optionally, you can do one or more of the following:
To attach GPUs to your reserved N1 VMs, include the
--accelerator
flag.gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --accelerator=count=NUMBER_OF_ACCELERATORS,type=ACCELERATOR_TYPE --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace the following:
NUMBER_OF_ACCELERATORS
: the number of GPUs to add per reserved VM.ACCELERATOR_TYPE
: a supported GPU model for N1 VMs. Ensure that your chosen GPU model is available in the zone where you want to reserve resources. Otherwise, creating the reservation fails.
To add one or more Local SSD disks to each reserved VM, include one or more
--local-ssd
flags. You can specify up to 24 Local SSD disks. Each Local SSD disk is 375 GB.For example, to specify two Local SSD disks when creating a shared reservation, include two
--local-ssd
flags as follows:gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --local-ssd=size=375,interface=INTERFACE_1 \ --local-ssd=size=375,interface=INTERFACE_2 \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
INTERFACE_1
andINTERFACE_2
with the type of interface you want each Local SSD disk to use. Specify one of the following values:NVME disk interfaces:
nvme
SCSI disk interfaces:
scsi
Make sure that the machine type you specify for the reserved VMs supports the chosen disk interfaces. Otherwise, creating the reservation fails. For more information, see how to choose a disk interface.
To have the reserved VMs use a specific minimum CPU platform instead of the zone's default CPU platform, include the
--min-cpu-platform
flag.gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --min-cpu-platform="MIN_CPU_PLATFORM" \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
MIN_CPU_PLATFORM
with a minimum CPU platform. To make sure that a CPU platform is available in the zone where you're reserving resources, view the available CPU platforms by zone.To specify that only VMs that specifically target this reservation can consume it, include the
--require-specific-reservation
flag.gcloud compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --require-specific-reservation \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--reservation-sharing-policy=ALLOW_ALL
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --reservation-sharing-policy=ALLOW_ALL \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
To enable Compute Engine to automatically delete the reservation, select one of the following methods:
To delete the reservation at a specific date and time, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--delete-at-time
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --delete-at-time=DELETE_AT_TIME \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
DELETE_AT_TIME
with a date and time formatted as an RFC 3339 timestamp, which must be as follows:YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSOFFSET
Replace the following:
YYYY-MM-DD
: a date formatted as a 4-digit year, 2-digit month, and a 2-digit day of the month, separated by hyphens (-
).HH:MM:SS
: a time formatted as a 2-digit hour using a 24-hour time, 2-digit minutes, and 2-digit seconds, separated by colons (:
).OFFSET
: the time zone formatted as an offset of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). For example, to use the Pacific Standard Time (PST), specify-08:00
. Alternatively, to use no offset, specifyZ
.
To delete the reservation after a specific duration, use the
gcloud beta compute reservations create
command with the--delete-after-duration
flag.gcloud beta compute reservations create RESERVATION_NAME \ --delete-after-duration=DELETE_AFTER_DURATION \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --share-setting=projects \ --share-with=CONSUMER_PROJECT_IDS \ --vm-count=NUMBER_OF_VMS \ --zone=ZONE
Replace
DELETE_AFTER_DURATION
with a duration in days, hours, minutes, or seconds. For example, specify30m
for 30 minutes, or1d2h3m4s
for 1 day, 2 hours, 3 minutes, and 4 seconds.
Terraform
To create a reservation, use the
google_compute_reservation
Terraform resource.
To specify a shared reservation, define the share_settings
block:
- Set the
share_type
field toSPECIFIC_PROJECTS
. - In the
project_map
block, specify the project IDs of the projects that you want to share this reservation with.
For more information about how to use Terraform, see Using Terraform with Google Cloud.
REST
To create a shared reservation, make a POST
request to the
reservations.insert
method.
In the request body, include the following:
The
projectMap
field.The
shareType
field set toSPECIFIC_PROJECTS
.
For example, to create a shared reservation without including any optional
fields and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make the
following POST
request:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations
{
"name": "RESERVATION_NAME",
"shareSettings": {
"shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS",
"projectMap": {
"CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": {
"projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1"
},
"CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": {
"projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2"
}
}
},
"specificReservation": {
"count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS",
"instanceProperties": {
"machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE"
}
}
}
Replace the following:
PROJECT_ID
: the ID of the project where you want to reserve resources.ZONE
: the zone in which to reserve resources.RESERVATION_NAME
: the name of the reservation to create.CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1
andCONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2
: the IDs of projects that can consume this reservation. You can include up to 100 consumer projects. These projects must be in the same organization as the owner project. Don't include the owner project. By default, it is already allowed to consume the reservation.NUMBER_OF_VMS
: the number of VMs to reserve.MACHINE_TYPE
: a machine type to use for each VM. If you specify an A3 machine type, then you must include thespecificReservationRequired
field in the request body, and set the field totrue
. This indicates that only VMs that specifically target the reservation can consume it.
For example, to create a reservation by specifying a global instance
template in zone us-central1-a
, share the reservation with projects
project-1
and project-2
, and reserve ten VMs that each use an N2
predefined machine type with 4 vCPUs, make the following POST
request:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/example-project/zones/us-central1-a/reservations
{
"name": "my-reservation",
"shareSettings": {
"shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS",
"projectMap": {
"project-1": {
"projectId": "project-1"
},
"project-2": {
"projectId": "project-2"
}
}
},
"specificReservation": {
"count": "10",
"instanceProperties": {
"machineType": "n2-standard-4",
}
}
}
Optionally, you can do one or more of the following:
To attach GPUs to your reserved N1 VMs, include the
guestAccelerators
field in the request body.For example, to create a reservation shared with two consumer projects, and attach GPUs to any reserved N1 VMs, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "guestAccelerators": [ { "acceleratorCount": NUMBER_OF_ACCELERATORS, "acceleratorType": "ACCELERATOR_TYPE" } ], "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } } }
Replace the following:
NUMBER_OF_ACCELERATORS
: the number of GPUs to add per reserved VM.ACCELERATOR_TYPE
: a supported GPU model for N1 VMs. Ensure that your chosen GPU model is available in the zone where you want to reserve resources. Otherwise, creating the reservation fails.
To add one or more Local SSD disks to each reserved VM, include the
localSsds
field in the request body. You can specify up to 24 Local SSD disks. Each Local SSD disk is 375 GB.For example, to create a shared reservation while specifying two Local SSD disks and two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "localSsds": [ { "diskSizeGb": "375", "interface": "INTERFACE_1" }, { "diskSizeGb": "375", "interface": "INTERFACE_2" } ], "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } } }
Replace
INTERFACE_1
andINTERFACE_2
with the type of interface you want each Local SSD disk to use. Specify one of the following values:NVME disk interfaces:
NVME
SCSI disk interfaces:
SCSI
Make sure that the machine type you specify for the reserved VMs supports the chosen disk interfaces. Otherwise, creating the reservation fails. For more information, see how to choose a disk interface.
To have the reserved VMs use a specific minimum CPU platform instead of the zone's default CPU platform, include the
minCpuPlatform
field in the request body.For example, to create a shared reservation while specifying a minimum CPU platform and two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE", "minCpuPlatform": "MIN_CPU_PLATFORM" } } }
Replace
MIN_CPU_PLATFORM
with a minimum CPU platform. To make sure that a CPU platform is available in the zone where you're reserving resources, view the available CPU platforms by zone.To specify that only VMs that specifically target this reservation can consume it, include the
specificReservationRequired
field in the request body, and set the field totrue
.For example, to create a specific reservation and share it with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } }, "specificReservationRequired": true }
To allow a reservation of A2 or A3 VMs to be consumed by custom training jobs or prediction jobs in Vertex AI, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include theserviceShareType
field and set it toALLOW_ALL
.POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "reservationSharingPolicy": { "serviceShareType": "ALLOW_ALL" }, "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } } }
To enable Compute Engine to automatically delete the reservation, select one of the following methods:
To delete the reservation at a specific date and time, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include thedeleteAtTime
field.For example, to create a reservation while specifying a date and time to delete a reservation, and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "deleteAtTime": "DELETE_AT_TIME", "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } } }
Replace
DELETE_AT_TIME
with a date and time formatted as an RFC 3339 timestamp, which must be as follows:YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSOFFSET
Replace the following:
YYYY-MM-DD
: a date formatted as a 4-digit year, 2-digit month, and a 2-digit day of the month, separated by hyphens (-
).HH:MM:SS
: a time formatted as a 2-digit hour using a 24-hour time, 2-digit minutes, and 2-digit seconds, separated by colons (:
).OFFSET
: the time zone formatted as an offset of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). For example, to use the Pacific Standard Time (PST), specify-08:00
. Alternatively, to use no offset, specifyZ
.
To delete the reservation after a specific duration, make a
POST
request to thebeta.reservations.insert
method. In the request body, include thedeleteAfterDuration
field.For example, to create a reservation that Compute Engine deletes after a specific duration, and share the reservation with two consumer projects, make a request as follows:
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/beta/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/reservations { "deleteAfterDuration": { "seconds": "DELETE_AFTER_DURATION" }, "name": "RESERVATION_NAME", "shareSettings": { "shareType": "SPECIFIC_PROJECTS", "projectMap": { "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_1" }, "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2": { "projectId": "CONSUMER_PROJECT_ID_2" } } }, "specificReservation": { "count": "NUMBER_OF_VMS", "instanceProperties": { "machineType": "MACHINE_TYPE" } } }
Replace
DELETE_AFTER_DURATION
with a duration in seconds. For example, specify86400
for 86,400 seconds (1 day).
Troubleshooting
Learn how to troubleshoot reservation creation.
What's next
Learn how to view your reservations.
Learn how to attach reservations to commitments.
Learn how to consume reservations.
Learn how to monitor reservations consumption.