diff --git a/404.html b/404.html index fc1a6b0..1a34405 100644 --- a/404.html +++ b/404.html @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ - + @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ -
The Rocky Linux Release Engineering Team (who also refers to themselves as SIG/Core) dedicates themselves to the development, building, management, production, and release of Rocky Linux. This group combines development and infrastructure in a single cohesive unit of individuals that ultimately make the distribution happen.
Members of this team are also members of Special Interest Groups, such as SIG/AltArch or SIG/Kernel. Some members can also be found in other parts of the Enterprise Linux community as a whole, such as EPEL.
While not a strict Special Interest Group (as defined by the Rocky Linux wiki), the primary, overarching goal (or "interest") is to ensure Rocky Linux is built and released in a complete and functional manner.
Release Engineering strives to ensure a stable distribution is developed, built, tested, and provided to the community from the RESF as a compatible derivative of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. To achieve this goal, some of the things we do are:
Release Engineering (SIG/Core) is a mix of Development and Infrastructure members to ensure a high quality release of Rocky Linux as well as the uptime of the services provided to the community. The current members of this group are listed in the table below.
Release Engineering (SIG/Core) is a mix of Development and Infrastructure members to ensure a high quality release of Rocky Linux as well as the uptime of the services provided to the community. The current members of this group are listed in the table below. Some members may also be found in various Special Interest Groups, such as SIG/AltArch and SIG/Kernel.
See the What We Do page for a more detailed explanation of our activities.
There are various ways to get in touch with Release Engineering and provide help, assistance, or even just ideas that can benefit us or the entire community.
Chat
RESF SIG/Core Issue Tracker
For a list of our members, see the Members page.
Release Engineering (SIG/Core) was brought together as a combination of varying expertise (development and infrastructure) to try to fill in gaps of knowledge but to also to ensure that the primary goal of having a stable release of Rocky Linux is reached.
Some of the things we do in pursuit of our mission goals:
This section goes over at a high level how we compose releases for Rocky Linux. As most of our tools are home grown, we have made sure that the tools are open source and in our git services.
This page should serve as an idea of the steps we generally take and we hope that other projects out there who wish to also use our tools can make sure they can use them in this same way, whether they want to be an Enterprise Linux derivative or another project entirely.
The tools in use for the distribution are in the table below.
For Rocky Linux to be build, we use Peridot as the build system and empanadas to \"compose\" the distribution. As we do not use Koji for Rocky Linux beyond version 9, pungi can no longer be used. Peridot instead takes pungi configuration data and comps and transforms them into a format it can understand. Empanadas then comes in to do the \"compose\" and sync all the repositories down.
Peridot
empanadas
Step by step, it looks like this:
In Parallel:
Lorax results are pulled down from an S3 bucket
This page goes over empanadas, which is part of the SIG/Core toolkit. Empanadas assists SIG/Core is composing repositories, creating ISO's, creating images, and various other activities in Rocky Linux. It is also used for general testing and debugging of repositories and its metadata.
@label
@neil
~Development
empanadas is a python project using poetry, containing various built-in modules with the goal to try to emulate the Fedora Project's pungi to an extent. While it is not perfect, it achieves the very basic goals of creating repositories, images and ISO's for consumption by the end user. It also has interactions with peridot, the build system used by the RESF to build the Rocky Linux distribution.
For performing syncs, it relies on the use of podman to perform syncing in a parallel fashion. This was done because it is not possible to run multiple dnf transactions at once on a single system and looping one repository at a time is not sustainable (nor fast).
fpart
mock
%rhel
As of this writing, empanadas has the following abilities:
lorax
xorriso
livemedia-creator
The below is how to install empanadas from the development branch on a Fedora system.
% dnf install git podman fpart poetry mock -y\n% git clone https://git.resf.org/sig_core/toolkit.git -b devel\n% cd toolkit/iso/empanadas\n% poetry install\n
Depending on how you are using empanadas will depend on how your configurations will be setup.
empanadas/common.py
empanadas/config/*.yaml
empanadas/sig/*.yaml
These configuration files are delicate and can control a wide variety of the moving parts of empanadas. As these configurations are fairly massive, we recommend checking the reference guides for deeper details into configuring for base distribution or \"SIG\" content.
The most common way to use empanadas is to sync repositories from a peridot instance. This is performed upon each release or on each set of updates as they come from upstream. Below lists how to use empanadas, as well as the common options.
Note that for each of these commands, it is fully expected you are running poetry run in the root of empanadas.
poetry run
# Syncs all repositoryes for the \"9\" release\n% poetry run sync_from_peridot --release 9 --clean-old-packages\n\n# Syncs only the BaseOS repository without syncing sources\n% poetry run sync_from_peridot --release 9 --clean-old-packages --repo BaseOS --ignore-source\n\n# Syncs only AppStream for ppc64le\n% poetry run sync_from_peridot --release 9 --clean-old-packages --repo AppStream --arch ppc64le\n
URL: https://accounts.rockylinux.org
Purpose: Account Services maintains the accounts for almost all components of the Rocky ecosystem
Technology: Noggin used by Fedora Infrastructure
Contact: ~Infrastructure in Mattermost and #rockylinux-infra in Libera IRC
~Infrastructure
#rockylinux-infra
URL: https://git.resf.org
Purpose: General projects, code, and so on for the Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation.
Technology: Gitea
Contact: ~Infrastructure, ~Development in Mattermost and #rockylinux-infra, #rockylinux-devel in Libera IRC
#rockylinux-devel
URL: https://github.com/rocky-linux
Purpose: General purpose code, assets, and so on for Rocky Linux. Some content is mirrored to the RESF Git Service.
Technology: GitHub
URL: https://git.rockylinux.org
Purpose: Packages and light code for the Rocky Linux distribution
Technology: GitLab
URL: https://lists.resf.org
Purpose: Users can subscribe and interact with various mail lists for the Rocky ecosystem
Technology: Mailman 3 + Hyper Kitty
This page goes over the Peridot Build System and how SIG/Core utilizes it.
More to come.
In some cases, a package has to be rebuilt. A package may be rebuilt for these reasons:
This typically applies to packages being built from a given src subgroup. Packages pulled from upstream don't fall into this category in normal circumstances. In those cases, they receive .0.1 and so on as standalone rebuilds.
src
.0.1
This section goes over the process of composing a release from a bunch of packages to repositories, to images. This section also goes over the basics of working with koji when necessary.
Use this section to locate reference configuration items for the toolkit.
The common.py configuration contains dictionaries and classes that dictate most of the functionality of empanadas.
common.py
type: Dictionary
type: String
required: True
description: Empanadas expects to run on an EL system. This is part of the general check up. It should not be hardcoded and use the rpm python module.
required: False
description: Was the original tag placed in mock configs. This combines el with the rpm python module expansion. This is no longer required. The option is still available for future use.
el
description: The architecture of the current running system. This is checked against the supported architectures in general release configurations. This should not be hardcoded.
description: Date time stamp in the form of YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS. This should not be hardcoded.
description: Root path of composes on the system running empanadas.
description: For future use. Root path of staging repository location where content will be synced to.
description: For future use. Root path of production repository location where content will be synced to from staging.
description: For future use. Stub path that is appended to staging_root and production_root.
staging_root
production_root
example: mirror/pub/rocky
mirror/pub/rocky
description: For future use. Stub path that is appended to staging_root and production_root for SIG content.
example: mirror/pub/sig
mirror/pub/sig
description: URL to the base url's where the repositories live. This is typically to a peridot instance. This is supplemented by the configuration project_id parameter.
project_id
Note that this does not have to be a peridot instance. The combination of this value and project_id can be sufficient enough for empanadas to perform its work.
description: Hardcoded path to where ISO work is performed within a mock chroot. This is the default path created by mock and it is recommended not to change this.
example: /builddir
/builddir
description: This is the container used to perform all operations in podman.
example: centos:stream9
centos:stream9
description: Name of the distribution you are building or building for.
example: Rocky Linux
Rocky Linux
description: Short name of the distribution you are building or building for.
example: Rocky
Rocky
description: Translates Linux architectures to golang architectures. Reserved for future use.
description: Region you are working in with AWS or onprem cloud that supports this variable.
example: us-east-2
us-east-2
description: Name of the S3-compatible bucket that is used to pull images from. Requires aws_region.
aws_region
description: URL of the S3-compatible bucket that is used to pull images from.
description: Key value pairs of cloud or image variants. The value is either None or a list type.
None
config = {\n \"rlmacro\": rpm.expandMacro('%rhel'),\n \"dist\": 'el' + rpm.expandMacro('%rhel'),\n \"arch\": platform.machine(),\n \"date_stamp\": time.strftime(\"%Y%m%d.%H%M%S\", time.localtime()),\n \"compose_root\": \"/mnt/compose\",\n \"staging_root\": \"/mnt/repos-staging\",\n \"production_root\": \"/mnt/repos-production\",\n \"category_stub\": \"mirror/pub/rocky\",\n \"sig_category_stub\": \"mirror/pub/sig\",\n \"repo_base_url\": \"https://yumrepofs.build.resf.org/v1/projects\",\n \"mock_work_root\": \"/builddir\",\n \"container\": \"centos:stream9\",\n \"distname\": \"Rocky Linux\",\n \"shortname\": \"Rocky\",\n \"translators\": {\n \"x86_64\": \"amd64\",\n \"aarch64\": \"arm64\",\n \"ppc64le\": \"ppc64le\",\n \"s390x\": \"s390x\",\n \"i686\": \"386\"\n },\n \"aws_region\": \"us-east-2\",\n \"bucket\": \"resf-empanadas\",\n \"bucket_url\": \"https://resf-empanadas.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com\"\n}\n\nALLOWED_TYPE_VARIANTS = {\n \"Azure\": None,\n \"Container\": [\"Base\", \"Minimal\", \"UBI\"],\n \"EC2\": None,\n \"GenericCloud\": None,\n \"Vagrant\": [\"Libvirt\", \"Vbox\"],\n \"OCP\": None\n\n}\n
Each file in empanads/config/ is a yaml file that contains configuration items for the distribution release version. The configuration can heavily dictate the functionality and what features are directly supported by empanadas when ran.
empanads/config/
See the items below to see which options are mandatory and optional.
The Top Level is the name of the profile and starts the YAML dictionary for the release. It is alphanumeric and accepts punctuation within reason. Common examples:
9
9-beta
8-lookahead
description: Needed for treeinfo and discinfo generation.
description: Full version of a release
description: Release Candidate or Beta descriptor. Sets names and versions with this descriptor if enabled.
description: Major version of a release
description: Minor version of a release
description: Matches the top level of the release. This should not differ from the top level assignment.
description: Sets the dist tag for mock configs.
description: A URL to the bug tracker for this release or distribution.
description: Checksum type. Used when generating checksum information for images.
description: For future use with icicle.
type: list
description: List of supported architectures for this release.
type: boolean
description: Sets if architecture x86_64 will be multilib. It is recommended that this is set to True.
True
description: Appended to the base repo URL in common.py. For peridot, it is the project id that is generated for the project you are pulling from. It can be set to anything else if need be for non-peridot use.
type: dict
description: For future use. Sets symlinks to repositories for backwards compatibility. Key value pairs only.
description: Renames a repository to the value set. For example, renaming all to devel. Set to {} if no renames are goign to occur.
all
devel
{}
description: List of repositories that will be synced/managed by empanadas.
description: Key value pairs of packages and repodata. These are appended appropriately during syncing and ISO actions. Setting these are mandatory.
packages
repodata
type: dictionary
required: True if building ISO's and operating with lorax.
description: Controls how lorax and extra ISO's are built.
If are you not building images, set to {}
description: Dictates of xorrisofs is used to build images. Setting to false uses genisoimage. It is recommended that xorrisofs is used.
description: Set to false if you are using xorrisofs. Can be set to true when using genisoimage.
description: Dictates the ISO images that will be made or the treeinfo that will be generated.
Note: The primary repository (for example, BaseOS) will need to be listed to ensure the treeinfo data is correctly generated. disc should be set to False and isoskip should be set to True. See the example section for an example.
disc
False
isoskip
description: This tells the iso builder if this will be a generated ISO.
description: This tells the iso builder if this will be skipped, even if disc is set to True. Default is False.
type: string
description: Names the primary variant repository for the image. This is set in .treeinfo.
description: Names of the repositories included in the image. This is added to .treeinfo.
required value: dvd
dvd
description: This is required if building more than the DVD image. By default, the the name dvd is harcoded in the buildImage template.
required: True if building lorax images.
description: Sets up lorax images and which repositories to use when building lorax images.
description: List of repos that are used to pull packages to build the lorax images.
description: Base repository for the release
description: Excludes packages that are not needed when lorax is running.
description: Required list of installed packages needed to build lorax images.
description: Dictates what live images are built and how they are built.
description: The git repository URL where the kickstarts live
description: The branch being used for the kickstarts
description: Key value pairs of the live images being created. Key being the name of the live image, value being the kickstart name/path.
description: List of allowed architectures that will build for the live images.
description: Required list of packages needed to build the live images.
description: Cloud related settings.
Set to {} if not needed.
description: Cloud images that will be generated and in a bucket to be pulled, and their format.
description: Name of the cloud image being pulled.
Accepted key value options:
format
raw
qcow2
vhd
tar.xz
variants
primary_variant
description: Repoclosure settings. These settings are absolutely required when doing full syncs and need to check repositories for consistency.
description: For each architecture (key), dnf switches/settings that dictate how repoclosure will check for consistency (value, string).
example: x86_64: '--forcearch=x86_64 --arch=x86_64 --arch=athlon --arch=i686 --arch=i586 --arch=i486 --arch=i386 --arch=noarch'
x86_64: '--forcearch=x86_64 --arch=x86_64 --arch=athlon --arch=i686 --arch=i586 --arch=i486 --arch=i386 --arch=noarch'
description: For each repository that is pulled for a given release(key), repositories that will be included in the repoclosure check. A repository that only checks against itself must have a value of [].
[]
description: Extra files settings and where they come from. Git repositories are the only supported method.
description: URL to the git repository with the extra files.
description: URL to the git repository with the extra files, but the \"raw\" url form.
example: git_raw_path: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/staging/src/rocky-release/-/raw/r9/'
git_raw_path: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/staging/src/rocky-release/-/raw/r9/'
description: Branch where the extra files are pulled from.
description: For each gpg key type (key), the relative path to the key in the git repository (value).
These keys help set up the repository configuration when doing syncs.
By default, the RepoSync class sets stable as the gpgkey that is used.
stable
description: List of files from the git repository that will be used as \"extra\" files and placed in the repositories and available to mirrors and will appear on ISO images if applicable.
---\n'9':\n fullname: 'Rocky Linux 9.0'\n revision: '9.0'\n rclvl: 'RC2'\n major: '9'\n minor: '0'\n profile: '9'\n disttag: 'el9'\n bugurl: 'https://bugs.rockylinux.org'\n checksum: 'sha256'\n fedora_major: '20'\n allowed_arches:\n - x86_64\n - aarch64\n - ppc64le\n - s390x\n provide_multilib: True\n project_id: '55b17281-bc54-4929-8aca-a8a11d628738'\n repo_symlinks:\n NFV: 'nfv'\n renames:\n all: 'devel'\n all_repos:\n - 'all'\n - 'BaseOS'\n - 'AppStream'\n - 'CRB'\n - 'HighAvailability'\n - 'ResilientStorage'\n - 'RT'\n - 'NFV'\n - 'SAP'\n - 'SAPHANA'\n - 'extras'\n - 'plus'\n structure:\n packages: 'os/Packages'\n repodata: 'os/repodata'\n iso_map:\n xorrisofs: True\n iso_level: False\n images:\n dvd:\n disc: True\n variant: 'AppStream'\n repos:\n - 'BaseOS'\n - 'AppStream'\n minimal:\n disc: True\n isoskip: True\n repos:\n - 'minimal'\n - 'BaseOS'\n variant: 'minimal'\n volname: 'dvd'\n BaseOS:\n disc: False\n isoskip: True\n variant: 'BaseOS'\n repos:\n - 'BaseOS'\n - 'AppStream'\n lorax:\n repos:\n - 'BaseOS'\n - 'AppStream'\n variant: 'BaseOS'\n lorax_removes:\n - 'libreport-rhel-anaconda-bugzilla'\n required_pkgs:\n - 'lorax'\n - 'genisoimage'\n - 'isomd5sum'\n - 'lorax-templates-rhel'\n - 'lorax-templates-generic'\n - 'xorriso'\n cloudimages:\n images:\n EC2:\n format: raw\n GenericCloud:\n format: qcow2\n livemap:\n git_repo: 'https://git.resf.org/sig_core/kickstarts.git'\n branch: 'r9'\n ksentry:\n Workstation: rocky-live-workstation.ks\n Workstation-Lite: rocky-live-workstation-lite.ks\n XFCE: rocky-live-xfce.ks\n KDE: rocky-live-kde.ks\n MATE: rocky-live-mate.ks\n allowed_arches:\n - x86_64\n - aarch64\n required_pkgs:\n - 'lorax-lmc-novirt'\n - 'vim-minimal'\n - 'pykickstart'\n - 'git'\n variantmap:\n git_repo: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/rocky/pungi-rocky.git'\n branch: 'r9'\n git_raw_path: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/rocky/pungi-rocky/-/raw/r9/'\n repoclosure_map:\n arches:\n x86_64: '--forcearch=x86_64 --arch=x86_64 --arch=athlon --arch=i686 --arch=i586 --arch=i486 --arch=i386 --arch=noarch'\n aarch64: '--forcearch=aarch64 --arch=aarch64 --arch=noarch'\n ppc64le: '--forcearch=ppc64le --arch=ppc64le --arch=noarch'\n s390x: '--forcearch=s390x --arch=s390x --arch=noarch'\n repos:\n devel: []\n BaseOS: []\n AppStream:\n - BaseOS\n CRB:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n HighAvailability:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n ResilientStorage:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n RT:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n NFV:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n SAP:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n - HighAvailability\n SAPHANA:\n - BaseOS\n - AppStream\n - HighAvailability\n extra_files:\n git_repo: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/staging/src/rocky-release.git'\n git_raw_path: 'https://git.rockylinux.org/staging/src/rocky-release/-/raw/r9/'\n branch: 'r9'\n gpg:\n stable: 'SOURCES/RPM-GPG-KEY-Rocky-9'\n testing: 'SOURCES/RPM-GPG-KEY-Rocky-9-Testing'\n list:\n - 'SOURCES/Contributors'\n - 'SOURCES/COMMUNITY-CHARTER'\n - 'SOURCES/EULA'\n - 'SOURCES/LICENSE'\n - 'SOURCES/RPM-GPG-KEY-Rocky-9'\n - 'SOURCES/RPM-GPG-KEY-Rocky-9-Testing'\n...\n
Each file in empanads/sig/ is a yaml file that contains configuration items for the distribution release version. The configuration determines the structure of the SIG repositories synced from Peridot or a given repo.
empanads/sig/
Note that a release profile (for a major version) is still required for this sync to work.
This section goes over the various SOP's for SIG/Core. Please use the menu items to find the various pages of interest.
This SOP covers how the Rocky Linux Release Engineering Team handles composes and repository syncs for the distribution. It contains information of the scripts that are utilized and in what order, depending on the use case.
@mustafa
@tgo
There are several git repositories used in the overall composition of a repository or a set of repositories.
Pungi - This repository contains all the necessary pungi configuration files that peridot translates into its own configuration. Pungi is no longer used for Rocky Linux.
Comps - This repository contains all the necessary comps (which are groups and other data) for a given major version. Peridot (and pungi) use this information to properly build repositories.
Toolkit - This repository contains various scripts and utilities used by Release Engineering, such as syncing composes, functionality testing, and mirror maintenance.
There is a designated system that takes care of composing repositories. These systems contain the necessary EFS/NFS mounts for the staging and production repositories as well as composes.
/mnt/compose
/mnt/repos-staging
/mnt/repos-production
Each repository or set of repositories are controlled by various comps and pungi configurations that are translated into peridot. Empanadas is used to run a reposync from peridot's yumrepofs repositories, generate ISO's, and create a pungi compose look-a-like. Because of this, the comps and pungi-rocky configuration is not referenced with empanadas.
First, the toolkit must be cloned. In the iso/empanadas directory, run poetry install. You'll then have access to the various commands needed:
iso/empanadas
poetry install
sync_from_peridot
build-iso
build-iso-extra
pull-unpack-tree
pull-cloud-image
finalize_compose
To perform a full compose, this order is expected (replacing X with major version or config profile)
# This creates a brand new directory under /mnt/compose/X and symlinks it to latest-Rocky-X\npoertry run sync_from_peridot --release X --hashed --repoclosure --full-run\n\n# On each architecture, this must be ran to generate the lorax images\n# !! Use --rc if the image is a release candidate or a beta image\n# Note: This is typically done using kubernetes and uploaded to a bucket\npoetry run build-iso --release X --isolation=None\n\n# The images are pulled from the bucket\npoetry run pull-unpack-tree --release X\n\n# The extra ISO's (usually just DVD) are generated\n# !! Use --rc if the image is a release candidate or a beta image\n# !! Set --extra-iso-mode to mock if desired\n# !! If there is more than the dvd, remove --extra-iso dvd\npoetry run build-iso-extra --release X --extra-iso dvd --extra-iso-mode podman\n\n# This pulls the generic and EC2 cloud images\npoetry run pull-cloud-image --release X\n\n# This ensures everything is closed out for a release. This copies iso's, images,\n# generates metadata, and the like.\n# !! DO NOT RUN DURING INCREMENTAL UPDATES !!\npoetry run finalize_compose --release X\n
It is possible to simply compose singular repos if you know which ones you want to sync. This can be done when it's not for a brand new release.
# Set your repos as desired. --arch is also acceptable.\n# --ignore-debug and --ignore-source are also acceptable options.\npoetry run sync_from_peridot --release X --hashed --clean-old-packages --repo X,Y,Z\n
Syncing utilizes the sync scripts provided in the release engineering toolkit.
When the scripts are being ran, they are usually ran with a specific purpose, as each major version may be different.
The below are common vars files. common_X will override what's in common. Typically these set what repositories exist and how they are named or look at the top level. These also set the current major.minor release as necessary.
.\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 common\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 common_8\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 common_9\n
These are for the releases in general. What they do is noted below.
\u251c\u2500\u2500 gen-torrents.sh -> Generates torrents for images\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 minor-release-sync-to-staging.sh -> Syncs a minor release to staging\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 prep-staging-X.sh -> Preps staging updates and signs repos (only for 8)\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sign-repos-only.sh -> Signs the repomd (only for 8)\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-file-list-parallel.sh -> Generates file lists in parallel for mirror sync scripts\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-prod.sh -> Syncs staging to production\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-prod.delete.sh -> Syncs staging to production (deletes artifacts that are no longer in staging)\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-prod-sig.sh -> Syncs a sig provided compose to production\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-staging.sh -> Syncs a provided compose to staging\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-staging.delete.sh -> Syncs a provided compose to staging (deletes artifacts that are no longer in the compose)\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-staging-sig.sh -> Syncs a sig provided compose to staging\n
Generally, you will only run sync-to-staging.sh or sync-to-staging.delete.sh to sync. The former is for older releases, the latter is for newer releases. Optionally, if you are syncing a \"beta\" or \"lookahead\" release, you will need to also provide the RLREL variable as beta or lookahead.
sync-to-staging.sh
sync-to-staging.delete.sh
RLREL
beta
lookahead
# The below syncs to staging for Rocky Linux 8\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-staging.sh Rocky\n# The below syncs to staging for Rocky Linux 9\nRLVER=9 bash sync-to-staging.delete.sh Rocky\n
Once the syncs are done, staging must be tested and vetted before being sent to production. Once staging is completed, it is synced to production.
# Set X to whatever release\nbash RLVER=X sync-to-prod.delete.sh\nbash sync-file-list-parallel.sh\n
During this phase, staging is rsynced with production, the file list is updated, and the full time list is also updated to allow mirrors to know that the repositories have been updated and that they can sync.
Note: If multiple releases are being updated, it is important to run the syncs to completion before running the file list parallel script.
This SOP covers how the Rocky Linux Release Engineering Team handles composes and repository syncs for Rocky Linux 8. It contains information of the scripts that are utilized and in what order, depending on the use case.
Please see the other SOP for Rocky Linux 9+ that are managed via empanadas and peridot.
Pungi - This repository contains all the necessary pungi configuration files for composes that come from koji. Pungi interacts with koji to build the composes.
Comps - This repository contains all the necessary comps (which are groups and other data) for a given major version. Pungi uses this information to properly build the repositories.
For every stable script, there is an equal beta or lookahead script available.
/mnt/koji
Each repository or set of repositories are controlled by various pungi configurations. For example, r8.conf will control the absolute base of Rocky Linux 8, which imports other git repository data as well as accompanying json or other configuration files.
r8.conf
Inside the pungi git repository, the folder scripts contain the necessary scripts that are ran to perform a compose. There are different types of composes:
pungi
scripts
Each script is titled appropriately:
produce-X.sh
rX.conf
produce-X-full.sh
updates-X.sh
updates-X-NAME.sh
updates-X-full.sh
When these scripts are ran, they generate an appropriate directory under /mnt/compose/X with a directory and an accompanying symlink. For example. If an update to Rocky was made using updates-8.sh, the below would be made:
/mnt/compose/X
updates-8.sh
drwxr-xr-x. 5 root root 6144 Jul 21 17:44 Rocky-8-updates-20210721.1\nlrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 26 Jul 21 18:26 latest-Rocky-8 -> Rocky-8-updates-20210721.1\n
This setup also allows pungi to reuse previous package set data to reduce the time it takes to build a compose. Typically during a new minor release, all composes should be ran so they can be properly combined. Example of a typical order if releasing 8.X:
produce-8.sh\nupdates-8-devel.sh\nupdates-8-extras.sh\n\n# ! OR !\nproduce-8-full.sh\n
When the scripts are being ran, they are usually ran for a specific purpose. They are also ran in a certain order to ensure integrity and consistency of a release.
\u251c\u2500\u2500 gen-torrents.sh -> Generates torrents for images\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 minor-release-sync-to-staging.sh -> Syncs a minor release to staging\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sign-repos-only.sh -> Signs the repomd (only)\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-prod.sh -> Syncs staging to production\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-staging.sh -> Syncs a provided compose to staging\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 sync-to-staging-sig.sh -> Syncs a sig provided compose to staging\n
Generally, you will only run minor-release-sync-to-staging.sh when a full minor release is being produced. So for example, if 8.5 has been built out, you would run that after a compose. gen-torrents.sh would be ran shortly after.
minor-release-sync-to-staging.sh
gen-torrents.sh
When doing updates, the order of operations (preferably) would be:
* sync-to-staging.sh\n* sync-to-staging-sig.sh -> Only if sigs are updated\n* sync-to-prod.sh -> After the initial testing, it is sent to prod.\n
An example of order:
# The below syncs to staging\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-staging.sh Extras\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-staging.sh Rocky-devel\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-staging.sh Rocky\n
Once the syncs are done, staging must be tested and vetted before being sent to production. During this stage, the updateinfo.xml is also applied where necessary to the repositories to provide errata. Once staging is completed, it is synced to production.
updateinfo.xml
pushd /mnt/repos-staging/mirror/pub/rocky/8.X\npython3.9 /usr/local/bin/apollo_tree -p $(pwd) -n 'Rocky Linux 8 $arch' -i Live -i Minimal -i devel -i extras -i images -i isos -i live -i metadata -i Devel -i plus -i nfv\npopd\nRLVER=8 bash sign-repos-only.sh\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-prod.sh\nbash sync-file-list-parallel.sh\n
On the designated compose box, there is a script that can do all of the incremental steps.
cd /root/cron\nbash stable-updates\n
The same goes for a full production.
bash stable\n
This SOP covers how the Rocky Linux Release Engineering Team handles composes and repository syncs for Special Interest Groups.
sync_sig
To perform a compose of a SIG, it must be defined in the configuration. As an example, here is composing the core sig.
core
# This creates a brand new directory under /mnt/compose/X and symlinks it to latest-SIG-Y-X\n~/.local/bin/poetry run sync_sig --release 9 --sig core --hashed --clean-old-packages --full-run\n\n# This assumes the directories already exist and will update in place.\n~/.local/bin/poetry run sync_sig --release 9 --sig core --hashed --clean-old-packages\n
For SIG's, the only files you'll need to know of are sync-to-staging-sig.sh and sync-to-prod-sig.sh. Both scripts will delete packages and data that are no longer in the compose.
sync-to-staging-sig.sh
sync-to-prod-sig.sh
# The below syncs the core 8 repos to staging\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-staging-sig.sh core\n# The below syncs the core 9 repos to staging\nRLVER=9 bash sync-to-staging-sig.sh core\n\n# The below syncs everything in staging for 8 core to prod\nRLVER=8 bash sync-to-prod-sig.sh core\n\n# The below syncs everything in staging for 9 core to prod\nRLVER=9 bash sync-to-prod-sig.sh core\n
Once staging is completed and reviewed, it is synced to production.
bash sync-file-list-parallel.sh\n
This SOP contains most if not all the information needed for SIG/Core to maintain and operate Mirror Manager for Rocky Linux.
So you made a bad decision and now have to do things to Mirror Manager. Good luck.
This runs two (2) instances. Apache/httpd is configured to send /mirrorlist to one and /debuglist to the other.
/mirrorlist
/debuglist
Every fifteen (15) minutes: Mirrorlist cache is regenerated
Every twenty (20) minutes: Service hosting /mirrorlist is restarted
Note that the timing for the restart of the mirror list instances are arbitrary.
This is a uwsgi service fronted by an apache/httpd instance. This is responsible for everything else that is not /mirrorlist or /debuglist. This allows the mirror managers to, well, manage their mirrors.
Fastly sits in front of mirror manager. VPN is required to access the /admin endpoints.
/admin
If the backend of the CDN is down, it will attempt to guess what the user wanted to access and spit out a result on the dl.rockylinux.org website. For example, a request for AppStream-8 and x86_64 will result in a AppStream/x86_64/os directory on dl.rockylinux.org. Note that this isn't perfect, but it helps in potential down time or patching.
AppStream/x86_64/os
Fastly -> www firewall -> mirrormanager server\n
In reality, the flow is a lot more complex, and a diagram should be created to map it out in a more user-friendly manner (@TODO)
User -> Fastly -> AWS NLB over TLS, passthru -> www firewall cluster (decrypt TLS) -> mirrormanager server (Rocky CA TLS)\n
Below are a list of possible tasks to take with mirror manager, depending on the scenario.
For the following steps, the following must be completed:
Disable mirrormanager user cronjobs
Update the database with the new content. This is run on a schedule normally (see previous section) but can be done manually.
a. As the mirror manager user, run the following:
/opt/mirrormanager/scan-primary-mirror-0.4.2/target/debug/scan-primary-mirror --debug --config $HOME/scan-primary-mirror.toml --category 'Rocky Linux'\n/opt/mirrormanager/scan-primary-mirror-0.4.2/target/debug/scan-primary-mirror --debug --config $HOME/scan-primary-mirror.toml --category 'Rocky Linux SIGs'\n
Update the redirects for $reponame-$releasever
$reponame-$releasever
a. Use psql to mirrormanager server: psql -U mirrormanager -W -h mirrormanager_db_host mirrormanager_db
psql -U mirrormanager -W -h mirrormanager_db_host mirrormanager_db
b. Confirm that all three columns are filled and that the second and third columns are identical:
select rr.from_repo AS \"From Repo\", rr.to_repo AS \"To Repo\", r.prefix AS \"Target Repo\" FROM repository_redirect AS rr LEFT JOIN repository AS r ON rr.to_repo = r.prefix GROUP BY r.prefix, rr.to_repo, rr.from_repo ORDER BY r.prefix ASC;`\n
c. Change the majorversion redirects to point to the new point release, for example:
majorversion
update repository_redirect set to_repo = regexp_replace(to_repo, '9\\.2', '9.3') where from_repo ~ '(\\w+)-9-(debug|source)';`\n
d. Insert new redirects for the major version expected by the installer
insert into repository_redirect (from_repo,to_repo) select REGEXP_REPLACE(rr.from_repo,'9\\.2','9.3'),REGEXP_REPLACE(rr.to_repo,'9\\.2','9.3')FROM repository_redirect AS rr WHERE from_repo ~ '(\\w+)-9.2';\n
Generate the mirrorlist cache and restart the debuglist and verify.
Once the bitflip is initiated, restart mirrorlist and reenable all cronjobs.
shasum=$(curl https://dl.rockylinux.org/pub/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml | sha256sum)
tail -latr /var/log/mirrormanager/propagation/rocky-9.3-BaseOS-x86_64_propagation.log.*`\n\nexport VER=9.3\nawk -v shasum=$(curl -s https://dl.rockylinux.org/pub/rocky/$VER/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml | sha256sum | awk '{print $1}') -F'::' '{split($0,data,\":\")} {if ($4 != shasum) {print data[5], data[6], $2, $7}}' < $(find /var/log/mirrormanager/propagation/ -name \"rocky-${VER}-BaseOS-x86_64_propagation.log*\" -mtime -1 | tail -1)'\n
This will generate a table. You can take the IDs in the first column and use the database to disable them by ID (table name: hosts) or go to https://mirrors.rockylinux.org/mirrormanager/host/ID and uncheck 'User active'.
Users can change user active, but they cannot change admin active. It is better to flip user active in this case.
Admins can also view https://mirrors.rockylinux.org/mirrormanager/admin/all_sites if necessary.
Example of table columns:
Note
These mirrors are here soley as an example and not to call anyone out, every mirror shows up on here at one point, for some reason, due to natural variations in how mirrors sync.
[mirrormanager@ord1-prod-mirrormanager001 propagation]$ awk -v shasum=$(curl -s https://dl.rockylinux.org/pub/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml | sha256sum | awk '{print $1}') -F'::' '{split($0,data,\":\")} {if ($4 != shasum) {print data[5], data[6], $2, $7}}' < rocky-9.3-BaseOS-x86_64_propagation.log.1660611632 | column -t\n164 mirror.host.ag http://mirror.host.ag/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n173 rocky.centos-repo.net http://rocky.centos-repo.net/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 403\n92 rocky.mirror.co.ge http://rocky.mirror.co.ge/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n289 mirror.vsys.host http://mirror.vsys.host/rockylinux/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n269 mirrors.rackbud.com http://mirrors.rackbud.com/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n295 mirror.ps.kz http://mirror.ps.kz/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n114 mirror.liteserver.nl http://rockylinux.mirror.liteserver.nl/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n275 mirror.upsi.edu.my http://mirror.upsi.edu.my/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n190 mirror.kku.ac.th http://mirror.kku.ac.th/rocky-linux/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n292 mirrors.cat.pdx.edu http://mirrors.cat.pdx.edu/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n370 mirrors.gbnetwork.com http://mirrors.gbnetwork.com/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n308 mirror.ihost.md http://mirror.ihost.md/rockylinux/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n87 mirror.freedif.org http://mirror.freedif.org/Rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n194 mirrors.bestthaihost.com http://mirrors.bestthaihost.com/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n30 mirror.admax.se http://mirror.admax.se/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 200\n195 mirror.uepg.br http://mirror.uepg.br/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404\n247 mirrors.ipserverone.com http://mirrors.ipserverone.com/rocky/9.3/BaseOS/x86_64/os/repodata/repomd.xml 404'\n
This SOP contains all the steps required by SIG/Core (a mix of Release Engineering and Infrastructure) to perform releases of all Rocky Linux versions. Work is in all collaboration within the entire group of engineerings.
@skip77
@sherif
@pgreco
Within a minimum of two (2) days, the following should be true:
Torrents should be setup. All files can be synced with the seed box(es) but not yet published. The data should be verified using sha256sum and compared to the CHECKSUM files provided with the files.
Website should be ready (typically with an open PR in github). The content should be verified that the design and content are correct and finalized.
Enough mirrors should be setup. This essentially means that all content for a release should be synced to our primary mirror with the executable bit turned off, and the content should also be hard linked. In theory, mirror manager can be queried to verify if mirrors are or appear to be in sync.
Within a minimum of one (1) to two (2) days, the following should be true:
Updates should be completed in the build system, and verified in staging.
Updates should be sent to production and file lists updated to allow mirrors to sync.
Ensure the SIG/Core Checklist is read thoroughly and executed as listed.
During release day, these should be verified/completed in order:
Website - The primary website and user landing at rockylinux.org should allow the user to efficiently click through to a download link of an ISO, image, or torrent. It must be kept up.
Torrent - The seed box(es) should be primed and ready to go for users downloading via torrent.
Release Notes & Documentation - The release notes are often on the same website as the documentation. The main website and where applicable in the docs should refer to the Release Notes of Rocky Linux.
Wiki - If applicable, the necessary changes and resources should be available for a release. In particular, if a major release has new repos, changed repo names, this should be documented.
Everything else!
Mirror Manager
Pass image to Testing Team for final validation
Pass image to Testing Team for validation
This SOP contains general checklists required by SIG/Core to prepare and plan for the upcoming release. This work, in general, is required to be done on a routine basis, even months out before the next major or minor release, as it requires monitoring of upstream's (CentOS Stream) work to ensure Rocky Linux will remain ready and compatible with Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
It is expected to monitor the following repositories upstream, as these will indicate what is coming up for a given major or point release. These repositories are found at the Red Hat gitlab.
These repositories can be monitored by setting to \"all activity\" on the bell icon.
Upon changes to the upstream repositories, SIG/Core member should analyze the changes and apply the same to the lookahead branches:
rocky-release
rocky-logos
pungi-rocky
sync-from-upstream
peridot-rocky
comps
rocky-module-defaults
Repositories that generally track for LookAhead and Beta releases will flow downward to the stable branch. For example:
* rXs / rXlh\n |\n |----> rX-beta\n |\n |----> rX\n
This applies to any specific rocky repo, such as comps, pungi, peridot-config, and so on. As it is expected some repos will deviate in commit history, it is OK to force push, under the assumption that changes made in the lower branch exists in the upper branch. That way you can avoid changes/functionality being reverted on accident.
There are packages that are patched typically for the purpose of debranding. List of patched packages are typically maintained in a metadata repository. The obvious ones are listed below and should be monitored and maintained properly:
While not a strict Special Interest Group (as defined by the Rocky Linux wiki), the primary, overarching goal (or \"interest\") is to ensure Rocky Linux is built and released in a complete and functional manner.