diskimage-builder/diskimage_builder/block_device/blockdevice.py

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# Copyright 2016-2017 Andreas Florath (andreas@florath.net)
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
import codecs
import collections
import json
import logging
import os
import pickle
import pprint
import shutil
import sys
import yaml
from diskimage_builder.block_device.config import config_tree_to_graph
from diskimage_builder.block_device.config import create_graph
from diskimage_builder.block_device.exception import \
BlockDeviceSetupException
from diskimage_builder.block_device.utils import exec_sudo
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
def _load_json(file_name):
"""Load file from .json file on disk, return None if not existing"""
if os.path.exists(file_name):
with codecs.open(file_name, encoding="utf-8", mode="r") as fd:
return json.load(fd)
return None
class BlockDeviceState(collections.MutableMapping):
"""The global state singleton
An reference to an instance of this object is saved into nodes as
a global repository. It wraps a single dictionary "state" and
provides a few helper functions.
The state ends up used in two contexts:
- The node list (including this state) is pickled and dumped
between cmd_create() and later cmd_* calls that need to call
the nodes.
- Some other cmd_* calls, such as cmd_writefstab, only need
access to values inside the state and not the whole node list,
and load it from the json dump created after cmd_create()
"""
# XXX:
# - we could implement getters/setters such that if loaded from
# disk, the state is read-only? or make it append-only
# (i.e. you can't overwrite existing keys)
def __init__(self, filename=None):
"""Initialise state
:param filename: if :param:`filename` is passed and exists, it
will be loaded as the state. If it does not exist an
exception is raised. If :param:`filename` is not
passed, state will be initalised to a blank dictionary.
"""
if filename:
if not os.path.exists(filename):
raise BlockDeviceSetupException("State dump not found")
else:
self.state = _load_json(filename)
assert self.state is not None
else:
self.state = {}
def __delitem__(self, key):
del self.state[key]
def __getitem__(self, key):
return self.state[key]
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
self.state[key] = value
def __iter__(self):
return iter(self.state)
def __len__(self):
return len(self.state)
def save_state(self, filename):
"""Persist the state to disk
:param filename: The file to persist state to
"""
logger.debug("Writing state to: %s", filename)
self.debug_dump()
with open(filename, "w") as fd:
json.dump(self.state, fd)
def debug_dump(self):
"""Log state to debug"""
# This is pretty good for human consumption, but maybe a bit
# verbose.
nice_output = pprint.pformat(self.state, width=40)
for l in nice_output.split('\n'):
logger.debug('{0:{fill}{align}50}'.format(l, fill=' ', align='<'))
class BlockDevice(object):
"""Handles block devices.
This class handles the complete setup and deletion of all aspects
of the block device level.
A typical call sequence:
cmd_init: initialize the block device level config. After this
call it is possible to e.g. query information from the (partially
automatic generated) internal state like root-label.
cmd_getval: retrieve information about the (internal) block device
state like the block image device (for bootloader) or the
root-label (for writing fstab).
cmd_create: creates all the different aspects of the block
device. When this call is successful, the complete block level
device is set up, filesystems are created and are mounted at
the correct position.
After this call it is possible to copy / install all the needed
files into the appropriate directories.
cmd_writefstab: creates the (complete) fstab for the system.
cmd_umount: unmount and detaches all directories and used many
resources. After this call the used (e.g.) images are still
available for further handling, e.g. converting from raw in
some other format.
cmd_cleanup: removes everything that was created with the
'cmd_create' call, i.e. all images files themselves and
internal temporary configuration.
cmd_delete: unmounts and removes everything that was created
during the 'cmd_create' all. This call should be used in error
conditions when there is the need to remove all allocated
resources immediately and as good as possible.
From the functional point of view this is mostly the same as a
call to 'cmd_umount' and 'cmd_cleanup' - but is typically more
error tolerance.
In a script this should be called in the following way:
dib-block-device init ...
# From that point the database can be queried, like
ROOT_LABEL=$(dib-block-device getval root-label)
Please note that currently the dib-block-device executable can
only be used outside the chroot.
dib-block-device create ...
trap "dib-block-device delete ..." EXIT
# copy / install files
dib-block-device umount ...
# convert image(s)
dib-block-device cleanup ...
trap - EXIT
"""
def _merge_into_config(self):
"""Merge old (default) config into new
There is the need to be compatible using some old environment
variables. This is done in the way, that if there is no
explicit value given, these values are inserted into the current
configuration.
"""
for entry in self.config:
for k, v in entry.items():
if k == 'mkfs':
if 'name' not in v:
continue
if v['name'] != 'mkfs_root':
continue
if 'type' not in v \
and 'root-fs-type' in self.params:
v['type'] = self.params['root-fs-type']
if 'opts' not in v \
and 'root-fs-opts' in self.params:
v['opts'] = self.params['root-fs-opts']
if 'label' not in v \
and 'root-label' in self.params:
if self.params['root-label'] is not None:
v['label'] = self.params['root-label']
else:
v['label'] = "cloudimg-rootfs"
def __init__(self, params):
"""Create BlockDevice object
Arguments:
:param params: YAML file from --params
"""
logger.debug("Creating BlockDevice object")
self.params = params
logger.debug("Params [%s]", self.params)
self.state_dir = os.path.join(
self.params['build-dir'], "states/block-device")
self.state_json_file_name \
= os.path.join(self.state_dir, "state.json")
self.config_json_file_name \
= os.path.join(self.state_dir, "config.json")
self.node_pickle_file_name \
= os.path.join(self.state_dir, "nodes.pickle")
self.config = _load_json(self.config_json_file_name)
# This needs to exists for the state and config files
try:
os.makedirs(self.state_dir)
except OSError:
pass
def cmd_init(self):
"""Initialize block device setup
This initializes the block device setup layer. One major task
is to parse and check the configuration, write it down for
later examiniation and execution.
"""
with open(self.params['config'], "rt") as config_fd:
self.config = yaml.safe_load(config_fd)
logger.debug("Config before merge [%s]", self.config)
self.config = config_tree_to_graph(self.config)
logger.debug("Config before merge [%s]", self.config)
self._merge_into_config()
logger.debug("Final config [%s]", self.config)
# Write the final config
with open(self.config_json_file_name, "wt") as fd:
json.dump(self.config, fd)
logger.info("Wrote final block device config to [%s]",
self.config_json_file_name)
def _config_get_mount(self, path):
for entry in self.config:
for k, v in entry.items():
if k == 'mount' and v['mount_point'] == path:
return v
assert False
def _config_get_all_mount_points(self):
rvec = []
for entry in self.config:
for k, v in entry.items():
if k == 'mount':
rvec.append(v['mount_point'])
return rvec
def _config_get_mkfs(self, name):
for entry in self.config:
for k, v in entry.items():
if k == 'mkfs' and v['name'] == name:
return v
assert False
def cmd_getval(self, symbol):
"""Retrieve value from block device level
The value of SYMBOL is printed to stdout. This is intended to
be captured into bash-variables for backward compatibility
(non python) access to internal configuration.
Arguments:
:param symbol: the symbol to get
"""
logger.info("Getting value for [%s]", symbol)
if symbol == "root-label":
root_mount = self._config_get_mount("/")
root_fs = self._config_get_mkfs(root_mount['base'])
logger.debug("root-label [%s]", root_fs['label'])
print("%s" % root_fs['label'])
return 0
if symbol == "root-fstype":
root_mount = self._config_get_mount("/")
root_fs = self._config_get_mkfs(root_mount['base'])
logger.debug("root-fstype [%s]", root_fs['type'])
print("%s" % root_fs['type'])
return 0
if symbol == 'mount-points':
mount_points = self._config_get_all_mount_points()
# we return the mountpoints joined by a pipe, because it is not
# a valid char in directories, so it is a safe separator for the
# mountpoints list
print("%s" % "|".join(mount_points))
return 0
# the following symbols all come from the global state
# dictionary. They can only be accessed after the state has
# been dumped; i.e. after cmd_create() called.
state = BlockDeviceState(self.state_json_file_name)
if symbol == 'image-block-partition':
# If there is no partition needed, pass back directly the
# image.
if 'root' in state['blockdev']:
print("%s" % state['blockdev']['root']['device'])
else:
print("%s" % state['blockdev']['image0']['device'])
return 0
if symbol == 'image-path':
print("%s" % state['blockdev']['image0']['image'])
return 0
logger.error("Invalid symbol [%s] for getval", symbol)
return 1
def cmd_writefstab(self):
"""Creates the fstab"""
logger.info("Creating fstab")
# State should have been created by prior calls; we only need
# the dict
state = BlockDeviceState(self.state_json_file_name)
tmp_fstab = os.path.join(self.state_dir, "fstab")
with open(tmp_fstab, "wt") as fstab_fd:
# This gives the order in which this must be mounted
for mp in state['mount_order']:
logger.debug("Writing fstab entry for [%s]", mp)
fs_base = state['mount'][mp]['base']
fs_name = state['mount'][mp]['name']
fs_val = state['filesys'][fs_base]
if 'label' in fs_val:
diskid = "LABEL=%s" % fs_val['label']
else:
diskid = "UUID=%s" % fs_val['uuid']
# If there is no fstab entry - do not write anything
if 'fstab' not in state:
continue
if fs_name not in state['fstab']:
continue
options = state['fstab'][fs_name]['options']
dump_freq = state['fstab'][fs_name]['dump-freq']
fsck_passno = state['fstab'][fs_name]['fsck-passno']
fstab_fd.write("%s %s %s %s %s %s\n"
% (diskid, mp, fs_val['fstype'],
options, dump_freq, fsck_passno))
target_etc_dir = os.path.join(self.params['build-dir'], 'built', 'etc')
exec_sudo(['mkdir', '-p', target_etc_dir])
exec_sudo(['cp', tmp_fstab, os.path.join(target_etc_dir, "fstab")])
return 0
def cmd_create(self):
"""Creates the block device"""
logger.info("create() called")
logger.debug("Using config [%s]", self.config)
rollback = []
# Create a new, empty state
state = BlockDeviceState()
try:
dg, call_order = create_graph(self.config, self.params, state)
for node in call_order:
node.create(rollback)
except Exception:
logger.exception("Create failed; rollback initiated")
for rollback_cb in reversed(rollback):
rollback_cb()
sys.exit(1)
# dump state and nodes, in order
# XXX: we only dump the call_order (i.e. nodes) not the whole
# graph here, because later calls do not need the graph
# at this stage. might they?
state.save_state(self.state_json_file_name)
pickle.dump(call_order, open(self.node_pickle_file_name, 'wb'))
logger.info("create() finished")
return 0
def cmd_umount(self):
"""Unmounts the blockdevice and cleanup resources"""
# State should have been created by prior calls; we only need
# the dict. If it is not here, it has been cleaned up already
# (? more details?)
try:
state = BlockDeviceState(self.state_json_file_name)
except BlockDeviceSetupException:
logger.info("State already cleaned - no way to do anything here")
return 0
# Deleting must be done in reverse order
call_order = pickle.load(open(self.node_pickle_file_name, 'rb'))
reverse_order = reversed(call_order)
for node in reverse_order:
node.umount(state)
return 0
def cmd_cleanup(self):
"""Cleanup all remaining relicts - in good case"""
# State should have been created by prior calls; we only need
# the dict
state = BlockDeviceState(self.state_json_file_name)
# Deleting must be done in reverse order
call_order = pickle.load(open(self.node_pickle_file_name, 'rb'))
reverse_order = reversed(call_order)
for node in reverse_order:
node.cleanup(state)
logger.info("Removing temporary state dir [%s]", self.state_dir)
shutil.rmtree(self.state_dir)
return 0
def cmd_delete(self):
"""Cleanup all remaining relicts - in case of an error"""
# State should have been created by prior calls; we only need
# the dict
state = BlockDeviceState(self.state_json_file_name)
# Deleting must be done in reverse order
call_order = pickle.load(open(self.node_pickle_file_name, 'rb'))
reverse_order = reversed(call_order)
for node in reverse_order:
node.delete(state)
logger.info("Removing temporary state dir [%s]", self.state_dir)
shutil.rmtree(self.state_dir)
return 0