Add image size report

In the common case of not specifying a size, we are already running
"du" over the image to figure out how big it is.  Leverage that by
saving it's output and displaying a pruned list of big files when
requested.

We add a flag to show a summarised option (files >10MiB) and another
to show full output, should you wish that level of detail.

"Invocation" documentation is updated (and formatted a little better
while we're here).

Change-Id: I255800790a62fed1c82fcd311f1cc29c9867766d
This commit is contained in:
Ian Wienand 2016-03-08 11:17:59 +11:00
parent 103b7dea6d
commit fa3c5e3056
2 changed files with 66 additions and 18 deletions

View File

@ -308,10 +308,48 @@ mv $TMP_BUILD_DIR/mnt $TMP_BUILD_DIR/built
if [ -n "$DIB_IMAGE_SIZE" ]; then
du_size=$(echo "$DIB_IMAGE_SIZE" | awk '{printf("%d\n",$1 * 1024 *1024)}')
else
# in kb*0.60 - underreport to get a slightly bigger device
du_size=$(sudo du --block-size=600 -x -s ${TMP_BUILD_DIR}/built |\
awk ' { print $1 }')
du_output=$(sudo du -a -c -x ${TMP_BUILD_DIR}/built)
# the last line is the total size from "-c".
# scale this by 0.6 to create a slightly bigger image
du_size=$(echo "$du_output" | tail -n1 | cut -f1 | \
awk '{print int($1 / 0.6)}')
fi
if [[ "${DIB_SHOW_IMAGE_USAGE:-0}" != 0 ]]; then
xtrace=$(set +o | grep xtrace)
set +o xtrace
if [ -z "$du_output" ]; then
du_output=$(sudo du -a -c -x ${TMP_BUILD_DIR}/built)
fi
# by default show the 10MiB and greater files & directories -- a
# dir with lots of little files will still show up, but this helps
# signal:noise ratio
if [[ ${DIB_SHOW_IMAGE_USAGE_FULL:-0} == 0 ]]; then
# numfmt will start giving a decimal place when < 10MiB
du_output_limit="| egrep 'MiB|GiB|TiB|PiB' | grep -v '\..MiB'"
echo "================================="
echo "Image size report (files > 10MiB)"
echo "================================="
else
du_output_limit=""
echo "================="
echo "Image size report"
echo "================="
fi
echo "$du_output" | sort -nr | \
numfmt --to=iec-i --padding=7 --suffix=B --field=1 --from-unit=1024 \
$du_output_limit
echo
echo "===== end image size report ====="
echo
$xtrace
fi
if [ "$FS_TYPE" = "ext4" ] ; then
# Very conservative to handle images being resized a lot
# We set journal size to 64M so our journal is large enough when we

View File

@ -1,19 +1,29 @@
Invocation
==========
The scripts can generally just be run. Options can be set on the command line
or by exporting variables to override those present in lib/img-defaults. -h to
get help.
The image building scripts expect to be able to invoke commands with sudo, so if you
want them to run non-interactively, you should either run them as root, with
sudo -E, or allow your build user to run any sudo command without password.
The scripts can generally just be run. Options can be set on the
command line or by exporting variables to override those present in
lib/img-defaults. -h to get help.
Using the variable ELEMENTS\_PATH will allow to specify multiple elements locations.
It's a colon (:) separated path list, and it will work in a first path/element found,
first served approach. The included elements tree is used when no path is supplied,
and is added to the end of the path if a path is supplied.
The image building scripts expect to be able to invoke commands with
sudo, so if you want them to run non-interactively, you should either
run them as root, with sudo -E, or allow your build user to run any
sudo command without password.
By default, the image building scripts will not overwrite existing disk images,
allowing you to compare the newly built image with the existing one. To change
that behaviour, set the variable OVERWRITE\_OLD\_IMAGE to any value that isn't
0.
Using the variable ``ELEMENTS_PATH`` will allow to specify multiple
elements locations. It is a colon (:) separated path list, and it
will work in a first path/element found, first served approach. The
included elements tree is used when no path is supplied, and is added
to the end of the path if a path is supplied.
By default, the image building scripts will not overwrite existing
disk images, allowing you to compare the newly built image with the
existing one. To change that behaviour, set the variable
``OVERWRITE_OLD_IMAGE`` to any value that isn't ``0``.
Setting the variable ``DIB_SHOW_IMAGE_USAGE`` will print out a
summarised disk-usage report for the final image of files and
directories over 10MiB in size. Setting ``DIB_SHOW_IMAGE_USAGE_FULL``
will show all files and directories. These settings can be useful
additions to the logs in automated build situations where debugging
image-growth may be important.