By default (during boot) the use_tempaddr is set to <=0 for all
up-to date kernels. Only Ubuntu installes a sysctl setting which
sets the use_tempaddr to 2 (/etc/sysctl.d/10-ipv6-privacy.conf) [1].
The 80-disable-rfc3041 overwrites this setting and sets
use_tempaddr back to 0.
Because this only affects Ubuntu it makes sense to move the script
to the ubuntu-common element. The other motivation for the move is,
to clear the base element that it can be removed.
[1] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/procps/+bug/1068756
Change-Id: Ibf261818ca8243874fde9eb3650bb65188fa228d
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Debootstrap only supports one apt repository to install packages from.
As a result, we do not consider the updates repo during debootstrap
causing us install a second kernel when we do an apt-get dist-upgrade
during build.
Lets use debootstrap to get us a minimal chroot, then add our repos and
install the correct packages from the start.
We also have to reorder the dpkg root.d scripts which configure apt so
they run before we perform our package installs.
Change-Id: I6a592db6f0a01d3b19d8e0786e63f1315a1ef647
Closes-Bug: #1637516
debootstrap is not debian or ubuntu specific. We can make a debootstrap
element that knows how to do all of the things, and then a
debian-minimal and ubuntu-minimal image that use it. Finally, make
the debian element simply be a collection of the extra things we do to
make it look like a cloud-init based cloud image.
Change-Id: Iaf46c8e61bf1cac9a096cbfd75d6d6a9111b701e
There are times when a much more stripped down base image is desired
over the distro cloud images. For instance, Infra would like some base
images that do not have cloud-init or really much of anything else. This
is easy to accomplish with debootstrap and rinse.
Change-Id: I44ff22457165afb048fdaea469210ae47d83dd3f