We landed the fix for this in
Icdb769541eee9793f261b4b8ec563be76ee13fe2.
This reverts commit 2978ff885b.
Change-Id: Iecfc41ab2aad57bc4f6f86a13810b534d19a8fd5
debian ships a modified site.py which has some interesting behavior when
VIRTUAL_ENV is set. In this case it will add
/usr/lib/pythonx.x/site-packages to the start of sys.path. This causes
pip to install packages to this location (rather than /usr/local). As a
result, later on when booting where VIRTUAL_ENV is not set this branch
is not hit and the path where python packages were installed is not part
of sys.path.
Change-Id: Icdb769541eee9793f261b4b8ec563be76ee13fe2
When using up to date distributions for dib development, pep8
installs using python3. This patch fixes the problem, that
not the complete dib-lint (which is called) is compatible
with python3.
Change-Id: I417d03746edb4d34011b997edf8b5b9662ea6f09
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
There are issues with pip packages and a python3 only Xenial systems.
This is occuring after Ie609de51cc5fcde701296c9474e315981d9778a2.
We believe the issue is with VIRTUAL_ENV being set within the chroot
and messing up pip installs
(Icdb769541eee9793f261b4b8ec563be76ee13fe2) but a full solution is not
yet clear.
For now, set Xenial to ensure we use python2. Install the package for
the ubuntu element (75-debian-minimal-baseinstall will install python2
for the minimal elements).
Change-Id: Id403919b0af93b375a900186c01a0d3a3bdfafea
On Debian network configuration can be done via /etc/network/interfaces.
It can accept a statement to load additional files, which varied in
history:
Wheezy only supports 'source' (see b822581)
Jessie supports 'source-directory' and comes with the statement by
default.
However since 754dd05 we inconditionally inject 'source', thus on Jessie
the configuration ends up with:
source-directory /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
When networking is started, 'ifup -a' parses the list of interfaces
twice. When configured with dhcp, that causes two dhclient to spawn
which might conflict with each other.
Inject the source statement only if there is neither a source or
source-directory with the same path.
Change-Id: Iefa9c9584f676e50481c621b4111eded3125a50b
Because we run this image in openstack-infra, we want to increase our
test coverage to help avoid potential breaks to our CI systems.
Change-Id: I26405e3f7465654075278ec35b5e0da1338bb45e
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Since we still run these 3 version of ubuntu-minimal elements in
openstack-infra, also run functional testing for them.
Trusty and xenial will be in voting gate, precise added as skipped for
non-voting.
Add the default skip/run status to the "-l" output just to confirm
this too.
Change-Id: Icfbfd0cb7d9acae824972474b77e2fe0486c4f69
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Every run we are doing a full tar.gz of the chroot environment that
never gets used.
It's not suitable for CI since we use fresh images each time there.
The cache in general isn't really isn't a very safe thing to have
around, because there's no invalidation procedure and no real way to
make one -- we've no guarantee that a new chroot build even moments
after a previous one wouldn't bring in or different packages, etc (of
course this is *unlikely*, but the longer you go between builds the
worse the problem becomes. Also, tons of packages get installed after
this not from any cache, so potential speed-up is rather marginal.
Debian turned this off with I58fc485aacacaa17243bf9ce760ed91256d1f182.
However, given the reasons above and it's complete lack of testing, I
don't see this as useful.
If we really want this type of thing, I think we should come up with a
way to use a persistent external yum/dnf cache that yum/dnf keeps in
sync with it's usual invalidation rules.
Change-Id: I66789c35db75c41bc45ea1ad2e26f87456de4e4d
Set the grub timeout to 5 seconds by default, and add notes on how to
update this. This will stop infra having to carry an element that
goes and rewrites the grub configuration.
Change-Id: I556b3f48eff1b67ee8c4b9b64f749af95100fb99
Our setuptools action classifiers are woefully out of date, notably: we
are no longer alpha and we support python3.
Change-Id: I2425152129406e22073936275761bd5d850903fb
The squashfs format brings a couple of advantages over the other
formats. Image is often an order of magnitude smaller and it can
be used natively, either as an initrd, either with loop mount.
Change-Id: If72940b0c4dafb2504c52dd0429a8eb3f8305751
We now support tgz (tar.gz) as an output format.
Change-Id: Iadec92f2f96c3f904f28bd49f87ffc7d48ef7bd7
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
dracut has a "hostonly" mode where it builds an initramfs that is
suitable for booting the system it is building on. This is on by
default, but obviously in our nested multi-platform chroot situation
this is fraught with danger.
As highlighted by [1] our builds were inadvertently turning off
"hostonly" mode when the mountpoints in the chroot were not found.
The CentOS 7.3 behaviour change broke this and we ended up with an
initramfs with no file-system modules.
Iaf2a1e8470f642bfaaaad3f9b7f26cfc8cc445c9 introduced a regeneration of
the initramfs, which I think does work as described because it runs in
the loopback device.
However, dracut includes a package that installs configuration
overrides to build a generic initramfs. This is really what we want,
and should solve the problem no matter where the initramfs is created.
Add this package into yum-minimal and remove the extra re-create call
which should not be necessary.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1405238
Change-Id: I5d203f2abe743cb23a44d449850e692a948e7871
openSUSE 13.1 was discontinued on Feb 3rd, 2016, so defaulting
to it doesn't make sense (see https://en.opensuse.org/Lifetime).
Leap 42.2 is the most current release that is supported by
disk-image-builder and being tested in a 3rd party ci.
Enable functests for it to ensure we're not regressing again.
Moved to non-voting gate first.
Depends-On: Iff495b3cd0b6c3558c44cf4883651eca67b572d6
Change-Id: Iae6cd34a5853f1e309861c554d94d8595cbd9993
For some reason [1] introduced -m option without ever checking that the
mapping exists. Because there is no grub-ieee1275 mapping anywhere (not
in base, not in bootloader), pkg-map fails. So stop using the mapping in
package-install of grub-ieee1275 on ppc.
There is another patch that tries to solve the same bug by adding the
mapping [2]. I think it is better to undo the breakage introduced in [1]
first, and then, if various distributions have differing names for the
package, introduce various mappings. My reasoning is that at the moment
this element is broken for all ppc64 distributions. This patch would
fix it for some (namely, Ubuntu). Then we can add mappings as tests
are done for other distributions.
[1] Ibca43173c30c2a74a73a2e2d9dd6d6d832c62694
[2] Id2b0f63a7015f883070fd59b79fd96a1c024858a
Change-Id: I8425876c26e9e416c8ce2f53a4e38d26b4208633
Closes-Bug: #1624021
This element does some funky stuff WRT python2 vs python3 so lets get
some multi-distro testing in place.
Change-Id: I1e3c3bfa0a109419d4cbee7fa32a18392b7e1a93
dracut has a loop [1] where it probes top-level directories, tries to
find what block device they are on, then determines the file-system of
that block device. It then puts those file-system modules into the
initramfs for boot.
Since we install the kernel package during the chroot phase, / there
is not a block device and thus this loop matches nothing and we end up
with no file-system modules in the initramfs. This results in a very
annoying silent boot hang.
By moving re-generation of dracut into finalise.d phase, we run inside
the final image where / is the loop-device; the root file-system gets
detected correctly and the ext4 module is included correctly.
[1] http://git.kernel.org/cgit/boot/dracut/dracut.git/tree/dracut.sh?h=RHEL-7#n1041
Change-Id: Iaf2a1e8470f642bfaaaad3f9b7f26cfc8cc445c9
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Tripleo-image-elements have an install.d file '05-heat-cfntools' that runs
the following command:
virtualenv --setuptools $VENV
With the recent change to diskimage-builder (moving the install of pip
and virtualenv to the 10- range) virtualenv is no longer available for
this elementr; as a side-effect, the trove kick-start command is now
broken and gate jobs are failing.
The solutions is to move the (now) 10-install-pip to 04-install-pip.
This should still alleviate the race condition that
https://review.openstack.org/#/c/408277/ attempted to fix, as all
*-package-installs files are 00-, 01- or 02-.
Change-Id: Ia4e01f00c4c5e9a2087df1e2a91d9154480a0422
Closes-Bug: #1650008
Commit 6278371eaa13("Make dib-python use the default python for distro")
added default python version for various distros but it missed openSUSE
which leads to build failures since the openSUSE elements are pulling
python2 packages. Add openSUSE to the list of python2 distributions
until python3 support for the openSUSE elements is in place.
Change-Id: I95f1fa849a22607c430387a2a915f9d19c9c209f
We are explicitly calling python in this element which does not work on
systems which only have python3.
Change-Id: Ia730850a48e2478fd5461710a9d2619408725cd8
Now that we are explicit about what python version we intend to use
for dib we can have package installs optionally install packages
depending on this. Add a new dib_python_version that matches on the
DIB_PYTHON_VERSION string set by dib-python.
Co-Authored-By: Adam Harwell <flux.adam@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I70659aab7d12924bdb9bc0489a7f02d5fd0dbb39