This cuts the image size down alot, esspecially if there were lots of
small file deletes.
The fstrim utility is in the util-linux package and should be on
most all systems. fstrim also works with XFS, ext4, btrfs, etc
prodiving the kernel is new enough.
A reduction of 25% or more in size is common.
Change-Id: I269b4416be450369616f9b8e030f84c30e329804
This reverts commit 5184d02a7c.
The decision was made to go with fstrim because it is faster and more
universal that zerofree. The related-id has the patchset that implements
fstrim.
Related-Id: I269b4416be450369616f9b8e030f84c30e329804
Change-Id: If40cf2fc0ecd8686768cbfeac9ecee90907674e7
If the image has an ext filesystem and the zerofree utility is present
on the build system then run zerofree. This should make images as
compressable as possible which is a nice feature when building
compressed qcow2 images.
Change-Id: Ia6062c291f7a3f58b85a4f408ecb3d0574c65d53
The quickstart should be the first bit of developer documentation, not
the last. Also add in a short blurb for the developer docs so we dont
have two doc titles back to back.
Change-Id: Icb5683b8eb22e759fefb1cb2252ed445dea5f7dd
This simplifies and enhances the functional-test runner script for
much better interactive behaviour and to give us the ability to better
choose what is running in CI.
Firstly, I have split the image-output testing into a separate script.
This is not actually part of the functional testing of elements and is
both logically and functionally different. It currently does not run
in upstream CI because we don't have docker in the images. I have
nothing against it, but it can be it's own thing.
run_functests.sh is overhauled to have a useful interactive interface,
e.g.
---
$ ./run_functests.sh -h
run_functests.sh [-h] [-l] <test> <test> ...
-h : show this help
-l : list available tests
<test> : functional test to run
Special test 'all' will run all tests
$ ./run_functests.sh -l
The available functional tests are:
apt-sources/test-sources
debian/build-succeeds
fedora/build-succeeds
fedora/build-succeeds-f21
ironic-agent/build-succeeds-fedora
---
As described there, you can run a single test, a number of tests, the
default tests (as CI will do) or all tests. Running all tests is too
much for regular CI, but currently the only way to stop a low priority
test running, or temporarily pause is to remove it completely --
clearly sub-optimal (see I93c2990472e88ab3e5ff14db56b4ff1b4dd965ef).
There is nothing complicated about this, and to further simplify I
have merged the runner functions back into run_functests.sh which
remains a very modest ~150 lines, with most of that being argument
sanity. With that and the image-format cleanup, we can remove the
indirection of the 3 small library files.
For consistency, I have renamed the "dib_functions_test" (that tests
things from the dib functions library) with a run_* prefix.
Because the default list is the same as the current functional tests
run, this does not modify the status-quo. I plan to modify this,
however, to run fedora-minimal & centos-minimal tests in a future
change, as these are required to be stable for openstack ci.
Documentation is updated, and a README.rst is added in the tests
directory for discoverability.
Change-Id: I86d208bd34ff09a29fdb916a4e7ef740c7f65af8
speedup section explains the user how to sppedup image build by using
tmpfs. The correct user guide to have this section, is the user guide
about image building rather than the installation user guide.
Change-Id: I96b90bd79df53db4f926a928ae3c86b888315230
End user docs would benefit from a section about the byte-to-inode
ratio, and why it's set the way it is. This update explains why
and how to manipulate the ratio depending on the intended use.
Change-Id: Iffb5ef6f4c7c74f4aa6e25912d4991d7a611c8fe
Closes-bug: 1512841
Install-types are a user facing feature, not just for developers. Lets
move the docs on them in to the user guide.
Change-Id: I6ee8f657c270cf90da9c0729494740bb23aa47c5
Now 'tox -efunc' can be invoked to run all functional tests in
the 'venv' tox environment. Also `tox -efunc element-name` can be
used to run function tests for one element (e.g. ironic-agent).
Change-Id: Ia685d1b2a7deef2f8b98876ac09792134dd30f2f
Use inline code syntax for env variables.
Link to elements README files.
Point 'redhat' to 'redhat-common' instead.
Change-Id: Ied1150aaa631c7c6d7f2f55314f9aa3529fd4ba0
Augment the developing_elements.rst by taking advantage of Sphinx
markup. Most of the doc used to be in /README.md and thus did not
leverage on Sphinx.
Use inline codeblock to denote variables, files, command: ``foo``
Phase Subdirectories:
List phase names in the preliminary introduction
Get rid of lists in favor of definitions
Highlight whether the phase runs in or outside the chroot
Input parameters are now lists
Use definition lists in Dependencies and Ramdisk sections.
Link to elements README when they exist.
Testing Element: split into two subsections: 'shell' and 'python'.
Use "sourcecode:: sh" for the couple examples at the very top and very
bottom of the document.
Change-Id: I2421f76ec452cac243ccb2208f88c7d320ffedd3
As described in the comments, inspect the installation to see if we
have been installed with "pip -e" and, if so, make sure we reference
the scripts from the source location rather than the
system-installations.
Update the documentation with a terse but helpful quick-start to show
an easy way to start developing a change using this.
Closes-Bug: #1491035
Change-Id: I0460061b834a2b854175f8c9be2be8d38c540c9d
The README.rst has a lot of information that has been duplicated in the
Sphinx maintained documentation (3600330).
Remove dupes from README.rst
Point to http://docs.openstack.org/developer/diskimage-builder/
Change summary:
=====================+======================================
README.md | Sphinx document
section |
=====================+======================================
Installation | installation.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Invocation | invocation.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Requirements | installation.rst Speedups
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Caches/offline | caches.rst + changes from 849e9cb2
| fix some markup
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Install Types | install_types.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Writing an element | developing_elements.rst + fe7823a2
| `Testing element` from b9b6640f
| `3rd party elements' from f1e7bf3a
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Existing elements | elements.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
What tools are there | components.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Design | design.rst
---------------------+--------------------------------------
Change-Id: I578daa8e3a8d876b3ee3c9a748d7c8aa2bf7a0b7
jenkin => jenkins
on ci.md
documention => documentation
on developer/caches.html
typicallly => typically
on developer/developing_elements.html
Closes-Bug: #1476993
Change-Id: Ie40205debad5dbc6074e65672e0f3ebeaee5b08e
Having data files in the phase subdirs is an easy source of confusion
in reviews (especially when the data file is a script) and theres really
no reason to be putting data files there at this point. Lets make a
convention out of not doing this.
Change-Id: I99571a2a49e14e8c709af20f6d13d662ac745eb4
Adding a test function which allows us to use elements to perform
element-specific tests. In order for this to work sanely, also adding
some configuration to our break system so we can assert on negative
tests.
Also adding a test for apt-sources to verify this code actually works.
Change-Id: I378a74255010eca192f5766b653f8a42404be5ea
Add a small documentation paragraph about the operating system elements,
what they are required to provide (and thus what other elements can rely
on).
This makes DISTRO_NAME a prime-class variable, which can now be assumed
to always exists (it was de-facto required so far).
Change-Id: Iffbc69de0516b58bfde48e87cd73073428d66b05
Set the pbr option 'warnerrors' to make build_sphinx turns warnings into
error. Fix all warnings.
`tox -edocs` will thus abort whenever someone introduce a new error.
Change-Id: Id6d09768a241866e1fdc1a1e2bf90336f5c5087d
Our docs are very developer focused. Lets create a separate user guide
to help new users get started.
Change-Id: I8a03920e6d3306dd0405177875ea55ccb4b40fea
Rework the list as a definition list.
Mark literal code snippets as literal code snippets.
Fix heading typo.
Change-Id: Ie3d393a49914779f12f3075ff2ac2df5ecf78321
This makes the docs site a lot more manageable and begins moving us in
the direction of separate user and developer docs.
Change-Id: I1650ef9d5be1733b8bc118d99090143cb5b06102