Use openSUSE 15.0 as default, which is the latest released stable
openSUSE release. Switch to https for accessing download.o.org
as encrypted transfers should be used by default.
Remove leftovers for definitely unmaintained openSUSE 13.x images
and split into old/new leap style versioning scheme for clarity.
Change-Id: Iab129eeee2b1a2563f0f0d2cb17bbad57c068e38
It looks like fedora-release on fedora 30+ has been split into sub
packages. Use fedora-release-common to avoid package conflicts.
Change-Id: I8f8711044fc4074b91939e0a6dfdac4d7a14a35b
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
In fedora-30 is when we migrate to dbus-broker, fedora-29 is still using
dbus-daemon.
Change-Id: I1e1d3a3826157b8b22386c211eaa58b6439b5f3c
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Depending on the version of $DIB_PYTHON_VERSION, we can either use pip /
pip3 to install glean. This is helpful for newer OSes that might not
want to ship python2 (pip).
Change-Id: I25c5927a1eb55ee16b919dd64403184f335839b6
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Harden sshd configuration by adding KexAlgorithms, Ciphers and MACs for sshd,
following good pratices on https://infosec.mozilla.org/guidelines/openssh
Change-Id: I3051320d867a5033e82deef10c5e723ca9829884
Co-Authored-By: Nicolas Hicher <nhicher@redhat.com>
Currently diskimage-builder supports two ways to specify the image
size. One is defining a fixed image size using DIB_IMAGE_SIZE, the
other one is auto-detection while adding a security margin of 60% as
free space. This means when building larger images (e.g. >100GB) with
unknown size upfront we end up with much wasted space, IO and network
traffic when uploading the images to several cloud providers. This can
be optimized by adding a third way by defining DIB_IMAGE_EXTRA_SIZE to
specify the free space in GB. This makes it possible to easily build
images of varying sizes while still minimizing the overhead by keeping
the free space constant to e.g. 1GB.
Change-Id: I114c739d11d0cfe3b8d8abc6df5ff989edfb67f2
In many cases, the statically sized 64MB journal is far below the
e2fstools default calculation[0] which calls for a 64MB journal only
on filesystems smaller than 16GB. On bare metal in particular, the
correct default journal size will often be in the 512MB-1GB range.
Since we cannot know what the target system is, this should be a
tunable parameter that the user can set depending on the intended
image usage.
Add a DIB_JOURNAL_SIZE envvar and --mkfs-journal-size parameter
to the image creation so users can override the default journal
size.
[0] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/ext2/e2fsprogs.git/tree/lib/ext2fs/mkjournal.c#n333
Change-Id: I65fa13a088eecdfe61636678578577ea2cfb3c0c
These options have always been a bit of a mess since v2 when we added
all the block-device flexibility. Add some explicit documentation to
try and help explain the relationship between these options and the
block-device config.
Change-Id: I49affcbef868d644f673b833bef8310cf25cfd0f
The non-encrypted urls are just redirecting to https, so we
can save one roundtrip by linking the encrypted versions directly.
Change-Id: I88fe8b8c8ccfb5471f59f7898a69bf62cb6cfcaf
Due to the referenced bug, many versions of debootstrap can't bring up
a buster environment. Unfortunately, these include versions we use to
do this on Xenial/Bionic nodes.
Also, there isn't backports or security updates, so elide these for
now.
I did get a working build (I haven't gone so far as a full boot+glean)
with this, at least.
Change-Id: If2420e92cb728ab6e91b0d70547da4483679b391
Paritial-Bug: #1822927
Currently, the cleanup script is using the existence of the folder
/sys/fs/selinux to check if SELinux is enabled. This, however, is
misleading in case disk-image-builder is used inside a Docker
container on a selinux-enabled host. In this case, the folder exists
in the container but SELinux is disabled.
This patch addresses the problem by checking, in addition to the
check already in place, the output of the command selinuxenabled.
Change-Id: I83e58f2467e60df9f0f00f7b7a58d0e2ce357a9a
Closes-Bug: #1820077
This is a mechanically generated change to replace openstack.org
git:// URLs with https:// equivalents.
This is in aid of a planned future move of the git hosting
infrastructure to a self-hosted instance of gitea (https://gitea.io),
which does not support the git wire protocol at this stage.
This update should result in no functional change.
For more information see the thread at
http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-discuss/2019-March/003825.html
Change-Id: I40e1a77a1f5c9b5a17aab849fc74a11b5a36854c
This is a mechanically generated change to replace openstack.org
git:// URLs with https:// equivalents.
This is in aid of a planned future move of the git hosting
infrastructure to a self-hosted instance of gitea (https://gitea.io),
which does not support the git wire protocol at this stage.
This update should result in no functional change.
For more information see the thread at
http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-discuss/2019-March/003825.html
Change-Id: Id26bec14c3d94e2f81b2148fc85d17f07866398c
This is only one line, but it takes a lot to untangle ... basically
the current "correct" path is:
---
mk_build_dir()
-> sets trap trap_cleanup EXIT
... stuff ..
mount_proc_dev_sys
-> mounts $TMP_MOUNT_PATH/<proc,dev.sysfs>
pre-finalise.d
finalise.d
unmount_image $TMP_BUILD_DIR/mnt # nb == $TMP_MOUNT_PATH
-> unmount_dir()
-> recursive unmount everything inside TMP_MOUNT_PATH
TMP_IMAGE_PATH=$(dib-block-device getval image-path)
export TMP_IMAGE_PATH
dib-block-device umount
dib-block-device cleanup
... actually cleanup directories ...
---
Our current failure exit trap does:
---
dib-block-device umount
unmount_image
...
---
Note this is the *opposite* of what is done in the correct exit path.
In the failure case, if a script fails in the finalise stages it leads
to /proc, /sys, /dev etc. still being mounted inside the image; the
"dib-block-device umount" call doesn't know anything about these
mounts and tries to unmount the parent directory, and we get a hard
failure with a busy mount, and all the mounts are subsequently leaked.
Note that "unmount_dir", which is ultimately called by
"unmount_image", already knows to skip those mounts that
"dib-block-device umount" manages (this is the DIB_MOUNTPOINTS list).
This is further evidence it should be called *before* the
dib-block-device umount.
Change-Id: Ibef3ce9d1167b9c4ff3d5717b113cd3ed374f5e3
Add a DIB_APT_MINIMAL_CREATE_INTERFACES boolean to the debootstrap
element which functions identically to
DIB_YUM_MINIMAL_CREATE_INTERFACES in the yum-minimal element.
This can be used to disable the creation of the
/etc/network/interfaces.d/eth[01] dhcp configuration files, which
are not needed on systems where cloud-init or other means are used
to configure networking.
The flag is enabled by default to keep creating the dhcp interface
files, maintaining backwards compatibility.
Change-Id: I1fdaca8350a5ceefd9e437af4fd000ce6a3ee7f3
in same cases it is required to avoid update all existing packages,
doing so can result in release update which is currently not possible
unless you not include "base" element.
"base" element used for most distribution (rhel, debain), and is
necessary for most cloud operations, this patch add
"DIB_AVOID_PACKAGES_UPDATE" parameter to skip updating all packages.
usecases for this patch can be:
* Avoid release update when building old release ex. RHEL7.5.
* build on network-less environment.
usage:
DIB_AVOID_PACKAGES_UPDATE=1
or
DIB_AVOID_PACKAGES_UPDATE=0
Change-Id: I71192b23c8f0bc48b348fe7377bf8a2399b53792
Related to I041a141366099093805e6052b1bbf64efd277e1e, we also need to
remove this on opensuse. The files for gate testing are added, but
the test is not added to any jobs at this point in the interests of
gate time.
Change-Id: I1af9e84d76bedcb2607717edc6d2abe2920b0584
This fixes a regression in I041a141366099093805e6052b1bbf64efd277e1e
where we starting skipping the removal of old files for image-based
builds (confusingly named centos7 rather than centos for historical
reasons). Fix the check
Change-Id: I74688a9e91d833b5d654056431729bed0585616c
As described inline, we only want to remove the system package files
on centos; it causes problems on Fedora where some system tools expect
these to be there.
But there is an additional bug -- pip actually removes the system
package files anyway. To work around this, reinstall the system
package.
Closes-Bug: #1813232
Change-Id: I041a141366099093805e6052b1bbf64efd277e1e