This change extends the block device lvs attributes to allow creating
a volume which represents a thin pool, and to create volumes which are
allocated from this pool.
Change-Id: Ic58f55c36236cc8c6279fbcb708e27dc2982f2d5
This change enhances the growvols script to support all volumes being
backed by one thin provisioning pool.
If a pool is detected, the following occurs:
- validation to confirm every volume is backed by the pool
- only the pool is extended into the new partition
- volumes are extended by the same amount as the non thin-provisioned
case
This results in no volumes being over-provisioned, so
out-of-space behaviour will be the same as the non thin-provisioned
case.
This change also switches to using /dev/mapper device mapper paths for
volume block devices, since that is the only path the thin pool is
mapped to.
Change-Id: I96085fc889e72c942cfef7e3acb6f6cd73f606dd
It turns out we do need to create the machine-id for the same reason
as on 8. This was being hidden by the bootloader choosing the root
disk label from the host (see the dependent change).
Change I3b518802d681b888916a5cc6a3dcf7e1b537da1e has modified the
testing to use a different root-disk label, which should help catch
this in the fututure.
Depends-On: https://review.opendev.org/c/zuul/nodepool/+/853574
Change-Id: I64de66cac25fd2e051780fb4812e075c647eb76e
--root-label was added with I596104d1a63b5dc6549e8460a1ae3da00165ef04
This sets the ROOT_LABEL environment variable.
Over the years how this deploys has become more complex; now this
value gets written into DIB_BLOCK_DEVICE_PARAMS_YAML default values,
which is then loaded into DIB_ROOT_LABEL.
To override this from the environment you need to specify a full
DIB_BLOCK_DEVICE_CONFIG -- we don't have a way to just merge in the
root label setting.
Using the command-line argument is difficult with tools like nodepool
where the command-line is baked into something else. However we
already have methods for overriding environment variables on dib
calls.
Several of the other variables here accept default values from the
environment, so this is not an outlier. Making ROOT_LABEL also do
this allows us to test with non-default root devices in the gate (see
the linked change).
Change-Id: Ia1ef48c24841a86f387ff9603c64fd23d8670193
Needed-By: https://review.opendev.org/c/zuul/nodepool/+/853574
Without this change, the final unmount will timeout after the
rollbacks are called when the partitioning fails due to a user error.
dmsetup remove is called both for partition and LVM volume devices.
Change-Id: I99679ea00338d4018a95d4da9b21685161cd5049
openEuler 20.03-LTS-SP2 was out of date in May 2022. 22.03 LTS
is the newest LTS version. It was release in March 2022 and
will be maintained for 2 years. This patch upgrades the LTS
version. It'll be used in Devstack, Kolla-ansible and so on
in CI jobs.
This patch also enables the YUM mirror to speed up the package
download.
Change-Id: Iba38570d96374226b924db3aca305f7571643823
Somewhere between the upstream container
rockylinux/rockylinux:8.6.20220515 and the latest release, systemd
started to be pre-installed in the container.
With <= 20220515 installing the kernel-core package would end up
pulling in systemd. As part of the systemd package installation, the
/etc/machine-id file is created and populated.
The kernel package post-install steps install the kernel with
/bin/kernel-install; this is responsible for copying the kernel
binaries into /boot. It does this based on the machine-id, and it
seems its failure case with a blank machine-id is to simply skip
copying the kernels into /boot. To compound this problem, it seems
our bootloader installation doesn't notice that we don't have a kernel
installed, so we end up building an unbootable image.
Testing is/was showing us this; but as rocky is non-voting and this
occured at a random time (rather than in response to a dib change) I
think it slipped by us.
To work around this, create the machine-id early in the container. We
already have paths that remove the machine-id from final images.
Change-Id: I07e8262102d4e76c861667a98ded9fc3f4f4b82d
I think that generally this is a lot of noise in the logs, as the
internals of cache-url is well tested, so we don't need to trace log
by default.
Change-Id: I25b5a1ec0d8f99691b2b4b62b9fdd537e5a773e4
This is a squash of two changes that have unfortunately simultaneously
broken the gate.
The functests are failing with
sha256sum: bionic-server-cloudimg-amd64.squashfs.manifest: No such file or directory
I think what has happened here is that the SHA256 sums file being used
has got a new entry "bionic-server-cloudimg-amd64.squashfs.manifest"
which is showing up in a grep for
"bionic-server-cloudimg-amd64.squashfs". sha256 then tries to also
check this hash, and has started failing.
To avoid this, add an EOL marker to the grep so it only matches the
exact filename.
Change I7fb585bc5ccc52803eea107e76dddf5e9fde8646 updated the
containerfile tests to Jammy and it seems that cgroups v2 prevents
podman running inside docker [1]. While we investigate, move this
testing back to focal.
[1] https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/14884
Change-Id: I1af9f5599168aadc1e7fcdfae281935e6211a597
Gentoo can manage python versions itself. Before this commit users were
forced to set python versions themselves. Now they have the option to
set it if they wish.
The workaround needed for git is also no longer needed, so it's been
removed.
Change-Id: I06b259ef73a40df6b8ab92a5b424bffcf4ef764d
Signed-off-by: Matthew Thode <mthode@mthode.org>
The block device lvm lvs `size` attribute was passed directly to
lvcreate, so using units M, G means base 2. All other block device
size values are parsed with accepted conventions of M, B being base 10
and MiB, GiB being base 2.
lvm lvs `size` attributes are now parsed the same as other size
attributes. This improves consistency and makes it practical to
calculate volume sizes to fill the partition size. This means existing
size values will now create slightly smaller volumes. Previous sizes
can be restored by changing the unit to MiB, GiB, or increasing the
value for a base 10 unit.
The impact on this change should be minimal, the only known uses of lvm
volumes (TripleO, and element block-device-efi-lvm) uses extents
percentage instead of size. The smaller sizes can always be increased
after deployment.
Requested sizes will also be rounded down to align with physical
extents (4MiB). Previously specifying a value which did not align on
4MiB would consume an extra extent which could unexpectedly consume
more than the partition size.
Change-Id: Ia109cc5105071d82cc895d8d9cb85bc47da20a7a
All indication in CI is that Centos Stream9's use of dhclient
appears to point to compatability issues when interacting with
dnsmasq. However, this doesn't appear to be the issue with the
internal dhcp client. As such, lets constraint the RH default
so that it no longer applies to Centos 9-stream.
I've also added a documentation entry for DIB_DHCP_CLIENT which
was previously undocumented.
As an aside, I've already reached out to RH's NetworkManager team
regarding this, but root cause is not entirely understood at this
point.
Change-Id: I235f75b385a8b0348c8fe064038c51409f8722c4
Story: 2010109
Task: 45677
Creating a separate /boot partition is desirable in some cases[1].
This change detects if /boot is a partition, and ensures that the
kernel/ramdisk paths are correct in either case. This is applied to
all BLS entries files, whether they were generated by the previous
grub2-mkconfig call or in the source image.
This means the rhel9 specific workaround can be removed since all
paths are now normalised at this stage.
[1] https://review.opendev.org/c/openstack/tripleo-image-elements/+/846807
Change-Id: I62120ec8c65876e451532d2654d37435eb3606a6
Resolves: rhbz#2101514
Currently if no Dockerfile is specified or found, we exit later with
an obscure error. Check this after the element search; if we still
don't have something to build then we can't continue.
Change-Id: Ifb17a0995fab0ccfe7ee08363676c1fa57e37592
'9-stream' was being matched against the regex '9',
causing builds on RHEL9 to try to install C9S RPMs.
We want this the other way so that DIB_RELEASE=9
will not match the regex '9-stream'.
Resolves: rhbz#2097443
Signed-off-by: Lon Hohberger <lhh@redhat.com>
Change-Id: Iefd7c23512c460e33117d12bbc33606134daa9e2
Add a warning in satellite configuration as when no activation_key
is provided and no environment is configured, subscription-manager
might hang as it's prompting the user to provide the missing
parameter.
Change-Id: I9564841ca845eafc2bd39be6b05bef62e8062f28
Due to the referenced inline issue, 9-stream currently fails running
setfiles in a chroot without /proc. Since we want to actually label
/proc, we don't want it mounted. This pulls in the fixed packages to
get things going until the fix is rolled out.
Change-Id: Id41c16130e975779cb70e2ab19807a689450d026
When building an image, say RHEL9, on a host installed with that
same image, you will be blocked from mounting the filesystems to
extract contents, as the host OS kernel will identify the duplicate
UUIDs and error accordingly.
This was previously fixed for the root filesystem, but not the boot
filesystem.
Change-Id: I63a34fba033ed1c459aeb9c201c8821fa38a36e9
the command had one error in it (missing one backslash)
and was rendered wrong, w/o any backslashes at all.
Change-Id: If187f645b818f47d10b602ccee12c29892a8d88d
After some recent reordering[0], the /boot/grub directory isn't created
early enough on Gentoo any more, let us just ensure ourselves that it is
in place when we create the grub config.
[0] I8cb34914bbbfa05521bbb71cc6637368b980358f
Change-Id: I8a84d08c3090e46b00d1d626fb984f66ea33f256
Previously a module version was splitted from the module name:
nvidia, 510.47.03, 5.4.0-109-generic, x86_64: installed
In Jammy it is now a part of the name:
nvidia/510.47.03, 5.15.0-27-generic, x86_64: installed
Assuming the fact that it would be threatted as a path this change
doesn't brake anything which was working before. But at the same
time it allows to pass last step where dkms is requested to build all
modules.
Change-Id: Ic1bb2b45f9db906b64ca03ae5c4e05b2114f2a74
It may happen a base image has an edited version of cloud-init
"cloud.cfg" that prevents the host keys to be generated.
While it didn't represent an issue with older releases of cloud-init,
starting cloud-init-22 this isn't true anymore.
Before that release, an sshd-keygen@.service was present and called by
sshd-keygen.target (which was called by sshd.service), and we ended up
with ssh host keys in any cases - either generated from cloud-init, or
generated by sshd-keygen.service.
But cloud-init-22 introduced an edition to the sshd-keygen.service,
making it check for the presence of cloud-init service, and preventing
this sshd-keygen to kick in this case.
So we'd better ensure cloud-init is able to generate the keys, else
we'll be in a bad state, since it's instructed to remove the ones
present.
Closes-Bug: #1971751
Change-Id: I37b2f3e9d57a86544ef14e74a4a927309c18bbf0
This adds arm64 ubuntu-minimal Jammy functests and x86 ubuntu image
based Jammy functests. To make this happen we have to install
debootstrap from debian unstable on the functest nodes in order to get
access to a debootstrap that knows what jammy is.
As we ramp up Jammy support in our tools having good testing will be
helpful.
Change-Id: I1d1dc752ce176457d0656cbd50e27a2721ca9856