This new element will allow to regenerate dracut
on the produced images, to enable different modules. It
relies on a yaml blob to specify modules and packages
needed. It defaults to installing lvm and crypt.
Change-Id: I292fb70cde41ee6053b7b81a67931bcdaaa6d664
Manifests files can release sensitive information and therefore should
have restrictive permissions.
Change-Id: I64d6c830217a7d8b0172df2dc774079dcd1e2a68
Related-Bug: #1671842
With new block device definition, where content of the image
can be mounted on different partitions, is not enough with
executing setfiles on root directory. Instead of that, expose
all the mountpoints on the image, and apply setfiles on them.
Change-Id: I153f979722eaec49eab93d7cd398c5589b9bfc44
This patch finalizes the block device refactoring. It moves the three
remaining levels (filesystem creation, mount and fstab handling) into
the new python module.
Now it is possible to use any number of disk images, any number of
partitions and used them mounted to different directories.
Notes:
* unmount_dir : modified to only unmount the subdirs mounted by
mount_proc_sys_dev(). dib-block-device unmounts
$TMP_MOUNT_PATH/mnt (see I85e01f3898d3c043071de5fad82307cb091a64a9)
Change-Id: I592c0b1329409307197460cfa8fd69798013f1f8
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Closes-Bug: #1664924
This is a partial refactor from change
I592c0b1329409307197460cfa8fd69798013f1f8
Change-Id: I8822e68e41c4ebd47eea9ffed4557efc130a7bf7
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Some package updates are more complex and require things like --backtrack=99 to
be passed to emerge. We also try harder to ensure the system is in a consistent
state as a last step.
Change-Id: Ia5d3514e8b2a6cb2d656ade997cebb798d9c0a47
With 8e822768f9 we added the ability to
disable the EPEL repository, however we need yum-utils to use
yum-config-manager.
Change-Id: Iea445f84494fd9a89fd93e9b35f920eb5e55211d
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Recent changes in the default configuration of cloud-init in Ubuntu
cause warnings when the Ec2 datasource is used on non-Amazon clouds,
see https://bugs.launchpad.net/cloud-init/+bug/1660385
We explicitly select the previous behavior when an Ec2 datasource is
desired.
Change-Id: Iebad8f6c0017fe08013dd5fe667c6132158b71cd
Closes-bug: 1683038
We only need dib-python when we build the image, no need to leak it to
the final product. Remove it in cleanup.d outside the chroot so
nothing can be using it.
Change-Id: I1e229caad7968fb3ab8e44ecdda427e174088d2d
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
If DIB_PYTHON_VERSION is < 3 on the !redhat path, that means we're on
an older platform that may not have python3-virtualenv packages. Skip
install.
Ensure the order of operations happens by forcing the installs
Also add a note about limited platform support (patches welcome :)
Change-Id: I18412767f0ebf946d557a0a126285369e96af159
Recent changes in project-config have shown that we leave the system
in an inconsistent state when installing from source. On fedora, we
will have installed the python2 packages, but then used $DIB_PYTHON to
install python3 pip from source!
This tries to clarify the situation. As described in the document,
with package installs, we just install the $DIB_PYTHON packaged
versions.
Source installs want to take over the global namespace. This is the
price you pay for running the latest versions outside package managers
:) The only sane thing seems to be for us to normalise python2 &
python3 versions of pip, setuptools and virtualenv and then hacking
things such that "/usr/bin/pip" and "/usr/bin/virtalenv" remain
defaulted to python2 versions.
Documentation is added
Change-Id: Ibc6572b89e256d1f48b7fe7c672b8b9524dc704f
Currently we install pip/virtualenv with "/usr/local/bin/dib-python".
This means that every time you create a virtualenv, the python
interpreter inside it is called "dib-python" which is confusing.
Add an env var DIB_PYTHON that points directly the to interpreter
available during build, for use when running scripts.
Change-Id: I88ad3c9eb958d58db4631d9b27bc2c592f970345
Apt gets confused if it talks to a mirror with an older index than the
index currently cached by apt. This can happen when image builds use a
newer index than the booted image. Avoid these problems entirely by
removing those index caches at the end of image building.
Change-Id: I245d516ee8a44831b2c29612b782bad555c48a3f
Co-Author: Clark Boylan <clark.boylan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
This patch removes three nearly-copies of debootstrap documentation
and fixes some documentation aspects.
Change-Id: Ief7794f5c1abad73788c063af6c862472cd34744
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
The current output for package-installs-v2 is inscrutable [1]
The problem starts with process_output() which is not capturing
stderr. This means that any stderr output is dislocated from any
stdout output around it. This is *really* confusing as you get a
bunch of seemingly meaningless stderr output from any calls before you
see any stdout (e.g. in [1] you can see random yum error output that
should have been with the yum call)). The simplest thing to do is to
redirect stderr to stdout which keeps everything in sync.
This causes a slight problem, however, because pkg-map outputs both
status information and errors on stderr. To work around this but
maintain compatibility, we add a "--prefix" argument that prepends
mapped packages from pkg-map with a value we can match on. The
existing status/debug output from pkg-map is low-value; modify the
call so that it will be traced only at higher debug levels (e.g. -x
-x).
The current loop is also calling pkg-map for every package in every
element (this is why in [1] the same message is repeated over and
over). This is unnecessary; it only needs to pkg-map once for each
element, giving the package list as the arguments. Create package
lists by element and pass those to pkg-map.
As a cleanup, there is no point in printing e.output if the
process_output fails for the install because we are already tracing
it; i.e. the output, even for failures, is already in the logs.
Printing it again just duplicates the output.
[2] is an extract showing what I feel is a much more understandable
log output for a fairly complex install.
[1] http://paste.openstack.org/show/595118/
[2] http://paste.openstack.org/show/595303/
Change-Id: Ia74602a5d2db032a476481caec0e45dab013d54f
The dib-run-parts element was copying our internal version of
dib-run-parts into /usr/local/bin to be used running scripts inside
the target chroot. However, it never cleaned up after itself. This
means all images were left with an unmanaged local install of
dib-run-parts.
This copies dib-run-parts into the hooks directory of the chroot and
runs it from there. It is cleaned up automatically on the exit path.
The dib-run-parts element is no longer required and it has been
removed from all dependencies. It is left with a deprecation notice
in the README. For compatability we convert it to simply install
dib-utils.
Codesearch shows no users depending on this unintentional implicit
install. Note os-refresh-config depends on dib-utils and thus will
have an explicitly installed version.
Partial-Bug: #1673144
Change-Id: Ia2e96c00a4246c04beb96c17f83b8aefb69219ca
It was an oversight during v2 development for dib to start providing
dib-run-parts. The intention was for dib to use a vendored
dib-run-parts directly from $_LIB and have no dependencies on
dib-utils at all. By exporting dib-run-parts, we created an
unintentional conflict with the dib-utils package which provides the
same script.
Tools that depend on dib-utils are unaffected by this
(os-refresh-config).
The only tool that installs diskimage-builder and then assumes
dib-run-parts is available in the path is instack. I have proposed
Ibfe972208df40fa092b11b5419043524c903f1b4 to modify that to use our
internal version.
Change-Id: I149c345d38d761a49b3a6ccc4833482f09f1cd05
Add DIB_EPEL_DISABLED flag that allows installation of the EPEL repo,
but to have it disabled by default. This will help when you have
unavoidable EPEL dependencies, but want to make sure you only pull
specific things in with "--enablerepo" calls when installing those
packages.
Change-Id: Iedf6167a7cd69418255ebbee095aea04c50d73fd
A code-block in README of rhel7 element is not rendered as expected.
This patch fixes it to be rendered correctly.
Change-Id: Ie8f4c05edd1dd93314290682e4b2734622894e15
zypper on non-suse hosts is not parsing the pattern repodata because
those are marked as an inofficial extension to the repomd specification.
This is not a big issue as there is meanwhile in newer openSUSE
distributions a pattern *package* that depends on the same packages like
the pattern would do, so we can just replace it with that.
Change-Id: I0c8f713075bd7e5bf1d425f81933b4666654add7
Depends-On: I34e98f0f7693859ed05011b008334628adff612f
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
When a glean is running on centos with multiple NICs, it will try to
systemctl enable network.service multiple times for each interface.
Because of systemd magic, it is possible for the systemctl command to
fail in a race condition.
glean shouldn't be enabling network.service during boot in
pre-networking phases (Ib2b618dd975ca44e9c6b0a2c9027642ffc46b9b0). I
have proposed I8319f1ed6498a9d447950c2b4b34bca59e7b97e4 to remove this
and document the behaviour.
This also bring across suse's version
(I20bffabd333ea290d8712ec2a467f2b2d5678f3a)
Change-Id: I89d9443cb61e287bd0d9da3f48315272218ee335
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
diskimage-builder usually provides defaults that work out of the box.
One default that does not work outside of x86 land is Ubuntu distro
mirror url. Considering there are only two valid default options, we can
automatically choose a better default.
This patch changes behavior only for architectures known to be using
http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports. All others still would use
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu as default. It provides some guarantee
that we do not introduce a regression.
Change-Id: If95a64bac0c88f30736da4bae7f1fdce126c0bf6
We somewhat discussed skipping qcow2 generation previously in
I9372e195913798a851c96e62eee89029e067baa1. As recent issues with PPC
testing have shown, we are not actually testing the "vm" element and
hence the bootloader path in the functional tests.
I don't think we need to test this on every element; it overlaps
somewhat with the testing done by the nodepool jobs which build full
images and boot them. I also didn't want to introduce a separate run
for this. Thus it seems valuable to at least have one element
enhanced to do this installation and conversion in our default tests
for basic sanity.
This disables qcow generation by default, as per the other change, but
allows an element to drop a file that will override the output
formats. The Xenial element is modified to produce a qcow2 using
this, and also introduces a dependency on the "vm" element so it tries
to install the bootloader.
We now exit if the .qcow2 fails to build as well.
Change-Id: I1a6acefe52f8c696c39b2d592fdc7ae32a87e6fe
Add a default PPC block-device layout. I've extracted this into
separate yaml files for ease of editing and to facilitate things like
longer comments.
This is not sufficient to get PPC images working, but it is required.
Change-Id: I09e5d1ed92260bdb632333f5203dd7e70d512dc8
Sphix 1.5 (I9e7261c4124b71eeb6bddd9e21747b61bbdc16fa) includes
"warning-is-error" which supersedes pbr's warnerrors. Enable this and
fix up the resulting failures
- trailing lines for lists in element_deps directive
- missing README's that are linked
- syntax error and highlighting in building instructions
Change-Id: I6549551b4a9bf47076c9811a7a38a666cbea2a50
99-squash-package-install in the package-installs element does not
know which python environments the requirements were installed into.
This can cause it to select the wrong python to run the
package-installs-squash script.
Co-Authored-By: Adam Harwell <flux.adam@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I5fab0e192c3a2dad8f60e821c184479e24e33bcd
On Debian Jessie and Debian Stretch systemctl is in /bin.
If the package systemd-sysv is not installed the script
dib-init-system did not find the init system.
This patch fixes the problem: it also looks in /bin
for systemctl and if found decides for systemd.
Change-Id: I5a18052a070bad5e16b14672237a1e2b38513949
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
The architecture-emulation-binaries element does for a limited number
of architectures on Ubuntu exactly the same as `qemu-debootstrap`.
`qemu-debootstrap` comes in the qemu-user-static package that is
anyhow used when cross-building an image.
This patch replaces the complete architecture-emulation-binaries
element with a call to qemu-debootstrap.
Change-Id: Ib9667307bfd3ff7592444a2ec5b04aa5365a1872
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Depending on the types of deployment (security, nfv...) some extra
kernel flags are needed on the images. This change exposes the
DIB_BOOTLOADER_DEFAULT_CMDLINE parameter, defaulting to the
existing 'nofb nomodeset vga=normal', that will allow to modify
these boot params.
Change-Id: I67d191fa5ca44a57f776cb9739a02dd71212969c
Closes-Bug: #1668890
Looks that the special handling for Ubuntu is not needed any longer
(its a pity that there are no detailed comments...).
The grub2 element is a second implementation of the bootstrap element
- but because there are some features that come only here, e.g. efi
boot, it should be working as long as this is not implemented in the
bootloader element.
Change-Id: I74269116ea30b84f3259805720d5cd1616f960c5
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Closes-Bug: #1627402
Currently there is no description of dependencies in the generated
documentation of the elements: therefore a user of an element does not
know which other elements are automatically included and e.g. which
configuration options are available. In addition there are some
copy&pastes of parts of the README.rst scattered thought different
Ubuntu and Debian specific elements.
This patch adds a semi-automatic generation of dependency information
of all elements. Nevertheless these are not automatically included.
The author of the element's README.rst can decide if and where the
dependency information should appear and can use the descriptor
.. element_deps::
for this.
This patch adds the dependency information for some Debian and
Ubuntu patches - and creates the base for later removing the
duplicated parts.
A call is added to element_dependencies._find_all_elements() to
populate reverse dependencies for Element objects.
(This is a reworking of I31d2b6050b6c46fefe37378698e9a330025db430 for
the feature/v2 branch)
Change-Id: Iebb83916fed71565071246baa550849eef40560b
With the old configuration structure it was only possible
to use one image and one partition layout. The new
block-device configuration uses a list at top level;
therefore it is possible to use multiple instances
of each element type.
Change-Id: I9db4327486b676887d6ce09609994116dbebfc89
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
During the creation of a disk image (e.g. for a VM), there is the need
to create, setup, configure and afterwards detach some kind of storage
where the newly installed OS can be copied to or directly installed
in.
This patch implements partitioning handling.
Change-Id: I0ca6a4ae3a2684d473b44e5f332ee4225ee30f8c
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Move dib-run-parts from dib-utils into diskimage-builder directly.
For calling outside the chroot, we provide a standard entry-point
script. However, as noted in the warning comment, the underlying
script is still copied directly into the chroot by the dib-run-parts
element. I believe this to be the KISS approach.
This removes the dependency on dib-utils. We have discussed this
previously and nobody seemed to think retiring dib-utils was going to
be an issue.
This also updates the documentation to not mention dib-utils, or using
disk-image-create via $PATH setup, but rather gives instructions on
installing from pip with a virtualenv.
Change-Id: Ic1e22ba498d2c368da7d72e2e2b70ff34324feb8
Currently we have all our elements and library files in a top-level
directory and install them into
<root>/share/diskimage-builder/[elements|lib] (where root is either /
or the root of a virtualenv).
The problem with this is that editable/development installs (pip -e)
do *not* install data_files. Thus we have no canonical location to
look for elements -- leading to the various odd things we do such as a
whole bunch of guessing at the top of disk-image-create and having a
special test-loader in tests/test_elements.py so we can run python
unit tests on those elements that have it.
data_files is really the wrong thing to use for what are essentially
assets of the program. data_files install works well for things like
config-files, init.d files or dropping documentation files.
By moving the elements under the diskimage_builder package, we always
know where they are relative to where we import from. In fact,
pkg_resources has an api for this which we wrap in the new
diskimage_builder/paths.py helper [1].
We use this helper to find the correct path in the couple of places we
need to find the base-elements dir, and for the paths to import the
library shell functions.
Elements such as svc-map and pkg-map include python unit-tests, which
we do not need tests/test_elements.py to special-case load any more.
They just get found automatically by the normal subunit loader.
I have a follow-on change (I69ca3d26fede0506a6353c077c69f735c8d84d28)
to move disk-image-create to a regular python entry-point.
Unfortunately, this has to move to work with setuptools. You'd think
a symlink under diskimage_builder/[elements|lib] would work, but it
doesn't.
[1] this API handles stuff like getting files out of .zip archive
modules, which we don't do. Essentially for us it's returning
__file__.
Change-Id: I5e3e3c97f385b1a4ff2031a161a55b231895df5b