This commits make update to ssacli version to point to latest
ssacli release that has support for HPE P/E-Class SR Gen10 controllers.
Change-Id: Ia9a0eaec78d601f56b4036e57601554b87f21acc
Closes-Bug: 1721185
A small update was made to 4.4.0-96.119 that dropped the
initramfs-tools dependency from the kernel [1]. This had the
unfortunate affect of removing the initramfs from ubuntu-minimal and
making it unbootable, since we specify the root device via LABEL=.
Add the package explicitly alongside the kernel.
Also, small fix to pass unit tests
[1] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-azure/+bug/1700972
Change-Id: I57a0f08cd5e082ecdf8dba0ab34fb3062c50836d
This commit adds change in 'proliant-tools' element to
install a package 'unzip' which is required to perform
SUM based firmware update for HPE Proliant servers.
Change-Id: Ib8f6d18402439edd93d100cc7a4fb2094c863715
As described in the comment, we need to create the /etc/machine-id for
the image-based build when systemd isn't updated (as is usually the
case for a new distro)
Work on clearing this out continues, but this brings it to parity with
fedora-minimal.
Change-Id: Icbbbabb4114d4d95909648d8e39a6bae6d2a7b7b
Depends-On: I761e425f8a658669d9b8a70ce4260cec263ea51a
The URL we are using seems to have disappeared. Update this to
download.fedoraproject.org. The new URL requires a "subrelease" now,
add it, along with a note on where it comes from.
Change-Id: I761e425f8a658669d9b8a70ce4260cec263ea51a
This element was assuming that yaml was included as package,
but there are systems not including it. So properly add yaml
as a dependency.
Change-Id: I72da2776674a3963657052b9a9715abcb4fab1e2
Partially-Fixes-Bug: #1715686
When using combined with rhel7 image, the unregister of repos
has already happened, because it is executed under 60- ordering.
As dracut-regenerate may need to install extra packages for it,
it causes this step to fail, because it cannot find repos where
to pull the packages from.
Change-Id: I35e37df7990ad76a5004cb90fdd863ec743a5483
Per the bug report, these seem to be causing issues with maintaining
file capabilities. They aren't necessary so let's just remove them.
Change-Id: I06c90fdc85655986142b936cadbe04d75dd27427
Closes-Bug: 1714604
Avoid incorrect use of [ with =~ matching
I guess this doesn't trip "-e" because it's in an if-conditional. I'm
looking at making bashate detect this; maybe we can run bashate over
things we know are scripts
Change-Id: Ia3fe2b978fae5bdaadbb1789058180d3ad950d00
In Ubuntu/Debian, the default dependencies cannot be relied
upon as we enter into a cyclical dependency relationship which
prevents the unit from starting.
Added the required configuration to the systemd unit file.
This issue has also been observed in glean[0], which has a nearly
identical unit file for interface start-up.
[0]: https://review.openstack.org/#/c/485748
Closes-Bug: #1708685
Change-Id: I23ac9510d1a21c7073bd33f76ba66fa04a8be035
Many programs rely upon /etc/protocols to be present
however the default debian image that is generated lacks
/etc/protocols. This is observable when building an image
for use with ironic via the ironic-agent element, since
the IPA agent fails to start as python needs /etc/protocols
to open a socket connection.
Added to debian-minimal as it is inherited into the debian
element.
Change-Id: Icc81635870961943707cf6b3f61a9ddbd51cb8fd
Closes-Bug: #1708531
There is some confusion in the readme's over what is happening. The
original change (Iaf46c8e61bf1cac9a096cbfd75d6d6a9111b701e) split out
debian-minimal and made debian "... simply be a collection of the
extra things we do to make it look like a cloud-init based cloud
image"
Make this clearer in the documentation
Change-Id: Ibe6fad9c67b70a5e31e43e06419968135174fef3
Deploying many nodes with the generated image shouldn't have the same
/etc/machine-id so clearing it and letting systemd generate a new
id upon first boot seems to be the best way to achieve this.
Change-Id: I73d0577d31464521b3989312fd9d982a1312a268
Closes-bug: 1707526
Closes-bug: 1672461
Fedora 26 is now the latest release:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/26/Schedule
We are building and using these in infra now
Change-Id: I012c2d28255be274e88abc2751d968bafaf76fbb
Depends-On: Ieba5f69020a13681074f72cfca2955071801b63a
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
Change I008f8bbc9c8414ce948c601e3907e27764e15a52 has shown that we
build redhat images without the "semange" tool available, which comes
from the policycoreutils-python package (see also
I3f9e2c322d042a5dddba33451c0fc21a4d32a88a).
I403e7806ae10d5dd96d0727832f4da20e34b94c7 added some of the selinux
libraries to yum-minimal for ansible support, but not to others.
Given both these changes, it seems that selinux[-targeted],
libselinux[-python] and policycoreutils[-python] can reasonably
considered part of all base images. Move the selinux related packages
into redhat-common.
This also adds it explicitly to install_test_deps.sh. It was actually
being dragged in by the docker install, but is a required component
for building (should be in bindep, but not there with that yet).
Change-Id: Idd4ae71ee6deee84604823b6b5dc4a845f316e01
Related-Bug: #1707788
Currently, the cleanup script is using existence of
semanage binary to check if selinux is enabled. However
this is misleading and can lead to problems when selinux
is disabled in a system where the binary exist.
This patch changes the detection logic to use /sys/fs/selinux
directory which is a in-memory filesystem created only when
selinux is really enabled.
Change-Id: I008f8bbc9c8414ce948c601e3907e27764e15a52
Related-Bug: 1706386
tar is an essential package but nothing pulls it explicitly. This causes
some issues in the openSUSE CI jobs like the following one
"Failed to execute tar: No such file or directory", "Failed to write
file: Broken pipe", "Failed to retrieve image file. (Wrong URL?)",
"Exiting."], "stdout": "", "stdout_lines": []}
Just like 'sed', add 'tar' to the list of packages for the openSUSE
minimal builds.
Change-Id: Ia36e3d9fd6b78862a6831ba80b43d4614a349ca0
As described in the comments inline, on a selinux enabled kernel (such
as a centos build host) you need to have permissions to change the
contexts to those the kernel doesn't understand -- such as when you're
building a fedora image.
For some reason, setfiles has an arbitrary limit of 10 errors before
it stops. I believe we previously had 9 errors (this mean 9
mis-labeled files, which were just waiting to cause problems).
Something changed with F26 setfiles and it started erroring
immediately, which lead to investigation. Infra builds, on
non-selinux Ubuntu kernel's, would not have hit this issue.
This means we need to move this to run with a manual chroot into the
image under restorecon.
I'm really not sure why ironic-agent removes all the selinux tools
from the image, it seems like an over-optimisation (it's been like
that since Id6333ca5d99716ccad75ea1964896acf371fa72a). Keep them so
we can run the relabel.
Change-Id: I4f5b591817ffcd776cbee0a0f9ca9f48de72aa6b
For builds inside the infra, we don't want to pack the cache
inside the image (as it might be different at the time the image
runs). In an opensuse-minimal image this saves about 10MB of image
size.
Change-Id: I5ecabd46f0a662798bda3e4468395ad8308d0055
As described in the comment and associated bugzilla, the behaviour of
setfiles has changed in Fedora 26 to require "-m" situations where
labeled file-systems are mounted below non-labeled file-systems. Our
loopback/chroot system appears to trigger this nicely, leading to a
setfiles call that does nothing without this.
Change-Id: I276c6f6a4fb44f4bea5004f6b4214f94757728ae
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
As described in the referenced bug, the dependency solver in yum
doesn't handle weak dependencies well and in some cases, such as
Fedora 26, can end up choosing coreutils-single (the busybox-esque
single binary) instead of actual coreutils, which then causes problems
with conflicting packages later.
Change-Id: I2907bf3b74c146986b483d52cc6ac437036330b4
On a system where the packaged pip/virtualenv is up-to-date with
upstream (such as Fedora 26 ... for now), we don't reinstall, which
then violates a bunch of assumptions later on. Force install.
Change-Id: I6ebcda0351997fa7e32f0e6e77a98b2c33764e3f
It turns out dnf argparse can't handle negative numbers without "=".
It's actually documented in the man page
--latest-limit <number> ... If <number> is negative skip <number>
of latest packages. If a negative number is used use syntax
--latest-limit=<number>
But who reads that :) This started failing with Fedora 26
Change-Id: I884af94c07fa11b010f69863047a04711b14f21e
We expect LC_ALL for non-C locales to be working inside
images, so always install glibc-locale for openSUSE.
Change-Id: I8fe92773e377539070d9d9fe2960a6202bb80a18
In preparation for promoting the openSUSE jobs to voting ones we should
use the OpenStack mirrors. As such, the opensuse elements are modified
to make use of the DIB_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR variable which is normally
exported by the openstack-ci-mirrors element.
Change-Id: Ie588c1c1eec13190cfb2ec718ba51f8c9878283f
We added the DIB_distro_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR arguments with
I92964b17ec3e47cf97e3a3091f054b2a205ac768 as a way that we could
source a list of mirrors and then have the distro elements choose
which one applied to them.
However, this hasn't worked out to be so useful. The
openstack-ci-mirrors element is working as a mirror setup script -- it
translates the openstack CI mirror list variables into the generic
"DIB_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR" as appropriate for each distro's build.
Also, it turns out there's other things that need to be done, such as
turning off gpg checking, which mean the idea of "just export
variables" hasn't turned out as valid ... you need actual code
involved to get it right.
AFAICT we never actually documented these, and they do not seem to be
in use. They have caused considerable confusion when dealing with new
platforms as we try to keep consistency. Remove them.
[1] http://codesearch.openstack.org/?q=DIB_.*_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR&i=nope&files=&repos=
Change-Id: Ifc4ab700631ffdfbe790068558f670f9a11dde5e
The purpose of the openSUSE element is to build openSUSE distribution
based images, so an additional community repo shouldn't be pulled into
the image. In addition the dkms dependency is blacklisted for SUSE
in the dkms element anyway, so this should be a noop.
Change-Id: I0aa06d9f4f110546032f910e3361840693d02de7
On Power systems console should be added the kernel command line
in the following order: 'console=tty0 console=hvc0'.
The first one is the graphical console. The last one is the serial
console. The kernel enables all the consoles pointed through the
kernel command line. However, only the last one will receive
input/output during kernel boot. All the other consoles will be
enabled after the boot.
Change-Id: I0069f608e0ab104d3778954e033fb82ed5ea7693
The python3 package actually contains some core modules (like the xml
one) which are not present in the python3-base on which is pulled by
the python3-devel package. As such, it's best to have it installed
similar to python-xml for python2.
Change-Id: I5cd5d1127ae62d6753c2ace44965179c5400bb9a
In order to support {CentOS,RHEL}7 for building cloud images we need to
handle the differences in grub packaging from Ubuntu. We also need to
populate the defualt location for cloud images for CentOS builds.
Change-Id: Ie0d82ff21a42b08c4cb94b7a5635f80bfabf684e
When a download redirector redirects to a broken mirror, timeout
quickly rather than waiting until the overall job is being timed out.
Change-Id: If7eb63d406aaf61f71aa9203cf708c474aa63fd0
The 'packages' variable already contains the packages we need so
use it instead of duplicating the packages.
Change-Id: Id22e1862f9654e66252d03a0fed9839cf004d750
Several people have popped up in IRC recently with failures in these
elements. Without Python 2.7 available in the image they are
unsupported (OpenStack hasn't supported it for a long time). Remove
these to avoid further confusion.
The centos/centos7 DISTRO split that has happened with centos-minimal
is unfortunate but I don't think it helps to rename centos7/rhel7 ATM.
To summarise; DISTRO=centos7 means image based build,
DISTRO=centos && DIB_RELEASE=7 means the minimal build.
In the future, I think it is important that the minimal builds and
image builds set the same DISTRO. This reflects that "upper" layers
shouldn't care about the exact building of the lower layers. I see
CentOS 8 going one of two ways
1) the changes are so significant, we start separate centos8 /
centos8-minimal elements. They both set DISTRO=centos8 (and
DIB_RELEASE to point-release maybe?). This means we have to update
all "if DISTRO == centos || DISTRO == centos7" branches to also check
for "centos8". Evenually (!) "centos" goes away for versioned DISTRO
only
2) we restore centos element with DISTRO=centos and DIB_RELEASE=8, and
centos-minimal remains the same. This means we have to audit all "if
DISTRO == centos" calls to make sure they're appropriate for version 8
(stick a "&& DIB_RELEASE=7" on them all basically).
I'm not sure we can fully decide until we start to see excatly how the
distro switching/matching bits look, but (2) is consistent with Ubuntu
and probably the preferred solution.
Some "rhel" parts have been cleaned up. More could be done in
rhel-common, but given our lack of coverage of that I'd prefer to
leave it for now.
Change-Id: I6ea784116ef59ca22878c8512c963f29c815a00a
The image download tests have long been too unreliable for the gate.
We need to cache the base images similar to how devstack caches it's
testing images. Let's move them to non-voting jobs for the time
being.
This means that the gate jobs are now all based on "-minimal" and are
using infra mirrors. Unfortunately, there is still some unreliability
because we currently have issues with infra mirrors being very slow
after AFS updates, leading to job timeouts. But we're on the right
path...
Also, I noticed we don't have tests of the "ubuntu" image-download
based tests, which were tacitly being tested by apt-sources before we
moved that to -minimal. Add simple tests for these.
Change-Id: Ie33ee49656872467ef68d753210032156bb6b2cb
This was previously defined as python2-devel (which is what rhel uses),
but the actual package name is python-devel. See:
https://software.opensuse.org/package/python-devel
Change-Id: Id61e5b05772d10c32b33d3e70cb64d5ebdcba6e4
I'm uncertain as to why this is using the "fedora" element for testing
... but it requires downloading the fedora .qcow on every test which
has shown to be unreliable. An easy thing to do is to switch it to
fedora-minimal; that will only involve downloads from local mirrors in
the gate.
Add redhat-rpm-config for minimal. I admit I have not fully gone
through why this is not pulled in. It's been an issue since
I459f2203fa145049dda185da952813118193d573 and there's all sorts of
bugs.
Change-Id: I37458e3926dae32a259bd5aa9efc645561b029a0
fedora/centos-minimal don't obey DIB_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR currently. I
don't really want them too -- we want to be able to separate the
mirrors used during the build process from those embedded into the
final image. Add DIB_YUM_MINIMAL_BOOTSTRAP_REPOS which is a directory
with repo files to use during the install.
This introduces setup-gate-mirrors.sh which is intended to setup
repo/sources/whatever files in the openstack gate that point to the
local region mirror. It pulls the info from the mirror_info.sh script
on each CI node.
The openstack-ci-mirrors element is updated to export these variables.
elements are updated to depend on it. Tests are restored
Change-Id: I7604fc4d41cb1483be16b8d628a24e8fc764f515
This adds "openstack-ci-mirrors" element which performs various
settings to get builds using local mirrors. As a first step, we
convert ubuntu-minimal jobs
The main trick is that since infra mirrors are created with rerepo
they are not signed (they are recreated, not cloned, and not signing
is seen as a feature in that it deters external use). So we need to
instruct debootstrap to ignore signing and also turn it off for
in-chroot apt. Other than that, the existing DIB_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR
works to redirect installs.
Remove "restricted" as it's not mirrored, and I don't think we want it
in here by default.
(I think DIB_DISTRIBUTION_MIRROR is a bit of an anti-pattern, because
it leaves the mirrors in the final image -- just because you use them
to build, doesn't mean you want them at runtime). But we don't need
to fix that now, and we don't use any created images.)
This pauses fedora testing until the next change, which moves to using
local mirrors for testing on fedora/centos
Change-Id: I778bd05a1e615c27edf1c9f0a1409119a6b3a850
The gate is currently extremley unstable, and these two issues are
causing most of the problems. We need to commit them atomically so we
can get anything moving again
---
The gate is very unstable downloading the ubuntu tarballs from
upstream at the moment. Move this to ubuntu-minimal which, in a later
change will source files from our local mirror.
We need a caching mechanism for these large files to avoid this
instability. This is future work for the various image-based jobs.
---
Move debian to default skip lists
I don't know if it's mirrors being worked hard for the Stretch
release, but this is constantly failing the gate. I will move this to
the -nv extras job
I am working on having the voting job use local mirrors for
everything. Unfortunately debian infra mirrors don't have stretch yet
and we need to do some fiddling to get "stable" available. Once we
have all this, we can consider making it voting again.
Change-Id: Iaf7b3888ef06c7aef63cbf76a94b33f96bc9c5c2
Debian Stretch released as stable recently, and the init system is
less tightly specified in the base dependencies (for some info, see
[1]). It seems, probably unintentionally, that in the previous
release systemd-sysv was brought in by debootstrap, but that is no
longer happening.
Add systemd as an early dependency of debian-minimal.
Remove the package-installs.yaml as that happens too late (other
things need to know the init system to write out service files, etc
and probe for systemd utils before package-installs). As mentioned, I
do not believe the "only install systemd on testing" idea was actually
working here, because it was being brought in during the initial
debootstrap.
Update some documentation to explain what's going on
[1] https://lists.debian.org/debian-boot/2015/05/msg00156.html
Change-Id: Id67c0cf08728407d234976f9807d3bd71d12f758
Using the newly exposed variables from the prior change, install the
ppc bootloader to the boot partition, not the underlying loopback
device.
Change-Id: I0918e8df8797d6dbabf7af618989ab7f79ee9580
Currently we only export "image-block-device" which is the loopback
device (/dev/loopX) for the underlying image. This is the device we
install grub to (from inside the chroot ...)
This is ok for x86, but is insufficient for some platforms like PPC
which have a separate boot partition. They do not want to install to
the loop device, but do things like dd special ELF files into special
boot partitions.
The first problem seems to be that in level1/partitioning.py we have a
whole bunch of different paths that either call partprobe on the loop
device, or kpartx. We have _all_part_devices_exist() that gates the
kpartx for unknown reasons. We have detach_loopback() that does not
seem to remove losetup created devices. I don't think this does
cleanup if it uses kpartx correctly. It is extremley unclear what's
going to be mapped where.
This moves to us *only* using kpartx to map the partitions of the loop
device. We will *not* call partprobe and create the /dev/loopXpN
devices and will only have the devicemapper nodes kpartx creates.
This seems to be best. Cleanup happens inside partitioning.py.
practice. Deeper thinking about this, and more cleanup of the
variables will be welcome.
This adds "image-block-devices" (note the extra "s") which exports all
the block devices with name and path. This is in a string format that
can be eval'd to an array (you can't export arrays).
This is then used in a follow-on
(I0918e8df8797d6dbabf7af618989ab7f79ee9580) to pick the right
partition on PPC.
Change-Id: If8e33106b4104da2d56d7941ce96ffcb014907bc
The supported ppc ${ARCH} is "ppc64el" (at least in the gate testing
...) so move the file to that, so gets picked up by
block_device_create_config_file
Change-Id: I9273f35cdbfb0a62404461cbc1df9b2a92155fb0
package-installs.yaml is installing python-dev, not python2-dev,
so we need to adjust the mapping accordingly.
In addition, zypper-minimal used an dpkg specific package name,
while there is a SUSE equivalent (and zypper-minimal is anyway
SUSE family specific)
Change-Id: Ia9dd061fa46a514781808d62e5e93b03f75c6745
Ubuntu 12.04 LTS reached its regular End of Life on April 28, 2017.
Depends-On: I5e145095a10db112bb27516bfe652d2cdc052a61
Change-Id: I64af4c5183d77a75dcd062895d19b0a1330c8da8
This element has not been functioning correctly for some time due to
an incorrect path to select-boot-kernel-initrd (should be /usr/local/bin).
The dracut-regenerate element can be used to regenerate dracut ramdisks
and is more flexible than this element.
Change-Id: I33d555ffd4a92b2948b2ea4a66b151f0422ccb8c
Closes-Bug: #1688546
This patch removes the ccache handling from the base element. For
mostly all systems this was never used at all.
This is working towards the removal of the base element from DIB
Change-Id: Ieb16ef612ebd98470993dcd6f55b3a22d37084ba
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
In python3, the standard out data returned by
subprocess.Popen.communicate() will in most cases be bytes rather than a
string and must therefore be decoded.
Without this fix we hit the following error:
TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'
Change-Id: I6d75f867ebfdb925970c3397175214b9050d7632
Closes-Bug: #1694463
Currently openSUSE 42.3 has entered feature freeze mode
so it is a good point in time to verify that 42.3 builds
are working successfully. Also test opensuse-minimal for
platforms that support it (need working zypper package)
Change-Id: I4c613e1e68cb7375c29d544bbf70b5da9bf21414
This is consistent with how dpkg based images are configured
and minimizes the nodepool images drastically (avoid installing
texlive for example)
Change-Id: I98fb31bc0e06869e9770fae3dbd62f0d86acb879
This is a follow-on to 57ef187632.
There's two things going on here; DIB_MANIFEST_IMAGE_DIR is *outside*
the chroot on the build host. We copy the files here for posterity, I
guess. MANIFEST_IMAGE_PATH is *inside* the chroot and are the files
we want to ensure are locked to root.
The prior change modified the permissions on DIB_MANIFEST_IMAGE_DIR.
So the first time you build, it works -- then the second time,
assuming you're using the same output filename, it hits the root-owned
manifest directories and causes a build failure.
I have built with this and checked that the manifest files in the
image are locked to root:
$ virt-ls -a ./test.qcow2 -l /etc/dib-manifests
total 32
drwxr-xr-x 2 0 0 4096 May 24 03:39 .
drwxr-xr-x 53 0 0 4096 May 24 03:39 ..
-rw------- 1 0 0 15236 May 24 03:39 dib-manifest-dpkg-test
-rw------- 1 0 0 35 May 24 03:39 dib_arguments
-rw------- 1 0 0 137 May 24 03:39 dib_environment
Related-Bug: #1671842
Change-Id: I08319d0b5fcc461d40fe0be8427dcf0e37ad21e6
Per [1] this is the "official" CDN mirror, which I think is the most
appropriate for the default. I think this addresses the concerns
httpredir service, which I don't think ever quite got out of beta.
[1] https://wiki.debian.org/DebianGeoMirror
Change-Id: I55f2a00b8bbb0f0a20d3be229e4c2c32a7b69057
Instead, either use the bash built-in of type to ensure it exists. Since
which is an external dep, things can fail oddly in a constrained
environment.
Also add a dib-lint test for this.
Change-Id: I645029f5b5bfe1198c89ce10fd3246be8636e8af
Signed-off-by: Jesse Keating <omgjlk@us.ibm.com>
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