This currently breaks glean on rackspace, revert until we can figure
out why that is.
This reverts commit 43bc352c59.
Change-Id: Iae88a3b0457bab0b8f0fd1febf58732ca95e5dc9
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
The release of pip10 has shown up a few issues here
Firstly, pip10 now refuses to overwrite distutils installed packages,
which includes "python-virtualenv" on centos. History has shown us
that we want the packages installed and overwritten, to avoid the
packages coming back and messing things up.
Pre-install all the packages, then list the files in the packages with
"rpm" directly and remove them. This way pip is happy to install.
We need to take better account of the package names for this; on
Fedora things have switch to "python2-virtualenv" instead of
"python-virtualenv" and we can't use an alias to list the package
contents.
This also highlighted that python2-pip is in EPEL for centos, so
enable that when we install it. Make the epel element a no-op for non
centos/rhe distros.
There is a related change in recent fedora that python3 now installs
binaries into /usr/local/bin. There are commented swizzles in here to
ensure we retain the status quo of "pip" and "virtualenv" both being
python2 based, with the python3 versions being called explicitly
"pip3" and "virtualenv3" respectively.
Change-Id: I2ffdd9f615ae6b00428c17249e4f216774991b99
We added this sed in I422490ebe9a9c655552685bc2ff342d288335a9c to
avoid installing python2 packages on python3-only systems and thus
dragging in all of python2.
We made a similar change to python-pip in
I7d8ba9300039cce90965410a4e16ca9e711904c3; however we realised that
the gate (and other consumers) were relying on this element having
installed the python2 & 3 packages for consistency -- otherwise jobs
would install the python-pip packages and overwrite the
pip-from-source and mess everything up. We reverted that in
I419dbdf4682394db68974944af1e5c432f3e0565 and added some clearer notes
that this element brings in python2 & 3, and if you want something
that doesn't do that then this element isn't for you.
However, we never fixed up the virtualenv package install -- currently
our Xenial images have a global virtualenv installed from source, but
the python-virtualenv packages aren't installed. Thus if a job does
"apt-get install python-virtualenv" it overwrites the from-source
virtualenv with older parts and again messes everything up.
Probably most jobs just call "virtualenv" and assume it is there;
however in bringing up some rspec test for puppet I have hit this
issue as some modules specify dependencies on the virtualenv packages.
Thus install the python-virtualenv AND python3-virtualenv packages in
this element.
Change-Id: Ia84c38dc3c40a6080e144b563e10abca7dac2881
The behavior of test -e and [[ -e against broken symlinks is to fail
even if the symlink exists. However we want to test if the link exists
or if there is a file in that location. Therefore switch from test -e to
test -L and test -f to check if the file or link exists regardless of
link target validity.
Change-Id: I84a9b6731eccf950707be50aef464a2de1e33e8e
On initial boot when networking is brought up by cloud-init this
is the timeout that dhclient adheres to. Centos configures
"timeout 300" (for an EC2 bug) in their cloud image, which results
in a 5 minutes delay to boot in cases where no dhcp available (e.g. IPv6
SLAAC). To reduce this boot delay and to provide consistency with
places where we have set other dhcp timeouts set this to DIB_DHCP_TIMEOUT.
Change-Id: I119a002070501c3dfe7c6730b07ee25f422b85b0
Related-Bug: #1758324
systemd-resolved has a new behaviour in bionic, in that if there is no
/etc/resolv.conf file when it installs, it assumes it is a fresh
system and makes /etc/resolf.conf a symlink into its compatability
files.
dib ends up saving & restoring whatever /etc/resolv.conf we have after
the inital chroot creation, which may not be what we want -- in the
above case it restores the system-resolved symlink. For
openstack-infra, we use unbound and want simply "127.0.0.1" in a
/etc/resolv.conf file [1].
Formalise the ability to save specific contents into the final image.
Add documentation, and a note in the code that it's an external
interface.
I would have preferred to namespace the .ORIG file with DIB_ or
similar, but this unofficial interface has already escaped into the
wild. Leave it as is for simplicity.
[1] Note that systemd-resolved will obey /etc/resolv.conf as you would
expect, if file exists.
Change-Id: Ie0e97d8072e2b21a54b053fa6fb07b62960c686d
We exit in several places and don't restore tracing. Previously in
nodepool we relied on the default fallback, which did restore the
tracing. Since we now use the MBR config file, we take the different
exit path without it and the debugging output is incomplete.
Change-Id: I586fc95517926025705ce376ec5c4aaf4122773f
Many elements install additional distribution packages.
In addition the user can provide a set of packages to be installed
via the '-p' switch.
Some of them influence the boot process and therefore the initramfs
needs to be updated. Because the package manager during the image
creation process is configured not to run package scripts, this needs
to be done explicitly.
This issue was found during development and debugging of the
block-device LVM plugin: Even when the e.g. the lvm2 package
was installed in the image, it was missing in the initramfs
because of the missing update.
Change-Id: I7c92033b3ca80cdd23d081002059d83ca3f53bdb
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Default the GENTOO_PORTAGE_CLEANUP to True. By default we should not
ship package info, this bloats the image and is usually outdated by the
time it'd be consumed.
Change-Id: I14c2530d91807cbc6a3806e01c7e4f6f472b190d
The debian element depends on debian-minimal now which provides
operating-system. This means that the debian element can no longer
provide operating-system and doing so results in an error when using the
debian element.
The fix is simple just rely on the fact that debian-minimal provides
operating-system and remove this element-provides from debian.
Fixes-Bug: 1758000
Change-Id: I524feeb82c19046ec987eb1186c7f4568309e559
The devuser element can set up passwordless sudo, which requiers the
/etc/sudoers.d directory, which requires the sudo package, so we ensure
the sudo package is installed.
Change-Id: I80d6c669d4ac0d97b49d01cb621bf05b8e7f8ef1
There was a typo in I6b819a8071389e7e4eb4874ff7750bd192695ff2 that
modified this default partition type from "0x83" to just 83. We are
now seeing failures relating to this as sfdisk checks for a "disk
manager" when it see Id 0x53 (== 83)
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/vda1 * 2048 26664575 13331264 53 OnTrack DM6 Aux3
Restore to 0x83
Change-Id: Ib43038d2d740fbe01a21a13dd56367f7bc97f869
Hpsum utiltity of proliant-tools requires net-tools to be installed
as part of base image. This commit adds support for installation of
net-tools for all distros.
Change-Id: I2a1e81059ed1aee975db78cfa5e61bbf1b98e06f
Closes-bug: 1751777
When using the package-installs element there can be some encoding
problems if the package installation emits unparsable output
[1]. However in this case we just want to forward the output to the
console which normally can handle this correctly. In order to fix this
switch off universal_newlines processing such that we just operate on
bytes.
Further we have to decode the lines without setting the locale and
ignoring errors. This is required because print encodes without
setting the locale and thus we need to filter/modify the stream such
that it doesn't crash.
[1] Traceback:
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | Traceback (most recent call last):
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | File "/usr/local/bin/package-installs-v2", line 137, in <module>
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | main()
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | File "/usr/local/bin/package-installs-v2", line 130, in main
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | process_output(install_args, follow=True)
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | for line in iter(proc.stdout.readline, ''):
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | File "/usr/lib/python3.5/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
2018-03-01 09:58:00.515 | UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 34: ordinal not in range(128)
Change-Id: Ie4af9b4523459a630cfb98d09093bfe9ef7aa61e
Currently rhel7 image creation fails because it tries to copy
default bootloaders which is ubuntu way. This commit updates `iso`
element to correct the path of bootloaders required for rhel image.
Change-Id: I526d75b2db609fc77be0fc778b4d00f2d3df38ec
Closes-bug: 1750725
For 'satellite' mode of registration, rpm for rhel SSL certificate is
hard coded to 'katello-ca-consumer-latest.noarch.rpm'. This commit adds
functionality that provides an option to set this as defined in their
satellite server.
Change-Id: Ib176cfa209f5ac8a4b5da71419327b4237330904
Closes-Bug: 1749947
Install hwe kernel for ubuntu-minimal. As noted this is currently
Xenial specific; we need this for initial bring-up so let's tackle
future releases as things progress.
Ensure we use ttyAMA0 for arm64 console too.
Change-Id: Ic607cf8369666dc24929aff6f2ef8a72e7980599
In the prior change we added block-device-[mbr|gpt|efi] elements to
create appropriate disk-layouts.
This adds an environment flag to each so the bootloader can install
the right thing. The EFI install path is updated to work with this
(this part a copy of I572937945adbb5adaa5cb09200752e323c2c9531)
We do some basic sanity checking in the block-device elements;
e.g. mbr is not suitable for aarch64, and efi is not suitable for
power.
This updates the bootloader to install EFI where appropriate
Co-Authored-By: Marcin Juszkiewicz <marcin.juszkiewicz@linaro.org>
Change-Id: Ib80acbfd9a12efd976c3fa15a5d1081eb0799305
This moves the block-device default out of the "vm" element and into a
selection of other elements. There's "mbr" which retains the status
quo. There's an EFI version that has the boot/grub partitions as
required. In between there's the GPT only version, which is useful
for architectures like power without EFI, but still want possible
larger disks using GPT.
Change-Id: I4a566a97d073fc0dda0ab2494ac988fe015800a9
The current check only validates that an element that specifies
"element-provides" doesn't conflict with a "real" element. We also
want to check this against the provides of other elements.
A real example is with a "block-device" element. There is no actual
"block-device" element; we can have multiple elements provide it
(block-device-[gpt,mbr,efi], say) but we only want one of them at a
time.
Update the unit test for this.
Change-Id: I59d4aa5f6f09e2892b213e154befa10d85e95ca3
This adds support for a GPT label type to the partitioning code. This
is relatively straight-forward translation of the partition config
into a sgparted command-line and subsequent call.
A unit test is added based on a working GPT/EFI configuration and the
fedora-minimal functional test is updated to build a single-partition
GPT based using the new block-device-gpt override element. See notes
in the sample configuration files about partition requirements and
types.
Documentation has been updated.
Co-Authored-By: Marcin Juszkiewicz <marcin.juszkiewicz@linaro.org>
Change-Id: I6b819a8071389e7e4eb4874ff7750bd192695ff2
In slow networks like Infiniband it takes much time for the
interface to get the carrier. This patch enables this service
to run more then 20 seconds and limited by DIB_DHCP_TIMEOUT.
Change-Id: I8a6015567ac25e37b5a5aba4b1fda71170cc144a
Like we did in https://review.openstack.org/475206 we need to install
systemd sooner because of the new world order of containers.
Change-Id: Ia60d751fee3af6f8d72ad664107acb337360feca
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
As described, we want to set the default label for XFS disks to the
shorter value.
For example, you hit this when setting the old FS_TYPE environment
variable to 'xfs' (which sets the "root-fs-type" parameter, which gets
passed through to 'type'; but does not set a default label).
Change-Id: I41dce6e25766562db4366021309b8c2b74a8ab80
Closes-Bug: 1742170
While Debian-based distros use the label of ppc64el for ppc64 little
endian, Fedora uses ppc64le.
The ironic-agent was doing arch specific package install of lshw over
dmidecode for ppc64 and ppc64el but was attempting to install dmidecode
on Fedora ppc64le which caused the test to fail due to a missing
package.
This change just adds ppc64le to the arch-specific package installation
description for the ironic-agent element.
Change-Id: I38c3c1480bbbb2df817856614e6b740a0c02723a
Closes-Bug: 1744944
This updates diskimage-builder to support current Fedora releases (26
and 27) and removes support for Fedora 25 which is EOL as of December
12, 2017.
Change-Id: I227a607c6c468cc8b7bb154a189e9c8ce2021192
This small change avoids running fstrim on vfat partitions.
The mount order test-case has been updated to also test the mkfs
creation components, and the input config modified to have a vfat
partition to cover this path.
Change-Id: I8952e748d4bdc12a5769706de9057c1e97d95e37
The installed pip can be an older version which does not support
the -c argument. Therefore, upgrade pip before using -c.
Change-Id: If18d8ea822a62c8551c9c4d47354d58b0299fed2
Closes-Bug: 1744403
This reverts commit ab89c7d69c.
This commit checked for DIB_PYTHON_VERSION and only installed the v3
packages. This is unfortunately backwards-incompatible, as consumers
such as the openstack gate are relying on this package installing pip
& virtualenv packages for python2 AND python3.
This was sort-of expressed in the docs, where it discusses what the
resulting setup of the system will be, but I've added a note to make
it clearer.
If we want to change this, I think we'll need either a new element, or
a non-defaulting flag.
Change-Id: I419dbdf4682394db68974944af1e5c432f3e0565
It turns out make has always been a tacit dependency of openssl as it
ships a Makefile for certificates [1]. This just recently changed to
be a hard dependency in F27, so this now fails as openssl is a
dependency of protected packages such as dnf. Since it's always been
wrong to remove it, we take it out of the purge list.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=783446
Change-Id: I69efb3a56878ab97c4587bbbf5356bea752f2846
There's a patch in flight in ironic-python-agent to switch the
default hardware manager to use lshw instead of dmidecode. [0]
This would require lshw to be installed regardless of
architecture. This patch removes the architecture rules from
lshw in the package-installs list.
[0] Ie370331df6bb5ef131c5cb60f458877e2a7ad71a
Change-Id: Idaf05b8efce28cd0cbf339cf693db4f55a693d9b
Partial-Bug: #1715790
zypper only supports the --no-recommends option during installs, giving
the option during removals results in an error.
When setting ACTION=remove, remove --no-recommends from EXTRA_ARGS, and
set --clean-deps to also remove no-longer-needed dependencies.
Rename EXTRA_ARGS to ACTION_ARGS for increased readability.
Change-Id: Ifbd168992b1a20658b6b4a99ba175234f6c78f6d
When "epel" element is used during a build process
with "rhel7" distribution, the build failed
because the "epel-release-7*" package cannot be
installed.
The reason is because the URL is not correct, it
should be:
URL=$BASE_URL/$RELEASE/x86_64/Packages/e/
Change-Id: I90c26892361f7611645b85f2eddc949b2f0d76fc
Closes-Bug: #1735547
At the moment all musl needs in addition to an official stage4 file is a
few keywords and use flag changes.
Change-Id: Ibf4a6d616aca1aef876967e2aa34170c96ac9ef8
This is intended to eventually support building musl-libc based images,
which need the musl overlay.
Change-Id: I8f5429ffa64e74c860772d9a00ff0b7eebb7721a
As described, Fedora 27 has a curl-minimal package that comes in to
satisfy the rpm package dependency. It conflicts with the "real" curl
package -- which is so commonly installed (by infra elements, etc)
that this becomes an annoying problem. Just pre-install the full curl
package.
Fedora 24 is old enough to not worry about, so remove some old
workarounds to make the flow a little simpler.
Change-Id: I67baf96377109ac4521ba00243a0d91b35fafba0
The current implementation - as introduced in
Iee44703297a15b14c715f4bfb7bae67f613aceee - has some shortcomings / bugs,
like:
* the 'grep' check is too sloppy
* when /dev/pts is already mounted multiple times the current implementation
fails:
$ mount | grep devpts | sed 's/.*(\(.*\))/\1/'
rw,nosuid,noexec,relatime,gid=5,mode=620,ptmxmode=000
rw,nosuid,noexec,relatime,gid=5,mode=620,ptmxmode=000
rw,nosuid,noexec,relatime,gid=5,mode=620,ptmxmode=000
* code duplication
* Using the undocumented and non-robust output
of 'mount'.
This patch fixed the above problems.
Change-Id: Ib0c7358772480c56d405659a6a32afd60c311686
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
We oneshot emerge without calculating dependencies a few things to solve
for possible dependency loops.
Python 3.5 also became stable, so don't need to do special things for
it.
Matched the uninstall with the install lines (no need for a full if
statement).
Change-Id: I7c5e546612ac47d659e73a46a52e34d39ca81949
We should always refresh the Tumbleweed repositories and the 'update'
one for Leap in order to always have the latest information from the
repositories.
Change-Id: I85db9d8bb7fa153f01222129e9b36fecc2632f57
This is a continuation for f2cc647dae ("diskimage_builder: lib:
common-functions: Fix options for devpts mount"). We also need to
respect the devpts mount options when the dib elements are mounting
this virtual filesystems themselves.
Change-Id: Iee44703297a15b14c715f4bfb7bae67f613aceee
We want to install python3-pip, not python-pip when we are building a
py3k image less we pull in python2. Once we stop installing python2 we
have to stop calling python2 during pip install.
Change-Id: I7d8ba9300039cce90965410a4e16ca9e711904c3
Currently in Leap 42.x the bootup scripts don't actually make use of
locale.conf yet, so we need to set it in /etc/sysconfig/language. For
future distro compatibility the setting in locale.conf is kept in sync.
Also fix default timezone link.
Change-Id: I59e5dccad8a5ae132d3039851e7aa1db86a609d7
s390x architecture uses zipl as bootloader. When used in combination
with the vm element it replaces the existing bootloader element.
It's mandatory for s390x vm images.
Use cases
---------
* Allow users to create s390x images that run on nova with s390x
libvirt/kvm backend
* Building nodepool images for s390x third party CI
Supported Distros
-----------------
The following listing shows all Distros that officially support
s390x and how those Distros are supported in DIB with this patch.
* SLES - not supported (SLES is not supported in DIB)
* RHEL - not suppoprted (RHEL is not supported as KVM guest on s390x,
therefore there's no rhel7 qcow image for s390x available
like it is for other archictectures)
* Ubuntu - supported
Ubuntu images can for example be built using the following commands:
$ disk-image-create ubuntu-minimal zipl vm
$ disk-image-create ubuntu-minimal zipl
$ disk-image-create ubuntu zipl vm
Testing
-------
Cross architecture building of s390x images is not supported so far.
The plan is to set up a ThirdParty CI that builds the image for s390x and
provides the logs.
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Scheuring <andreas.scheuring@de.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Holger Smolinsky <holger@smolinski.name>
Co-Authored-By: Zhiguo Deng <bjzgdeng@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Arne Recknagel <arne.recknagel@hotmail.com>
Closes-Bug: #1730641
Change-Id: I576e7edda68da12e97c60af38f457915efe7b934
Commit cebfcf85f9 ("Use -t devpts for
/dev/pts mounts") switched from using '--bind' to '-t devpts' for
mounting the /dev/pts virtual filesystem. However, mounting devpts to
another location also affects the host's /dev/pts mountpoint. Since we
are now mounting devpts without options we end up with the following one
on openSUSE
devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,nosuid,noexec,relatime,mode=600,ptmxmode=000)
instead of the one we want
devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,nosuid,noexec,relatime,gid=5,mode=620,ptmxmode=000)
The missing gid=5 options results to boot problems for virtual machines
So in order to fix that, we need to use the existing devpts options for
/dev/pts so we don't lose them in the new mount.
Change-Id: I17f2c2bb96b807f8dbc07185ae0147bff3230f92
In a couple of places we use flock for critical sections, but we leave
lockfiles around in various locations which can be confusing.
Introduce DIB_LOCKFILES global (under ~/.cache/dib/lockfiles) and
write lockfiles in there.
Fix up removal of the lockfile in the yum path; we just want to make
sure we cleanup the .rpmmacros file, but we don't need to remove the
lockfile as well.
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Change-Id: Ie810b2836be521325afe923708d046112e1e1e20
Create a new service, that will be launched after ironic
agent has been exited. This will launch an script that will
take the rescue password, and create the rescue user with
that credentials.
Depends-On: I7898ff22800dedba73d7fbfb3801378867abe183
Change-Id: Ic3a241e2789a122d3d966e7e2148306fd0cf6aed
Partial-Bug: 1526449
Currently a bind is used when mounting /dev/pts in chroot.
This leads to problems - especially when running DIB in parallel:
It was observed that the /dev/pts mount vanishes from the host
system.
This patch uses '-t devpts' - as it is done for /sys and /proc -
for handling /dev/pts.
Change-Id: Id7775ae6fca6502af800e7b73a00862ef320206b
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
On ubuntu we detect that in python3 we need to install
python3-virtualenv, but append this to the packages to install rather
than replace python-virtualenv which results in both being installed
(and therefore grabbing python2).
Change-Id: I422490ebe9a9c655552685bc2ff342d288335a9c
Closes-Bug: #1724656
This patch removes the unneeded dd calls in the lvm block device
plugin.
After removing the underlying block device, there is the need to call
'pvscan --cache'. This is done by a dedicated LVM cleanup node which
is cleaned up after the the underlying block device.
Change-Id: Id8eaede77fbdc107d2ba1035cd6b8eb5c10160c3
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
There have been a few changes over the past few months, here we make the
following changes.
* change from backtrack=99 to complete-graph as a more correct flag
* make python version selection more in line with what gentoo supports
* set up python before stuff gets pip installed
* ensure we have the proper pip so we can install pip packages as root
* ensure we have the proper use flags for the disk formatting changes
* set DIB_RELEASE like other distros
* fix openssh-server element for gentoo
Change-Id: I17202de3016616ce34c8cbead7d0fb047a64e96b
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
The call to fstrim in disk-image-create is currently useless, because
at the time this is called, the file systems were already umounted by
the block device layer.
The current implementation of the block-device mount plugin does not
call fstrim at all: resulting in larger image sizes.
This patch removes the useless fstrim call from the disk-image-create
script and moves this into the block-device mount.py.
The resulting image might be much smaller. Example: Ubuntu Xenial
with some elements; once with and once without this patch:
-rw-r--r-- 1 dib dib 475661824 Sep 16 06:43 ubuntu-xenial-without-fstrim.qcow2
-rw-r--r-- 1 dib dib 364249088 Sep 16 09:30 ubuntu-xenial-with-fstrim.qcow2
Change-Id: I4e21ae50c5e6e26dc9f50f004ed6413132c81047
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
This reverts commit a47ff0dd4a.
Since this merged, a global-requirements pin to keep networkx <2.0 has
also merged. The plan is:
1. revert our 2.0 support and
1a. take the <2.0 pin from global requirements
2. figure out how to use constraints properly in our testing
3. restore this, with a depends-on for a 2.0 bump in requirements
(which will self-test, see 3.)
4. when other projects are ready for a global 2.0 bump, merge
in a controlled fashion
This reverts the 2.0 support, and adds the pin for networkx <2.0
Change-Id: I18f6a1115da779581245e3dd423fd90516974a33
Networkx 2.0 released recently. The main difference for us is that
"node" is no longer a dictionary and should be accessed via "nodes",
and the topological_sort returns an interator
Closes-Bug: 1712693
Change-Id: I78e89f2261b8b8d28c68b517c1e61691ab40016c
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
We intended to do an in-place sort of the mount-point list, but
sorted() returns a new list that wasn't captured. Move to the .sort()
function.
It seems the existing unit-test missed this. Add a new test taken
from the bug which does exhibit a sorting issue. Also added a
unit-test of just the comparitor for sanity.
Closes-Bug: 1699437
Change-Id: I8101e4a1804a4af7dbda20d48bf362c3f4ad2742
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
This provides a basic LVM support to dib-block-device.
Co-Authored-By: Ian Wienand <iwienand@redhat.com>
Change-Id: Ibd624d9f95ee68b20a15891f639ddd5b3188cdf9
Under certain environments, this timeout was causing failures
because it was too short. Increasing to 10, to give time to
perform the specified tasks.
Change-Id: I01dd3553f38e1137b2fcb04b4ee12202be3ad1a8
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
The MBR Partition Table Entry (PTE) allows one to specify many
possible partition types and one of the benefits of this is being able
to specify the CHS variant or the LBA variant.
By default, LBA only creates partitions of type 0x83 (of course,
that's only because the documentation doesn't tell you how to make it
do anything else).
I will take up Ian's suggestion in patch set 2 for a more rigorous
test in an independent patch set.
Change-Id: If3068535980eac2e58d4025444c65147a8c7fedc
Closes-Bug:#1703352
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 code in mkfs correctly extends the command line with a '-n' for
vfat but does not currently do it for fat. This means that mkfs for
fat ends up with a '-L' which is what you'd do for everything like
ext[234].
The change just treats fat like vfat in the one place where this check
is required.
Change-Id: If65dfd949acdadff33a564640fb42ea73026a786
Closes-Bug: #1703063
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
We replace the base resolv.conf with an "outside" copy so that
resolving works when we're in the chroot.
Installing resolvconf package modifies the in-chroot resolv.conf to a
symlink (to /var/run) which it wants maintained in the final image.
We have the existing "immutable" check for a created resolv.conf file,
but no eqivalent for a symlink.
This adds a check to see if the resolv.conf is a symlink and leave it
alone if it is, assuming it has been re-created in the chroot.
I have tested this with ubuntu-minimal+resolvconf with
dhcp-all-interfaces and the system seems to work with resolvconf
working correctly.
Change-Id: Idd5a26e9d55979bd951577d5b098ed4bfba91ad3
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
In a system where python2 is not installed and /usr/bin/python is not
linked then the cleanup process will fail trying to invoke the python
script. Use the previously determined DIB_PYTHON_EXEC if it's available.
Change-Id: I128292808ccef92cc1803988b35caae5aa6fa541
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
We introduced the "settle" in
I90103b59357edebbac7a641e8980cb282d37561b thinking that maybe kpartx
had not finished writing the partition. This probably wasn't a bad
first assumption, since we used to have this -- but is seems
insufficient.
The other failiure here seems to be if kpartx hasn't actually seen the
updated partition table in the image, so it has correctly (in it's
mind) not mounted the partition.
Looking at strace of fdisk run manually on a loopback, it will do a
fsync on the raw device after writing and then a global sync as it
exits.
This replicates this; we flush and fsync in mbr.py in the exit handler
after writing the partition, before closing the file (i've updated one
of the unit tests to double-check the call). In the partitioning.py
caller we execute a sync call too.
Since it does seem unlikely the "-s" option of kpartx is not working,
I've removed the udev settle work-around too.
Change-Id: Ia77a0ffe4c76854b326ed76490479d9c691b49aa
Partial-Bug: #1698337
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
There was a race in diskimage-builder where the mkfs call after a
kpartx -avs for the loop device would fail because the device was
not yet ready. This adds a udevadm settle call after the kpartx
to make sure the udev event queue has cleared.
Change-Id: I90103b59357edebbac7a641e8980cb282d37561b
Closes-Bug: #1698337
This adds a devstack-inspired output filter to standardise
timestamping.
Currently, python tools timestamp always (timestamp setup in
logging_config.py) but all the surrounding bash does not.
We have extra timestamps added in run_functests.sh for our own
purposes to get the bash timestamps; but this ends up giving us
double-timestamps for the python bits. Additionally, callers such as
nodepool capture our output and put their own timestamps on it, and
again have the double-timestamps.
This uses a lightly modified outfilter.py from devstack to standardise
this.
All output is run through this filter, which will timestamp it. I
have removed the places where we double-timestamp -- logging_config.py
and the prefix in dib-run-parts.
An env option is added to turn timestamps off completely (does not
seem worth taking up a command-line option for). For callers like
nodepool, they can set this and will just have their own timestamps as
they collect the lines.
Since all logging is going through outfilter, it's easy to add a
--logfile option. I think this will be quite handy; personally I'm
always redirecting dib runs to files for debugging.
I've also added a "quiet" option. I think this could be useful in
run_tests.sh if we were to start logging the output of each test to
individual files. This would be much easier to deal with than the
very large log files we get (especially if we wanted to turn on
parallel running...)
Change-Id: I202e1cb200bde17f6d7770cf1e2710bbf4cca64c
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
Currently we pass a reference to a global "rollback" list to create()
to keep rollback functions. Other nodes don't need to know about
global rollback state, and by passing by reference we're giving them
the chance to mess it up for everyone else.
Add a "add_rollback()" function in NodeBase for create() calls to
register rollback calls within themselves. As they hit rollback
points they can add a new entry. lambda v arguments is much of a
muchness -- but this is similar to the standard atexit() call so with
go with that pattern. A new "rollback()" call is added that the
driver will invoke on each node as it works its way backwards in case
of failure.
On error, nodes will have rollback() called in reverse order (which
then calls registered rollbacks in reverse order).
A unit test is added to test rollback behaviour
Change-Id: I65214e72c7ef607dd08f750a6d32a0b10fe97ac3
Keep track of the mount-point ordering in a state variable, rather
than a global. This path is tested by existing unit tests.
Note a prior change inserted the MountNode objects directly into a
list in self.state, which makes sorting quite easy as it can just
implement __lt__. Unfortunately we still json dump the state, and
thus we can't have aribtrary objects in it (future work may be to
check keys inserted into the status object...). So we have to do a
bit of wrangling with tuple lists and comparision functions here, but
it's not too bad.
Change-Id: I0c51e0c53c4efdb7a65ab0efe09a6780cb1affa8
As we add file-systems, add them to global state and check the labels
are uniqiue. Add a unit test and remove the old global value.
Bonus fixup to the length check, and a test for that too.
Change-Id: I0f5a96f687c92e000afc9c98a26c49c4b1d3f28d
With I468dbf5134947629f125504513703d6f2cdace59 each node has a
reference to the global state object. This means it gets pickled into
the node-list, which is loaded for later calls. There is no need to
reload the state.json it and pass it for later cmd_* calls, as the
nodes can see it via the unpickled self.state
Change-Id: I9e2f8910f17599d92ee33e7df8e36d8ed4d44575
Making the global state reference a defined part of the node makes
some parts of the block device processing easier and removes the need
for other global values.
The state is passed to PluginNodeBase.__init__() and expected to be
passed into all nodes as they are created. NodeBase.__init__() is
updated with the new paramater 'state'.
The parameter is removed from the create() call as nodes can simply
reference it at any point as "self.state".
This is similar to 1cdc8b20373c5d582ea928cfd7334469ff36dbce, except it
is based on I68840594a34af28d41d9522addcfd830bd203b97 which loads the
node-list from pickled state for later cmd_* calls. Thus we only
build the state *once*, at cmd_create() time as we build the node
list.
Change-Id: I468dbf5134947629f125504513703d6f2cdace59
Currently the later cmd_* calls -- umount, cleanup, delete -- all
recreate the node graph by parsing the config file using
create_graph()
There is some need, however, to have a sense of global state when
building the node list. The problem is, this is a one time operation
-- we do not want to rebuild that state for these later calls (see the
"loaded" checks in proposed
Ic3b805f9258128d5233b21ff25579c03487c7fcc).
An insight here seems to be that these cmd_* calls do not actually
want to re-parse the configuration file and rebuild the node list;
they just want to walk the node list in reverse with the state as
provided after cmd_create().
So, rather than re-creating the node list, we might as well just
pickle it, save it to disk along side the state dictionary dump and
reload it for cmd_*.
After this, I think we can safely have PluginBase.__init__() be passed
the state. We will now know that this will only be called once,
during initial creation.
Change-Id: I68840594a34af28d41d9522addcfd830bd203b97
You can't pickle a static method reference which complicates being
able to save the node graph when the "rollback" call-back wants to
hold references to these functions. The outer module (localoop.py) is
small anyway, so from an organisation point of view the difference is
minimal. Since these are really only called with parameters from the
containing class, they could be class methods with no parameters, at
the small expense of having to fiddle the mbr test-case a bit.
Change-Id: I6f9592a4295abe1b41294b79828bc2f3c2da01c6
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
Something seems to be going on with the ppc matching in the gate test.
Small updates to see what's going on...
Change-Id: Ie48cd4ce1f983a58932a577a43746240f6866936
Because we append the function/line info after debug lines in the gate
logs, the pretty-print ends up not looking all that pretty. Pad it.
Change-Id: Ice013428342614300cd51e8b7be56e79b75b31fc
This is code motion with some small changes to make follow-on's
easier.
test_blockdevice_mbr.py is moved alongside the other tests. It is
modified slightly to use the standard base class and remove a lot of
repeated test setup; a fixture is used for the tempdir (so it doesn't
have to be torn-down, and is removed properly on error) and the partx
args are moved into the setUp() so each test doesn't have to create
it. No functional change. renamed test_mbr.py for shortness.
test_blockdevice_utils.py is merged with existing test_utils.py. No
change to the tests.
test_blockdevice.py is removed. It isn't doing anything currently; to
work it will need to take an approach based more on mocking of calls
that require elevated permissions. It's in history if we need it.
Change-Id: I87b1ea94afaaa0b44e6a57b9d073f95a63a04cf0
assertRaisesRegexp was renamed to assertRaisesRegex in Py3.2
For more details, please check:
https://docs.python.org/3/library/
unittest.html#unittest.TestCase.assertRaisesRegex
Change-Id: I705c958c0dbf1daa409ed29ccbc038426298c306
Closes-Bug: #1436957
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
While plugins treat the state as just a dictionary, it's nice for the
driver functions to keep state related functions encapsulated in the
state object singleton. Wrap the internal state dictionary so we can
pass the BlockDeviceState directly without dereferencing.
Change-Id: Ic0193c64d645ed1312f898cbfef87841f460799c
Currently we keep a global list of mount-points defined in the
configuration and automatically setup dependencies between mount nodes
based on their global "mount order" (i.e. higher directories mount
first).
The current method for achieving this is roughly to add the mount
points to a dictionary indexed my mount-point, then at "get_edge()"
call build the sorted list ... unless it has already been built
because this gets called for every node.
It seems much simpler to simply keep a sorted list of the
MountPointNode objects as we add them. We don't need to implement a
sorting algorithm then, we can just use sort() and implement __lt__
for the nodes.
I believe the existing mount-order unit testing is sufficient; I'm
struggling to find a valid configuration where the mount-order is
*not* correctly specified in the configuration graph.
Change-Id: Idc05cdf42d95e230b9906773aa2b4a3b0f075598
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
A couple of things going on, but I think it makes sense to do them
atomically.
The NodeBase.create() argument "results" is the global state
dictionary that will be saved to "state.json", and re-loaded in later
phases and passed to them as the argument "state". So for
consistency, call this argument "state" (this fits with the change out
to start building the state dictionary earlier in the
PluginBase.__init__() calls).
Since the "state" is a pretty important part of how everything works,
move it into a separate object. This is treated as essentially a
singleton. It bundles it nicely together for some added
documentation [1].
We move instantiation of this object out of the generic
BlockDevice.__init__() call and into the actual cmd_* drivers. This
is because there's two distinct instantiation operations -- creating a
new state (during cmd_create) and loading an existing state (other
cmd_*). This is also safer -- since we know the cmd_* arguments are
looking for an existing state.json, we will fail if it somehow goes
missing.
To more fully unit test this, some testing plugins and new
entry-points are added. These add known state values which we check
for. These should be a good basis for further tests.
[1] as noted, we could probably do some fun things in the future like
make this implement a dictionary and have some saftey features like
r/o keys.
Change-Id: I90eb711b3e9b1ce139eb34bdf3cde641fd06828f
As described in pep282 [1], the variable part of a log message
should be passed in via parameter. In this case the parameters
are evaluated only when they need to be.
This patch fixes (unifies) this for DIB.
A check using pylint was added that this kind of passing parameters to
the logging subsystem is enforced in future. As a blueprint a similar
(stripped-down) approach from cinder [2] was used.
[1] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0282/
[2] https://github.com/openstack/cinder/blob/master/tox.ini
Change-Id: I2d7bcc863e4e9583d82d204438b3c781ac99824e
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
This is an initial creation of pylint with a basic indent checker.
Small issues corrected. Job added to gate with
Ib554a284e92583cc1d6a5c2219b3922852ca4c73
Change-Id: I7e24d8348db3aef79e1395d12692199a1f80161a
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
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 was suggested in a review comment in
I8a5d62a076a5a50597f2f1df3a8615afba6dadb2. It works out quite nicely
because the BlockDevice() driver now doesn't need to know anything
about stevedore or plugins, and just works on the node list. It also
simplifies the unit testing by not having to call create_graph through
a BlockDevice object.
Change-Id: I98512f6cf42e256d2ea8225a0b496d303bf357b8
This completes the transitions started in
Ic5a61365ef0132476b11bdbf1dd96885e91c3cb6
The new file plugin.py is the place to start with this change. The
abstract base classes PluginBase and NodeBase are heavily documented.
NodeBase essentially replaces Digraph.Node
The changes in level?/*.py make no functional changes, but are just
refactoring to implement the plugin and node classes consistently.
Additionally we have added asserts during parsing & generation to
ensure plugins are implemented PluginBase, and get_nodes() is always
returning NodeBase objects for the graph.
Change-Id: Ie648e9224749491260dea65d7e8b8151a6824b9c
This switches the code to use networkx for the digraph implementation.
Note that the old implementation specifically isn't removed in this
change -- for review clarity. It will be replaced by a base class
that defines things properly to the API described below.
Plugins return a node object with three functions
get_name() : return the unique name of this node
get_nodes() : return a list of nodes for insertion into the graph.
Usually this is just "self". Some special things like partitioning
add extra nodes at this point, however.
get_edges() : return a tuple of two lists; edges_from and edges_to
As you would expect the first is a list of node names that points to
us, and the second is a list of node names we point to. Usually
this is only populated as ([self.base],[]) -- i.e. our "base" node
points to us. Some plugins, such as mounting, create links both to
and from themselves, however.
Plugins have been updated, some test cases added (error cases
specifically)
Change-Id: Ic5a61365ef0132476b11bdbf1dd96885e91c3cb6
This moves to a more generic config parser that doesn't have plugins
parsing part of the tree.
I understand why it ended up that way; we have "partitions" key which
has special semantics compared to others keys and there was a desire
to keep it isolated from core tree->graph code. But this isn't really
isolated; you have to reverse-engineer several module-crossing
boundaries, extras classes and repetitive recursive functions.
Ultimately, plugins should have access to the node graph, but not
participate in configuration parsing. This way we ensure that plugins
can't invent new methods of configuration parsing.
Note: unit tests produce the same tree -> graph conversion as the old
method. i.e. this is not intended to have a functional change.
Change-Id: I8a5d62a076a5a50597f2f1df3a8615afba6dadb2
Add a range of unit-testing for configuration parsing, graph
generation and mount-point generation. Unfortunately there's some
global variable hacks, and some stubs, but it's a start.
Change-Id: I9e4f950c2c2ea656fc0c1a14594059fb4c62fa35
There's an increasing amount of pydoc based documentation. Output the
module reference and link it into the developers main page.
One fixup to the rst needed
Change-Id: I1d43a1fe1c735eb4559e3d2b40834d1c8115c586
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
Move Partition() object creation into the actual Partition object,
rather than having the logic within the Partitioning() object
Change-Id: I833ed419a0fca38181a9e2db28e5af87500d8ba4
Split Partition() into it's own file for clarity. This will be
followed-on by less dependence between Partitions and Partition
Change-Id: I860f6a1787c0e4fe99f93919ac37cf7d80bfaae9
Moving the exception didn't cause problems in
I925ed62bdc808f0e07862f6e0905e80b50fbe942, but in later changes where
we split blockdevice.py up a bit more, we can get a bit tangled with
circular imports.
Change-Id: I8297483f64c4e1deecd5ec88ee40e9198bb83589
Because in some cases (e.g. partitioning) the order is needed,
add weights to the digraph to get an (somewhat) stable
topological sort.
Change-Id: I5ef1acc6338ac93c593faa0eafe26cbed42ed887
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
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
"log and throw" is arguably an anti-pattern; the error message either
bubles-up into the exception, or the handler figures it out. We have
an example where this logs, and then the handler in blockdevice.py
catches it and logs it again.
Less layers is better; just raise the exception, and use log.exception
to get tracebacks where handled.
Change-Id: I8efd94fbe52a3911253753f447afdb7565849185
Manifests files can release sensitive information and therefore should
have restrictive permissions.
Change-Id: I64d6c830217a7d8b0172df2dc774079dcd1e2a68
Related-Bug: #1671842
A majority of the "plugins" aren't implementing the plugin class.
Clearly we need some refactoring of the ideas here. Remove for
simplicity.
Change-Id: If399a371b171f4fd17cfa5856fe55daca4c86e60
To avoid failures with double unmount, skip unmounting
the mountpoints that are managed by block device.
Change-Id: I228779eb9bf544a27a53e5017c87573023fd375a
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
The args agument was only used to find the symbol for the getval
command. Have the command pass the symbol to find in directly. We
can therefore remove the args paramater to the BlockDevice() creation.
Change-Id: I8e357131b70a00e4a2c4792c009f6058d1d5ae9e
Move argument parsing to subparsers, rather than positional arguments.
This better reflects the tool's role as a driver and allows
sub-commands to deal with arguments in a natural way.
Change-Id: Iae8c368e0f3fe47abfddb9e0a1558bd5b3423aee
I accidentally dropped the clearing of this file when it moved to
cmd.py during rebase of I1919f6e865acae14ee95cd025c9c7b75ca266a9c
Change-Id: Ibe9fcde594770cb51c732cc253987308dc038083
DIB_BLOCK_DEVICE_PARAMS_YAML should be exported, and the
dib-block-device will take this as the value of --params. Remove this
to simplify the command-line
Change-Id: I6764ed223ecd36f9d24e19f164b6a927380b410f
This creates a BlockDeviceCmd object to hold the main() function.
This doesn't really do anything different right now, but sets a base
for using argparse subparsers to handle the command-line
Change-Id: I4acf95ff4d554a3b4e7e2244ab1706631b98458f
This moves the YAML parameter parsing into the command-line driver.
It makes the argument optional so it can be taken from the environment
variable directly. The parsed YAML is passed to the BlockDevice
object.
Change-Id: I6fa5e5b7d1fccfc7cf47d6e4a1fa6e560734680d
To avoid any confusion, commands passed to exec_sudo() should be a
list of "str"s. Log a message if we see unicode issues.
This also adds a debug trace of all output. stderr is captured.
This is modified to raise CalledProcessError on failure, like
check_call(). Calls that are ok to fail will need to explicitly catch
and ignore this.
The two calls that we expect to fail are wrapped
We wish to try rolling back if one of these command raises an
exception. Modify the create handler to initiate rollback on all
exceptions.
Change-Id: Iee4fa41ffaf243e4728bf3a5eeec5c8fa8d2dadc
The await function is essentially a non-standard check_output call.
Let's use standard calls to increase maintainability.
Change-Id: I2c25e1cd7122791fcaa86b46bd801e661471bc9e
As this method can be introduced without any dependency,
provide it on an independent change to simplify reviews.
This is a partial refactor based on
I592c0b1329409307197460cfa8fd69798013f1f8
Change-Id: Idaf3d2b3b3e23d0b9d6bc071d67b961a829ae422
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
This is a partial refactor from change
I592c0b1329409307197460cfa8fd69798013f1f8
Change-Id: I8822e68e41c4ebd47eea9ffed4557efc130a7bf7
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Add a new method in the block device library called
exec_sudo, so it can be reused.
This is a partial refactor of change
I592c0b1329409307197460cfa8fd69798013f1f8
Change-Id: Id621f6d029e1275a35c4fd3f19b57c8518076134
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
As part of the final steps, refactor the bits belonging
to block device and functions. This is a partial refactor
from I3600c6a3d663c697b59d91bd3fbb5e408af345e4
Change-Id: I7aa4fe0466e44846d8fa3194575d446fe4b5b2e6
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
Introducing the refactors of the block device to allow a tree-like
configuration, and start using it for the partitions level.
Based on patch I3600c6a3d663c697b59d91bd3fbb5e408af345e4
Change-Id: I58bb3c256a1dfd100d29266571c333c2d43334f7
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
It seems that the redhat nodepool job is quite reliably geting a
"floating point" error during centos image build. This happens after
03-yum-cleanup which is pruning the locales. This might be a
red-herring, since the logs are full of
/bin/bash: warning: setlocale: LC_ALL: cannot change locale (C.UTF-8)
I think in our recent de-puppetisation of hosts, something might have
changed that is setting LC_ALL=C.UTF-8 for the jenkins user, at least
on Ubuntu. This is a problem for centos, as it doesn't have C.UTF-8
locale. I then think using the invalid locale is what leads the the
floating-point error when doing some maths in dib-run-parts to
calculate runtimes.
We are currently overriding LANG, but we really want LC_ALL to ensure
this applies globally.
Change-Id: I8e7cae093c4b32e0d20b73ae0086f14c7cc6a9cb
Add a new getval call that allows to retrieve values
from the block device. Also isolating the block device
information into a 'blockdev' dictionary entry, to better
return it with the getval command.
This is a refactor from the original code at
I3600c6a3d663c697b59d91bd3fbb5e408af345e4.
Change-Id: I93d33669a3a0ae644eab9f9b955bb5a9470cadeb
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
The original approach was to pass each and every command
line parameter to the block device. While the block device
functionality gets extended, this is not any longer practical.
Instead of passing in all the parameters separately this patch
collects these in a YAML file that is passed in to the block device
layer.
Change-Id: I9d07593a01441b62632234468ac25a982cf1a9f0
Signed-off-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
This change move "do_extra_package_install" from pre-install to install
phase.
Extra packages are added by user request using the flag "-p", This
package should not be something the elements depend on.
The reason behind this patch is to move the extra package install to
a proper phase, Also more reasonable if base element run package update
to be before we install extra packages.
Change-Id: I68cc773aba9aa01743f0dda9f4e635e4cac2a282
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
DIB_PYTHON_EXEC was added in I5fab0e192c3a2dad8f60e821c184479e24e33bcd
to export the python that disk-image-create is running under. If dib
is installed with python3 then just calls "python" (python2) to run
sub-scripts, it fails to find itself.
This has been tested in devstack gates that use py3x
Change-Id: Ia1028972bfc0517b468b279aab9decdbcd7424ca
If the path is missing, unmount_dir currently exits with an error which
unintentionally aborts cleanup efforts early. This change makes
unmount_dir idempotent by exiting successfully if a directory doesn't
exist.
Change-Id: I1491b4344e8569ecb2833f44baee445a89a39d61
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>
This patch introduces stevedore plugin mechanism for use
with the block device layer. This makes it possible that
other projects pass in their own block device plugins.
Change-Id: Id3ea56aaf75f5a20a4e1b6ac2a68adb12c56b574
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>
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