Qemu-nbd does not perform well with older versions of qemu due to
the lack of writeback caching mode. It also only builds qcow2 images
and there is a desire for raw image support. Finally, qemu-nbd makes
it very difficult to build images concurrently due to the somewhat
opaque nature of how it selects a /dev/nbd# device. losetup, on
the other hand, makes this process very straight forward.
Change-Id: I309fad8af4fd1e8d1720c17b65e1897a76d5e897
Co-Author: Clint Byrum <clint@fewbar.com>
Update audit in order to fix up a conflict with a file from the glibc
package on a fresh Fedora 18 install.
Change-Id: Ib44c8415bce4ec47e21626a697cf426b96a9061a
This switches $CLOUD_IMAGES and $RELEASE to the DIB_ namespace so
they will survive future changes to the sanitisation of the build
environment.
Change-Id: I7dc2aa82fb9ef452705b080cc404f41046014f20
The root user tries to `sudo -u stack`, without a tty,
causing fedora+devstack images builds to fail in Jenkins.
Change-Id: Ia0a7fb315cf9bd17cf250e70dba06363a697c97c
ARM doesn't have a generic Linux image due to the soc-specific nature of Linux
kernels today, so we drop the manual installation of that package, replacing it
with a dist-upgrade instead. This involved tweaks to the dpkg and fedora
install-package scripts.
Change-Id: I97924b80ca87781307e1087b9fe4b18215770e84
Also add redhat-lsb to Fedora images for lsb_release which should prove
useful as a way to do distro-specific things.
Change-Id: Ie32566349319ca244fa02065bb9f81c36c1b49fb