This element allows installation of pip and virtualenv from either
distro packages or git.
Change-Id: Id294f0936c8fef8a3b27a415bfcc93b3f327e104
Depends-On: I731cc8a0f5bfeda8f17a78c33b9f44062323a361
Fedora has changed the location of epel, shorting the link
from 'download.fedoraproject.org' to 'dl.fedoraproject.org'.
This change updates the epel mirror to prevent it from timing
out.
Change-Id: I87090282a2f5f757495daec6ad14123b436b1aa0
Install selinux policy packages as part of the base-installs. selinux
is part of the base-system and the kernel boots by default in selinux
mode.
Without both of these, we can get in a situation where later scripts
(particuarly, some of the infra scripts) might install systemd-policy
without a base policy (targeted), leading to a messed up situation
where systemd will halt during boot due to missing policy files.
Change-Id: I6bf156304d1134fb328fba9b12dc364701b13696
Add an environment variable to control the creation of eth0/1
interface enablement scripts.
With a tool such as glean, the presence of these scripts will indicate
the interface is configured and configuration-drive settings will not
be applied. This means in a non-dhcp situation like on Rackspace,
network is broken.
On Fedora, where later systemd provides "predictable network interface
names" [1] eth0 & eth1 ironically aren't predictable so this just
confuses things. You really need cloud-init or glean or something to
bring up your interfaces in a sane fashion.
This maintains the status-quo on centos-minimal, but disables creation
for fedora-minimal.
[1] http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/
Change-Id: I3f1ffeb6de3b1f952292a144efab9554f7f99a5f
As described in the comment, systemd will create a broken
/etc/resolv.conf link if there is no file in the base-image (as you
can read in the bug, it is debated if this is a bug or a feature).
The solution is to leave a dummy /etc/resolv.conf file in the image.
Whatever network manager you choose (NetworkManager, glean,
cloud-config, etc) will overwrite this anyway.
It's just that some tools, such as dhclient, get confused with the
broken symlink. This affects you if you're using glean to configure
the network in a DHCP situation, for example -- dhclient won't
configure nameservers and everything goes to heck.
Change-Id: I734834d03e7fdb13f9ab2e86f877b07bf4a84ff9
We are incorrectly detecting major/minor device numbers for the growroot
rootfs. This can also be simplified by querying udev for partition
information.
Change-Id: I68059bf11f2563872f6b4d0e23fa09a15de980a8
The detection logic in pkg-map for DIB_DEBUG_TRACE assumes that this
variable being unset means tracing is on, when in fact this means
tracing is off.
Change-Id: I584a634c57bbe03e26a6ee94cef473e634616885
With a slow file system, umount can return 0 and the immediately
following remove can fail with a "Device or resource busy" error.
This happened in DevStack in disk-image-create where unmount_image
is followed by an immediate cleanup_build_dir.
Solution is to apply same logic from bug 1332521 to allow the
remove to retry on failure (up to 5s) in case the umount has not
completed.
Change-Id: I3337e2b4ad0111e77f79dc179439cdfea8ebdeda
Closes-Bug: #1527721
End user docs would benefit from a section about the byte-to-inode
ratio, and why it's set the way it is. This update explains why
and how to manipulate the ratio depending on the intended use.
Change-Id: Iffb5ef6f4c7c74f4aa6e25912d4991d7a611c8fe
Closes-bug: 1512841
In order to add more flexibility to the vm and bootloader
elements, split the functionality in two different ones, and
make vm depend on bootloader element.
This will allow to construct more elements that depend on
bootloader, and develop both elements independently.
Change-Id: Iad2503b7b8fe53b768a3bc79e4cb839700fbd747
This element enables creation of Ubuntu deploy ramdisk and
user images which could be used to deploy the HP Proliant
Servers with Dynamic Smart Array Controllers. Without this driver
the disk with the Dynamic Smart Array Controller is
not visible to the ramdisk.
Closes bug: #1492803
Change-Id: Ibb3b298cd379cd7333279484df6ae30e9d7f6aaa
Creating an element which we can use in #! lines to refer to either
python2 or python3 depending on what it available.
Change-Id: Ic47e18ad21c33ab9f0d11c04260a33725aeee814
The modprobe utility is required by the rtslib package (iSCSI Linux-IO).
It will also be required for inspection.
Change-Id: I6760c86160d1ceba45aedde62597a711bcb4543d
Vlan support was recently added to glean. However, if the 8021q module
is not loaded, glean will fail to bring up a tagged interfaced defined
in /etc/network/interfaces.d/. Manually attempting to bring up the
interface results in an error[1]. This patch ensures that the 8021q
module is loaded so that tagged interfaces can be brought up at boot.
[1] http://paste.openstack.org/show/480027/
Change-Id: I15d805c07d4b5e1161d831f0393d027e4325137f
Since we are modifing SSH keys, it should be safe to assume
openssh-server should be installed too.
Change-Id: I17ff05642bb2f0868d4c17819cd91b179068399a
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
When build ubuntu iso image, it will install grub-efi-amd64-signed
and grub-efi-amd64 packages. Both of the postinst script will try
to find root device and install grub which will definitely fail in
such a chroot environment.
So the workaround is to skip error and remove postinst script.
And confirm the package be installed successfully at last.
Change-Id: Ie0aecb212b22362046db55b5ad8c64c3211c28e5
Closes-Bug: #1491280
Co-Authored-By: Jane.zhang <jian.zhang8@hpe.com>
As described in the comments, CentOS overrides the "distroverpkg"
variable in yum.conf. This is the package that yum queries to
establish the value of the $releasever variable. On other platforms,
this defaults to "redhat-release" (which "fedora-release" provides) so
everything works. It is only when the base-system "distroverpkg"
refers to a package not in the chroot we hit the issue.
We can avoid this by setting the releasever variable via the
commandline.
Change-Id: I231c3277960992cd479b8aff7838f246397936f2
This patch is a follow up patch fixing some nits left by the review
25d3ee5471.
It does:
* Fix the README file to say that the password *must* be encrypted and
the option values *must* be quoted
* Adds Type=oneshot in the upstart service config file so that upstart
will not try to restart the service over and over.
* Enable setu, sete and setpipefail in the dynamic-login script
Change-Id: Iee5d75daef24469ccf47ca12de6ead37bf9d8d6f
Allow a user to override the username on where .ssh/authorized_keys is
installed.
Change-Id: I030d5a89260aed8b23a35c4cdc2d67629934b076
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
I recently built a ramdisk for IPA and was confused by
the fact that the source-repositories name did not
match the element name. (this is a convention,
confusing when they don't match but certainly not
required).
This patch makes it so you can use DIB_REPOREF_ironic_agent to
customize the IPA ramdisk sources when building ramdisks.
For backwards compat if DIB_REPOREF_agent is set it automatically
sets the new DIB_REPOREF_ironic_agent to that value as well.
Change-Id: I082d989d0d85601f5984dc7c3767b8d66a3d5438
Troubleshooting an image can be quite hard, specially if you can not get
a prompt you can enter commands to find out what went wrong. By default,
the images (specially ramdisks) doesn't have any SSH key or password for
any user. Of course one could use the ``devuser`` element to generate
an image with SSH keys and user/password in the image but that would be
a massive security hole and very it's discouraged to run in production
with a ramdisk like that.
This commit is adding a new element called dynamic-login, which inserts
a helper script into the image to allow operators to inject a SSH key
and/or change the root password dynamically when it boots via parameters
in the kernel command line.
Those parameters are:
sshkey = If the operator append sshkey="$PUBLIC_SSH_KEY" to the kernel
command line on boot, the helper script will append this key to the root
user authorized_keys.
rootpwd = If the operator append rootpwd="$ENCRYPTED_PASSWORD" to the
kernel command line on boot, the helper script will set the root password
to the one specified by this option. Note that this password should be
an encrypted password.
Change-Id: I6b87a1b90163d79745f30dfacd37516051fa0aea
When the kernel gets installed on Fedora, the rpm post scripts call
"/bin/kernel-install" [1] to install it. This is a script provided by
systemd.
However, in [2], Fedora ships a patch to kernel-install that makes a
call-out to /sbin/new-kernel-pkg -- the install script provided by
grubby [3]
Without grubby installed, systemd's kernel-install script goes off and
runs dracut plugins directly [4], which eventually creates the initrd.
For reasons that are not clearly explained, the initrd will end up in
a a "machine-id" sub-directory of /boot (possibly, so you can symlink
it?). It is also called "initrd", even though it's an initramfs, for
historical reasons in dracut I think.
It is at this point that I think 99-ramdisk has been written to move
the generated initrd file back into /boot. Later on, when we build
the image, we run grub-install and it picks up the kernel and the
initrd and installs everything.
grubby's new-kernel-pkg [6] it's very similar -- it uses dracut to
make the initramfs ... but in this case it is put in /boot and is
actually called initramfs.
The subtle change that led me down this path is that dracut has been
modified to have a "Recommends" for grubby for >F22 [7]. After
discussing this change with the author, it turns out it was *always*
intended to use the grubby-based kernel install scripts for Fedora --
our builds have been incorrect in not including the package. The
author got sick of people removing the package and making unbootable
systems, hence the change.
Thus this removes the workarounds in 99-ramdisk and replace it with an
install of the grubby package. grubby's kernel install script will
put the kernel & generated initramfs in /boot, and it will be
installed correctly via the usual grub install later when we build the
disk image.
I have built F22 & F23 fedora-minimal images with this and they boot.
[1] http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/kernel.git/tree/kernel.spec#n1832
[2] http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/systemd.git/tree/kernel-install-grubby.patch
[3] http://linux.die.net/man/8/new-kernel-pkg
[4] https://github.com/haraldh/dracut/blob/master/50-dracut.install
[5] 81516adcb7
[6] https://github.com/rhinstaller/grubby/blob/master/new-kernel-pkg
[7] 47ff68e78b
Change-Id: I1a6e45d04755515286b3d49f8280c16b527e2f48