Every run we are doing a full tar.gz of the chroot environment that
never gets used.
It's not suitable for CI since we use fresh images each time there.
The cache in general isn't really isn't a very safe thing to have
around, because there's no invalidation procedure and no real way to
make one -- we've no guarantee that a new chroot build even moments
after a previous one wouldn't bring in or different packages, etc (of
course this is *unlikely*, but the longer you go between builds the
worse the problem becomes. Also, tons of packages get installed after
this not from any cache, so potential speed-up is rather marginal.
Debian turned this off with I58fc485aacacaa17243bf9ce760ed91256d1f182.
However, given the reasons above and it's complete lack of testing, I
don't see this as useful.
If we really want this type of thing, I think we should come up with a
way to use a persistent external yum/dnf cache that yum/dnf keeps in
sync with it's usual invalidation rules.
Change-Id: I66789c35db75c41bc45ea1ad2e26f87456de4e4d
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
The centos-minimal approach of using rinse does not, it turns out, work
on centos. That's a bummer. It's also rather heavyweight. Instead, with
minor machinations, we can just use yum itself pointed at a chroot.
Also adding fedora-minimal element which creates a fedora image using
the new yum-minimal approach.
Co-Authored-By: Gregory Haynes <greg@greghaynes.net>
Change-Id: I026fd9d323e786dae5bb67824c6501067e1ceaa3