Redirecting our output through outfilter.py is inherently a bit racy,
since the disk-image-create process will exit, and then you might get
outfilter.py flushing any remaining output as it closes.
On an interactive prompt this might lead to final output overwriting
the prompt, etc. This can be a bit confusing when you start running
things in a loop.
If we save the original fd, then on the exit path close the redirected
fd's and wait a little bit for final output (as a result of the
close), we get a more consistent output.
Change-Id: I8efe57ab421c1941e99bdecab62c6e21a87e4584
Strip everything before "site-packages" in the output filename for the
PS4 prompt. This makes the line in debug logs significantly shorter
as we don't have the full virtualenv path every single time. The
important thing -- the file being called in the lib/ dir, is retained.
Change-Id: I00706b6f6c0425c7795f997c08ceda3374dc84b5
When switching to using log-file capture, we're getting
[gentoo/build-succeeds] outfile.write(ts_line.encode('utf-8'))
[gentoo/build-succeeds] UnicodeEncodeError: 'utf-8' codec can't
encode character 'udcc5' in position 59: surrogates not allowed
Use surrogateescape [1] on the output to avoid this
[1] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0383/
Change-Id: I2c2c537296edfa5a8fe661a41bd5bfb3bfcf57e3
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
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
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 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>
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
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
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>
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>
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
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
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
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 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
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
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
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>
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
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
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
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>
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>
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
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
Now that the main partitioning refactor patch is merged, there is
a small relict of handling partitions still in the disk-image-create
main.
This patch moves the functionality from disk-image-create to the
block-device/partitioning module: it is mostly a rewrite of the
original bash code in python.
Change-Id: Ia73baeca74180a7bc9ea487da03ff56d6a3070ce
Signed-off-by: Andreas Florath <andreas@florath.net>