diskimage-builder/elements/dib-run-parts/bin/dib-run-parts
Tim Serong ee5ae03d58 Enable running disk-image-create on SUSE Linux
- Ensures /sbin and friends are in $PATH when invoked (without this,
  various sudo invocations fail in exciting ways).
- Use dib-run-parts in lib/common-functions instead of run-parts
  (neither SLES nor openSUSE ship run-parts).
- Ensure dib-run-parts doesn't descend into subdirectories (same
  behaviour as run-parts).
- Move dib-run-parts from root.d to bin (cleaner, consistent with
  other elements with separate bin scripts).
- Tested by building Ubuntu image on openSUSE 12.3.
- Note: this doesn't add support for creating SUSE images, it just
  lets you run disk-image-create on SUSE-based distros.

Change-Id: I906c6bc3cf51cdf2c4415adeae1ca250faac25e1
2013-07-24 20:16:31 +10:00

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Executable file

#!/bin/bash
# Inspired by Debian and RedHat run-parts but portable and specific to di-b.
#
# Copyright 2012 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
allowed_regex=${RUN_PARTS_REGEX:-"^[0-9A-Za-z_-]+$"}
set -ue
name=$(basename $0)
usage() {
echo "usage: $name scripts_directory" >&2
exit 1
}
output () {
echo $name $(date) $* >&2
}
if [ $# -lt 1 ] ; then
usage
fi
target_dir=$1
if ! [ -d $target_dir ] ; then
output $target_dir must exist and be a directory
usage
fi
# We specifically only want to sort *by the numbers*.
# Lexical sorting is not guaranteed, and identical numbers may be
# parallelized later
# Note: -maxdepth 1 ensures only files in the target directory (but not
# subdirectories) are run, which is the way run-parts behaves.
targets=$(find $target_dir -maxdepth 1 -type f -executable -printf '%f\n' | grep -E "$allowed_regex" | LANG=C sort -n)
PROFILE_DIR=$(mktemp -d /tmp/profiledir.XXXXXX)
if [ -d /tmp/in_target.d/environment.d ] ; then
for env_file in /tmp/in_target.d/environment.d/* ; do
source $env_file
done
fi
for target in $targets ; do
output "Running $target_dir/$target"
target_tag=${target//\//_}
date +%s.%N > $PROFILE_DIR/start_$target_tag
$target_dir/$target
target_tag=${target//\//_}
date +%s.%N > $PROFILE_DIR/stop_$target_tag
output "$target completed"
done
echo "----------------------- PROFILING -----------------------"
echo ""
echo "Target: $(basename $target_dir)"
echo ""
printf "%-40s %9s\n" Script Seconds
printf "%-40s %9s\n" --------------------------------------- ----------
echo ""
pushd $PROFILE_DIR > /dev/null
for target in $(find . -name 'start_*' -printf '%f\n') ; do
stop_file=stop_${target##start_}
start_seconds=$(cat $target)
stop_seconds=$(cat $stop_file)
duration=$(python -c "print $stop_seconds - $start_seconds")
printf "%-40s %10.3f\n" ${target##start_} $duration
done
popd > /dev/null
rm -rf $PROFILE_DIR
echo ""
echo "--------------------- END PROFILING ---------------------"