diskimage-builder/elements/vm/finalise.d/51-bootloader
Steve Baker 9ba761ef27 Install fedora grub from cached rpm during finalise
When uninstalling grub2, leave all its dependencies
including grub2-tools installed to minimise the number of packages
which need to be installed in the finalise stage.

Since the yum cache is unmounted during finalise, installing
grub2 in finalise is slowed by re-populating the yum cache.

This change copies the grub2 rpm out of the yum cache so it can be installed
from file during finalise.

This should prevent disk becoming full during finalise on Fedora.

Closes-Bug: #1217185

Change-Id: If095adc4abb52a19a3aa0b1caebfb3e4d8f605ef
2013-09-15 09:11:58 +10:00

169 lines
5.2 KiB
Bash
Executable File

#!/bin/bash
# Configure grub. Note that the various conditionals here are to handle
# different distributions gracefully.
set -e
set -x
# FIXME:
[ -n "$IMAGE_BLOCK_DEVICE" ]
PART_DEV=$IMAGE_BLOCK_DEVICE
BOOT_DEV=$(echo $IMAGE_BLOCK_DEVICE | sed -e 's#p1##' | sed -e 's#mapper/##')
function install_extlinux {
install-packages extlinux
echo "Installing Extlinux..."
MBR=/usr/share/syslinux/mbr.bin
if [ ! -f $MBR ]; then
MBR=/usr/lib/syslinux/mbr.bin
if [ ! -f $MBR ]; then
echo "mbr.bin (from SYSLINUX) not found."
exit 1
fi
fi
dd if=$MBR of=$BOOT_DEV
mkdir -p /boot/syslinux
extlinux --install /boot/syslinux
if [ -f /etc/redhat-release ]; then
kernel=$(ls -1rv /boot/vmlinuz* | head -1)
initrd=$(ls -1rv /boot/initramfs* | head -1)
elif [ -f /etc/debian_version ]; then
kernel=$(ls -1rv /boot/vmlinuz*generic | head -1)
initrd=$(ls -1rv /boot/initrd*generic | head -1)
else
echo "Unable to find kernel and initram"
exit 1
fi
cat > /boot/syslinux/syslinux.cfg<<_EOF_
DEFAULT linux
LABEL linux
KERNEL $kernel
APPEND rw root=LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs
INITRD $initrd
_EOF_
}
function install_grub2 {
# Check for offline installation of grub
if [ -f "/tmp/grub/install" ] ; then
source /tmp/grub/install
else
install-packages grub-pc
fi
# XXX: grub-probe on the nbd0/loop0 device returns nothing - workaround, manually
# specify modules. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/grub2/+bug/1073731
GRUBNAME=`which grub-install` || echo "trying grub2-install"
if [ -z "$GRUBNAME" ]; then
GRUBNAME="bash -x `which grub2-install`"
fi
# If no GRUB2 is found, fallback to extlinux
if [ -z "$GRUBNAME" ] || [ $($GRUBNAME --version | grep "0.97" | wc -l) -ne 0 ]; then
echo "No GRUB2 found. Fallback to Extlinux..."
install_extlinux
exit 0
fi
echo "Installing GRUB2..."
GRUB_OPTS=${GRUB_OPTS:""}
# XXX: This is buggy:
# - --target=i386-pc is invalid for non-i386/amd64 architectures
# - and for UEFI too.
# GRUB_OPTS="$GRUB_OPTS --target=i386-pc"
if [[ ! $GRUB_OPTS == *--target* ]]; then
# /sys/ comes from the host machine. If the host machine is using EFI
# but the image being built doesn't have EFI boot-images installed we
# should set the --target to use a BIOS-based boot-image.
#
# * --target tells grub what's the target platform
# * the boot images are placed in /usr/lib/grub/<cpu>-<platform>
# * i386-pc is used for BIOS-based machines
# http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub.html#Installation
#
if [ -d /sys/firmware/efi ]; then
if [ ! -d /usr/lib/grub/*-efi ]; then
case $ARCH in
"x86_64"|"amd64")
GRUB_OPTS="$GRUB_OPTS --target=i386-pc"
;;
"i386")
target=i386-pc
if [ -e /proc/device-tree ]; then
for x in /proc/device-tree/*; do
if [ -e "$x" ]; then
target="i386-ieee1275"
fi
done
fi
GRUB_OPTS="$GRUB_OPTS --target=$target"
;;
esac
fi
fi
fi
$GRUBNAME --modules="biosdisk part_msdos" $GRUB_OPTS $BOOT_DEV
# This might be better factored out into a per-distro 'install-bootblock'
# helper.
if [ -f "/boot/grub/grub.cfg" ] ; then
GRUB_CFG=/boot/grub/grub.cfg
elif [ -f "/boot/grub2/grub.cfg" ] ; then
GRUB_CFG=/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
fi
# If GRUB configuration file does not exist, generate one
if [ ! $GRUB_CFG ]; then
if [ -d /boot/grub2 ]; then
GRUB_CFG=/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
elif [ -d /boot/grub ]; then
GRUB_CFG=/boot/grub/grub.cfg
fi
grub2-mkconfig -o $GRUB_CFG
fi;
DIST=`lsb_release -is`
[ -n "$DIST" ]
RELEASE=`lsb_release -cs`
[ -n "$RELEASE" ]
# grub-mkconfig generates a config with the device in it,
# This shouldn't be needed, but old code has bugs
if [ $RELEASE = 'precise' ] ; then
# Replace the search attempt with a hardcoded root as the Ubuntu reference
# images use.
sed -i "s%search --no.*%%" $GRUB_CFG
sed -i "s%set root=.*%set root=(hd0,1)%" $GRUB_CFG
fi
# force use of a LABEL:
# NOTE: Updating the grub config by hand once deployed should work, its just
# prepping it in a different environment that needs fiddling.
sed -i "s%$PART_DEV%LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs%" $GRUB_CFG
sed -i "s%search --no-floppy --fs-uuid --set=root .*$%search --no-floppy --set=root --label cloudimg-rootfs%" $GRUB_CFG
sed -i "s%root=UUID=[A-Za-z0-9\-]*%root=LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs%" $GRUB_CFG
if [ $DIST = 'Fedora' ] ; then
# enable serial console
sed -i "s%LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs%LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200%" $GRUB_CFG
if [ $(lsb_release -rs) = '19' ]; then
sed -i "s%UUID=[A-Za-z0-9\-]*%LABEL=cloudimg-rootfs%" /etc/fstab
fi
fi
}
DIB_EXTLINUX=${DIB_EXTLINUX:-0}
if [ "$DIB_EXTLINUX" != "0" ]; then
install_extlinux
else
install_grub2
fi