cb395e672b
Change-Id: I607ecb4adee9cf2e2db98142fe5274f4c12f5ab0
792 lines
24 KiB
ReStructuredText
792 lines
24 KiB
ReStructuredText
Building An Image
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=================
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Now that you have diskimage-builder properly :doc:`installed <installation>`
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you can get started by building your first disk image.
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VM Image
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--------
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Our first image is going to be a bootable vm image using one of the standard
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supported distribution :doc:`elements <../elements>` (Ubuntu or Fedora).
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The following command will start our image build (distro must be either
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'ubuntu' or 'fedora'):
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::
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disk-image-create <distro> vm
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This will create a qcow2 file 'image.qcow2' which can then be booted.
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Images can also be defined with YAML and built with the `diskimage-builder`.
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With an `image.yaml` file containing:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- elements:
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- <distro>
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- vm
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An image is built with:
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::
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diskimage-builder image.yaml
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Run `diskimage-builder --help` full description of the YAML attributes supported.
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Elements
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--------
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It is important to note that we are passing in a list of
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:doc:`elements <../elements>` to disk-image-create in our above command. Elements
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are how we decide what goes into our image and what modifications will be
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performed.
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Some elements provide a root filesystem, such as the ubuntu or fedora element
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in our example above, which other elements modify to create our image. At least
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one of these 'distro elements' must be specified when performing an image
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build. It's worth pointing out that there are many distro elements (you can even
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create your own), and even multiples for some of the distros. This is because
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there are often multiple ways to install a distro which are very different.
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For example: One distro element might use a cloud image while another uses
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a package installation tool to build a root filesystem for the same distro.
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Other elements modify our image in some way. The 'vm' element in our example
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above ensures that our image has a bootloader properly installed. This is only
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needed for certain use cases and certain output formats and therefore it is
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not performed by default.
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Output Formats
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--------------
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By default a qcow2 image is created by the disk-image-create command. Other
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output formats may be specified using the `-t <format>` argument. Multiple
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output formats can also be specified by comma separation. The supported output
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formats are:
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* qcow2
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* tar
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* tgz
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* squashfs
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* vhd
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* docker
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* raw
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When building a tgz image, note that the `DIB_GZIP_BIN` environment variable
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can be used to set the path of the gzip executable.
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Disk Image Layout
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-----------------
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The disk image layout (like number of images, partitions, LVM, disk
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encryption) is something which should be set up during the initial
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image build: it is mostly not possible to change these things later
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on.
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There are currently two defaults:
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* When using the ``vm`` element, an element that provides
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``block-device`` should be included. Available ``block-device-*``
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elements cover the common case of a single partition that fills up
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the whole disk and used as root device. Currently there are MBR,
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GPT and EFI versions. For example, to use a GPT disk you could
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build with ::
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disk-image-create -o output.qcow vm block-device-gpt ubuntu-minimal
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Or with `diskimage-builder` YAML
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- imagename: output.qcow
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elements: [vm, block-device-gpt, ubuntu-minimal]
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* When not using the ``vm`` element a plain filesystem image, without
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any partitioning, is created.
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If you wish to customise the top-level ``block-device-default.yaml``
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file from one of the ``block-device-*`` elements, set the environment
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variable `DIB_BLOCK_DEVICE_CONFIG`. This variable must hold YAML
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structured configuration data or be a ``file://`` URL reference to a
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on-disk configuration file.
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There are a lot of different options for the different levels. The
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following sections describe each level in detail.
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General Remarks
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+++++++++++++++
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In general each module that depends on another module has a `base`
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element that points to the depending base. Also each module has a
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`name` that can be used to reference the module.
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Tree-Like vs. Complete Digraph Configuration
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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The configuration is specified as a digraph_. Each module is a
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node; a edge is the relation of the current element to its `base`.
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Because the general digraph_ approach is somewhat complex when it comes
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to write it down, the configuration can also be given as a tree_.
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.. _digraph: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed_graph
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.. _tree: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_(graph_theory)
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Example: The tree like notation
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.. code-block:: yaml
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mkfs:
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name: root_fs
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base: root_part
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mount:
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mount_point: /
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is exactly the same as writing
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.. code-block:: yaml
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mkfs:
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name: root_fs
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base: root_part
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mount:
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name: mount_root_fs
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base: root_fs
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mount_point: /
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Non existing `name` and `base` entries in the tree notation are
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automatically generated: the `name` is the name of the base module
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prepended by the type-name of the module itself; the `base` element is
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automatically set to the parent node in the tree.
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In mostly all cases the much simpler tree notation can be used.
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Nevertheless there are some use cases when the more general digraph
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notation is needed. Example: when there is the need to combine two or
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more modules into one new, like combining a couple of physical volumes
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into one volume group.
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Tree and digraph notations can be mixed as needed in a configuration.
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Limitations
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+++++++++++
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To provide an interface towards the existing elements, there are
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currently three fixed keys used - which are not configurable:
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* `root-label`: this is the label of the block device that is mounted at
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`/`.
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* `image-block-partition`: if there is a block device with the name
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`root` this is used else the block device with the name `image0` is
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used.
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* `image-path`: the path of the image that contains the root file
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system is taken from the `image0`.
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Level 0
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+++++++
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Module: Local Loop
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..................
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This module generates a local image file and uses the loop device to
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create a block device from it. The symbolic name for this module is
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`local_loop`.
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Configuration options:
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the image. This is used as the name for the
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image in the file system and also as a symbolic name to be able to
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reference this image (e.g. to create a partition table on this
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disk).
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size
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(optional) The size of the disk. The size can be expressed using
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unit names like TiB (1024^4 bytes) or GB (1000^3 bytes).
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Examples: 2.5GiB, 12KB.
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If the size is not specified here, the size as given to
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disk-image-create (--image-size) or the automatically computed size
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is used.
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directory
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(optional) The directory where the image is created.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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local_loop:
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name: image0
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local_loop:
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name: data_image
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size: 7.5GiB
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directory: /var/tmp
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This creates two image files and uses the loop device to use them as
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block devices. One image file called `image0` is created with
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default size in the default temp directory. The second image has the
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size of 7.5GiB and is created in the `/var/tmp` folder.
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Level 1
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+++++++
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Module: Partitioning
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....................
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This module generates partitions on existing block devices. This
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means that it is possible to take any kind of block device (e.g. LVM,
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encrypted, ...) and create partition information in it.
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The symbolic name for this module is `partitioning`.
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MBR
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***
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It is possible to create primary or logical partitions or a mix of
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them. The numbering of the primary partitions will start at 1,
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e.g. `/dev/vda1`; logical partitions will typically start
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with `5`, e.g. `/dev/vda5` for the first partition, `/dev/vda6` for
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the second and so on.
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The number of logical partitions created by this module is theoretical
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unlimited and it was tested with more than 1000 partitions inside one
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block device. Nevertheless the Linux kernel and different tools (like
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`parted`, `sfdisk`, `fdisk`) have some default maximum number of
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partitions that they can handle. Please consult the documentation of
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the appropriate software you plan to use and adapt the number of
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partitions.
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Partitions are created in the order they are configured. Primary
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partitions - if needed - must be first in the list.
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GPT
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***
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GPT partitioning requires the ``sgdisk`` tool to be available.
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Options
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*******
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There are the following key / value pairs to define one partition
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table:
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base
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(mandatory) The base device to create the partitions in.
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label
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(mandatory) Possible values: 'mbr', 'gpt'
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Configure use of either the Master Boot Record (MBR) or GUID
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Partition Table (GPT) formats
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align
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(optional - default value '1MiB'; MBR only)
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Set the alignment of the partition. This must be a multiple of the
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block size (i.e. 512 bytes). The default of 1MiB (~ 2048 * 512
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bytes blocks) is the default for modern systems and known to
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perform well on a wide range of targets. For each partition
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there might be some space that is not used - which is `align` - 512
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bytes. For the default of 1MiB exactly 1048064 bytes (= 1 MiB -
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512 byte) are not used in the partition itself. Please note that
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if a boot loader should be written to the disk or partition,
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there is a need for some space. E.g. grub needs 63 * 512 byte
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blocks between the MBR and the start of the partition data; this
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means when grub will be installed, the `align` must be set at least
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to 64 * 512 byte = 32 KiB.
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partitions
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(mandatory) A list of dictionaries. Each dictionary describes one
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partition.
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The following key / value pairs can be given for each partition:
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the partition. With the help of this name,
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the partition can later be referenced, e.g. when creating a
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file system.
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flags
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(optional) List of flags for the partition. Default: empty.
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Possible values:
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boot (MBR only)
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Sets the boot flag for the partition
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primary (MBR only)
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Partition should be a primary partition. If not set a logical
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partition will be created.
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size
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(mandatory) The size of the partition. The size can either be an
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absolute number using units like `10GiB` or `1.75TB` or relative
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(percentage) numbers: in the later case the size is calculated
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based on the remaining free space.
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type (optional)
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The partition type stored in the MBR or GPT partition table entry.
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For MBR the default value is '0x83' (Linux Default partition). Any valid one
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byte hexadecimal value may be specified here.
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For GPT the default value is '8300' (Linux Default partition). Any valid two
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byte hexadecimal value may be specified here. Due to ``sgdisk`` leading '0x'
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should not be used.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- partitioning:
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base: image0
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label: mbr
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partitions:
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- name: part-01
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flags: [ boot ]
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size: 1GiB
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- name: part-02
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size: 100%
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- partitioning:
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base: data_image
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label: mbr
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partitions:
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- name: data0
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size: 33%
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- name: data1
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size: 50%
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- name: data2
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size: 100%
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- partitioning:
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base: gpt_image
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label: gpt
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partitions:
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- name: ESP
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type: EF00
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size: 16MiB
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- name: data1
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size: 1GiB
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- name: lvmdata
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type: 8E00
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size: 100%
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On the `image0` two partitions are created. The size of the first is
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1GiB, the second uses the remaining free space. On the `data_image`
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three partitions are created: all are about 1/3 of the disk size. On
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the `gpt_image` three partitions are created: 16MiB one for EFI
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bootloader, 1GiB Linux filesystem one and rest of disk will be used
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for LVM partition.
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Module: LVM
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...........
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This module generates volumes on existing block devices. This means that it is
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possible to take any previous created partition, and create volumes information
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in it.
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The symbolic name for this module is `lvm`.
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There are the following key / value pairs to define one set of volumes:
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pvs
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(mandatory) A list of dictionaries. Each dictionary describes one
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physical volume.
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vgs
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(mandatory) A list of dictionaries. Each dictionary describes one volume
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group.
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lvs
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(mandatory) A list of dictionaries. Each dictionary describes one logical
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volume.
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The following key / value pairs can be given for each `pvs`:
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the physical volume. With the help of this
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name, the physical volume can later be referenced, e.g. when creating
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a volume group.
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base
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(mandatory) The name of the partition where the physical volume
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needs to be created.
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options
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(optional) List of options for the physical volume. It can contain
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any option supported by the `pvcreate` command.
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The following key / value pairs can be given for each `vgs`:
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the volume group. With the help of this name,
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the volume group can later be referenced, e.g. when creating a logical
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volume.
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base
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(mandatory) The name(s) of the physical volumes where the volume groups
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needs to be created. As a volume group can be created on one or more
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physical volumes, this needs to be a list.
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options
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(optional) List of options for the volume group. It can contain any
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option supported by the `vgcreate` command.
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The following key / value pairs can be given for each `lvs`:
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the logical volume. With the help of this name,
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the logical volume can later be referenced, e.g. when creating a
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filesystem.
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base
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(mandatory) The name of the volume group where the logical volume
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needs to be created.
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size
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(optional) The exact size of the volume to be created. It accepts the same
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syntax as the -L flag of the `lvcreate` command.
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extents
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(optional) The relative size in extents of the volume to be created. It
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accepts the same syntax as the -l flag of the `lvcreate` command.
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Either size or extents need to be passed on the volume creation.
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options
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(optional) List of options for the logical volume. It can contain any
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option supported by the `lvcreate` command.
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type
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(optional) When set to `thin-pool` a thin pool volume will be created. When
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set to `thin` the thin volume will be backed by the thin pool named with the
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`thin-pool` key.
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thin-pool
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(optional) Name of the thin pool to use for this thin volume.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- lvm:
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name: lvm
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pvs:
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- name: pv
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options: ["--force"]
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base: root
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vgs:
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- name: vg
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base: ["pv"]
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options: ["--force"]
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lvs:
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- name: lv_root
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base: vg
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size: 1800M
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- name: lv_tmp
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base: vg
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size: 100M
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- name: lv_var
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base: vg
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size: 500M
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- name: lv_log
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base: vg
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size: 100M
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- name: lv_audit
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base: vg
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size: 100M
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- name: lv_home
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base: vg
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size: 200M
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On the `root` partition a physical volume is created. On that physical
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volume, a volume group is created. On top of this volume group, six logical
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volumes are created.
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Please note that in order to build images that are bootable using volumes,
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your ramdisk image will need to have that support. If the image you are using
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does not have it, you can add the needed modules and regenerate it, by
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including the `dracut-regenerate` element when building it.
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Level 2
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+++++++
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Module: Mkfs
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............
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This module creates file systems on the block device given as `base`.
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The following key / value pairs can be given:
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base
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(mandatory) The name of the block device where the filesystem will
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be created on.
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name
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(mandatory) The name of the partition. This can be used to
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reference (e.g. mounting) the filesystem.
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type
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(mandatory) The type of the filesystem, like `ext4` or `xfs`.
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label
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(optional - defaults to the name)
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The label of the filesystem. This can be used e.g. by grub or in
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the fstab.
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opts
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(optional - defaults to empty list)
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Options that will passed to the mkfs command.
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uuid
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(optional - no default / not used if not givem)
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The UUID of the filesystem. Not all file systems might
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support this. Currently there is support for `ext2`, `ext3`,
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`ext4` and `xfs`.
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Example:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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- mkfs:
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name: mkfs_root
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base: root
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type: ext4
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label: cloudimage-root
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uuid: b733f302-0336-49c0-85f2-38ca109e8bdb
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opts: "-i 16384"
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Level 3
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+++++++
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Module: Mount
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.............
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This module mounts a filesystem. The options are:
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base
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(mandatory) The name of the filesystem that will be mounted.
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|
|
name
|
|
(mandatory) The name of the mount point. This can be used for
|
|
reference the mount (e.g. creating the fstab).
|
|
|
|
mount_point
|
|
(mandatory) The mount point of the filesystem.
|
|
|
|
There is no need to list the mount points in the correct order: an
|
|
algorithm will automatically detect the mount order.
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: yaml
|
|
|
|
- mount:
|
|
name: root_mnt
|
|
base: mkfs_root
|
|
mount_point: /
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 4
|
|
+++++++
|
|
|
|
Module: fstab
|
|
.............
|
|
|
|
This module creates fstab entries. The following options exists. For
|
|
details please consult the fstab man page.
|
|
|
|
base
|
|
(mandatory) The name of the mount point that will be written to
|
|
fstab.
|
|
|
|
name
|
|
(mandatory) The name of the fstab entry. This can be used later on
|
|
as reference - and is currently unused.
|
|
|
|
options
|
|
(optional, defaults to `default`)
|
|
Special mount options can be given. This is used as the fourth
|
|
field in the fstab entry.
|
|
|
|
dump-freq
|
|
(optional, defaults to 0 - don't dump)
|
|
This is passed to dump to determine which filesystem should be
|
|
dumped. This is used as the fifth field in the fstab entry.
|
|
|
|
fsck-passno
|
|
(optional, defaults to 2)
|
|
Determines the order to run fsck. Please note that this should be
|
|
set to 1 for the root file system. This is used as the sixth field
|
|
in the fstab entry.
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: yaml
|
|
|
|
- fstab:
|
|
name: var_log_fstab
|
|
base: var_log_mnt
|
|
options: nodev,nosuid
|
|
dump-freq: 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Legacy global filesystem configuration
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The ``disk-image-create`` tool has a number of historic global
|
|
disk-related command-line options which are maintained for backwards
|
|
compatibility. These options are merged as necessary by the
|
|
block-device layer into the active configuration. If you are using
|
|
more complicated block-device layouts with multiple partitions, you
|
|
may need to take into account the special behaviour described below.
|
|
|
|
The ``local_loop`` module will take it's default size from the
|
|
following arguments:
|
|
|
|
``--image-size``
|
|
The size of loopback device which the image will be generated in,
|
|
in gigabytes. If this is left unset, the size will be calculated
|
|
from the on-disk size of the image and then scaled up by a fixed
|
|
60% factor. Can also set ``DIB_IMAGE_SIZE``.
|
|
|
|
``--image-extra-size``
|
|
Extra space to add when automatically calculating image size, in
|
|
megabytes. This overrides the default 60% scale up as described
|
|
above for ``--image-size``. Can also set ``DIB_IMAGE_EXTRA_SIZE``.
|
|
|
|
The special node named ``mkfs_root`` is affected by the following;
|
|
this reflects that the standard layout has only a single root
|
|
partition so the options are, in effect, global for the default
|
|
configuration. Note that if you are using multiple partitions,
|
|
settings such as ``--mkfs-options`` will *not* apply to other
|
|
partitions.
|
|
|
|
The file-system type for the ``mkfs_root`` node is set by the
|
|
``FS_TYPE`` environment variable, and defaults to ``ext4``. ``xfs``
|
|
should also work. There is no command-line argument for this.
|
|
|
|
The following options also affect the ``mkfs_root`` node
|
|
configuration:
|
|
|
|
``--mkfs-options``
|
|
Options passed to mkfs when making the root partition. For
|
|
``ext4`` partitions, this by default sets a 4k byte-to-inode ratio
|
|
(see below) and a default journal size of 64MiB. Note
|
|
``--mkfs-options`` are options passed to the mfks *driver*
|
|
(i.e. ``mkfs.ext4``) rather than ``mkfs`` itself (i.e. arguments
|
|
come after the initial ``mkfs -t <fstype>`` argument). You also
|
|
need to be careful with quoting. Can also set ``MKFS_OPTS``.
|
|
|
|
By default, ``disk-image-create`` uses a 4k byte-to-inode ratio
|
|
when creating the filesystem in the image. This allows large
|
|
'whole-system' images to utilize several TB disks without
|
|
exhausting inodes. In contrast, when creating images intended for
|
|
tenant instances, this ratio consumes more disk space than an
|
|
end-user would expect (e.g. a 50GB root disk has 47GB available).
|
|
If the image is intended to run within a tens to hundrededs of
|
|
gigabyte disk, setting the byte-to-inode ratio to the ext4 default
|
|
of 16k will allow for more usable space on the instance. The
|
|
default can be overridden by passing ``'-i 16384'`` as a
|
|
``--mkfs-options`` argument.
|
|
|
|
``--mkfs-journal-size``
|
|
Only valid for ``FS_TYPE==ext4``. This value set the filesystem
|
|
journal size in MB; overriding the default of 64MiB. Note the
|
|
image size will be grown to fit the journal, unless
|
|
``DIB_IMAGE_SIZE`` is explicitly set. Can also set
|
|
``DIB_JOURNAL_SIZE``.
|
|
|
|
``--max-online-resize``
|
|
Only valid for ``FS_TYPE==ext4``; this value sets the maximum
|
|
filesystem blocks when resizing. Can also set
|
|
``MAX_ONLINE_RESIZE``.
|
|
|
|
``--root-label``
|
|
The file-system label specified when creating the root file system.
|
|
Defaults to ``cloudimg-rootfs`` for ``ext4`` and ``img-rootfs`` for
|
|
``xfs``. Can also set ``ROOT_LABEL``.
|
|
|
|
Speedups
|
|
--------
|
|
If you have 4GB of available physical RAM (as reported by /proc/meminfo
|
|
MemTotal), or more, diskimage-builder will create a tmpfs mount to build the
|
|
image in. This will improve image build time by building it in RAM.
|
|
By default, the tmpfs file system uses 50% of the available RAM.
|
|
Therefore, the RAM should be at least the double of the minimum tmpfs
|
|
size required.
|
|
|
|
For larger images, when no sufficient amount of RAM is available, tmpfs
|
|
can be disabled completely by passing --no-tmpfs to disk-image-create.
|
|
ramdisk-image-create builds a regular image and then within that image
|
|
creates ramdisk.
|
|
|
|
If tmpfs is not used, you will need enough room in /tmp to store two
|
|
uncompressed cloud images. If tmpfs is used, you would still need /tmp space
|
|
for one uncompressed cloud image and about 20% of that image for working files.
|
|
|
|
Nameservers
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
To ensure elements can access the network, ``disk-image-create``
|
|
replaces the ``/etc/resolv.conf`` within the chroot with a copy of the
|
|
host's file early in the image creation process.
|
|
|
|
The final ``/etc/resolv.conf`` can be controlled in a number of ways.
|
|
If, during the build, the ``/etc/resolv.conf`` file within the chroot
|
|
is replaced with a symlink, this will be retained in the final image
|
|
[1]_. If the file is marked immutable, it will also not be touched.
|
|
|
|
.. [1] This somewhat odd case was added for installation of the
|
|
``resolvconf`` package, which replaces ``/etc/resolv.conf``
|
|
with a symlink to it's version. Depending on its contents, and
|
|
what comes after the installation in the build, this mostly
|
|
works.
|
|
|
|
If you would like specific contents within the final
|
|
``/etc/resolv.conf`` you can place them into
|
|
``/etc/resolv.conf.ORIG`` during the build. As one of the final
|
|
steps, this file will be ``mv`` to ``/etc/resolv.conf``.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chosing an Architecture
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
If needed you can specify an override the architecture selection by passing a
|
|
``-a`` argument like:
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
disk-image-create -a <arch> ...
|
|
|
|
Notes about PowerPC Architectures
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|
|
PowerPC can operate in either Big or Little Endian mode. ``ppc64``
|
|
always refers to Big Endian operation. When running in little endian
|
|
mode it can be referred to as ``ppc64le`` or ``ppc64el``.
|
|
|
|
Typically ``ppc64el`` refers to a ``.deb`` based distribution
|
|
architecture, and ``ppc64le`` refers to a ``.rpm`` based distribution.
|
|
Regardless of the distribution the kernel architecture is always
|
|
``ppc64le``.
|
|
|
|
Notes about s390x (z Systems) Architecture
|
|
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|
|
Images for s390x can only be build on s390x hosts. Trying to build
|
|
it with the architecture override on other architecture will
|
|
cause the build to fail.
|
|
|