After a novirt disk image install, we run `setfiles` in the
install root to ensure some SELinux contexts are correct. /dev
is currently excluded from this run. However, as reported and
discussed in https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1663040
it seems that with a recent systemd change, startup of many
services will fail if /dev itself is incorrectly labelled, and
in current Rawhide live images, it *is* incorrectly labelled.
Including `/dev` in this setfiles command appears to resolve the
problem in my testing.
Resolves: rhbz#1663040
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Drop running pkill. This causes problems if more than one is running on
a system (eg. in parallel using mock). It can kill off other processes
unrelated to this instance of anaconda.
This reverts commit 6b5c4df8b5.
Support both
[customizations]
hostname = "whatever"
and
[[customizations]]
hostname = "whatever"
in the blueprint data. The [[ syntax matches the other customization
directives (user, group, sshkey), and as such it's easy to accidentally
use it for the hostname without even realizing it's specifying something
different.
Add some tests for converting customizations to kickstarts.
Run df on the filesystem image after it has been created.
Output will be in program.log, eg:
Running... df /var/tmp/lorax.imgutils.wm04pg_v
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/loop0 1998672 1619508 362780 82% /var/tmp/lorax.imgutils.wm04pg_v
Return code: 0
It ends up that this isn't as easy as you'd think. Anaconda sets up some
signal handlers to handle cleanly exiting, but they are not being run
when sent a TERM after package installation has started. I think DNF
resets them causing it to get ignored.
When the cancel is sent it can take several minutes for it to have an
effect. In my testing it usually takes around 2 minutes for anaconda to
notice and exit.
This sends a TERM to the process and then waits for it to exit. When it
returns it then removed any device-mapper devices that were setup for
image installations, removes any hanging loop devices.
It then kills off any process with pyanaconda. in the cmdline, and
anaconda-bus.conf (because anaconda starts a bunch of helpers and if it
doesn't shut down cleanly they remain running).
Resolves: rhbz#1656691
In addition to monitoring the logs for errors, call a function (or
functions) that tell it to cancel the anaconda process and cleanup.
Also check for a cancel after creating the squashfs image for live-iso
since that's a long running process.
This required adding a new argument to a number of existing functions,
passing it down to QEMUInstall and novirt_install where the function is
called.
Resolves: rhbz#1656691
When there is no run or new symlink do one last check to make sure no
STATUS file was written. If it is missing, go ahead and remove the
results directory.
Related: rhbz#1656691
If another CANCEL request has already been made just exit from
uuid_cancel. If the build is FINISHED before it times out just exit,
don't remove the finished results.
Related: rhbz#1656691
When the repository has multiple arches, eg. i686 and x86_64, it should
add a new entry to the project's builds list, not create a new project
in the list.
This handles that by adding a modified insort_left function and
examining the packages returned from dnf to make sure they aren't
already listed in the results. It also handles adding them in sorted
order so that no further sorting needs to be done on the results.
Resolves: rhbz#1656642
If the system ran out of space, or was rebooted unexpectedly, the state
of the queue symlinks, or the results STATUS files may be inconsistent.
This checks them and:
* Removes broken symlinks from queue/new and queue/run
* Removes symlinks from run and sets the build to FAILED
* Sets builds w/o a STATUS to FAILED
* Sets builds with STATUS of RUNNING to FAILED
* Creates missing queue/new symlinks to results with STATUS of WAITING
So, any builds that were running during the reboot will be FAILED, and
any that were waiting to be started will be started upon rebooting.
Resolves: rhbz#1647985
Anaconda, Lorax, lorax-composer, and livemedia-creator can all now run
with SELinux in Enforcing mode. It does not need to be disabled and if
there are denials they should be reported as a bug.
Log the current state of SELinux when starting, update the
documentation.
Running lorax-composer --no-system-repos will prevent it from copying
the dnf repositories from /etc/yum.repos.d/ into the lorax-composer repo
directory. It will *only* use repositories setup using the sources api
or written to /var/lib/lorax/composer/repos.d/
If lorax-composer has previously been run without this switch the system
repos will need to be removed from the composer/repos.d/ directory. It
would also be a good idea to remove the cached metadata in
/var/tmp/composer/
Resolves: rhbz#1650363
Make runtime directly into squashfs image. This reduces largely
unreproducible ext4 layer, but requires anaconda's dracut module
modification to properly mount the image.
And in an intermediate version it returns a VectorString object which
isn't serializable by the json or toml modules.
So convert it to a list so that the type is consistent in the sources
code.
By default mkfs.mksdos choose volume id based on current time. If
SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH is set, use that instead.
Signed-off-by: Marek Marczykowski-Górecki <marmarek@invisiblethingslab.com>
The previous method worked, but wasn't exactly idiomatic. This is more
correct, and appears to work the same (templates depsolve, version globs
work, multiple repos work).
Note that this does use a private dnf attribute ._goal, but the word is
that this is going to become a public api soon, so yes it is there on
purpose.
Depending on how lorax-composer is run setting up an empty blueprints
directory can fail. So this moves checking/creation until after the
other directories are created and uses make_owned_dir to make sure
ownership is correct.
It needs to be root in order to set the ownership and permissions on the
directories that are under /var/lib/lorax/composer/
Refactor the directory creation into a utility function, and use a umask
of 0o006 to ensure that the parent directories created do not have o+rw
set on them (makedirs behavior is different between Python 3.6 and 3.7
so umask of 0 doesn't work consistently).
If a package is in multiple repos dnf may return more than 1 of them
when using best...glob so we pick the highest NEVRA one and install
that.
Related: rhbz#1636239
At the end of disk image installs, use fstrim on the generated filesystem to
discard any blocks that were allocated during the install and are now unused.
This will allow tools such as qemu-img to create images that do not include
deleted data.
For raw disk images that do not go through qemu-img, use fallocate --dig-holes
to create sparse holes in place of the unused blocks.
composer-cli uses TOML for 'blueprints save' which was returning an
empty 200 response if the blueprint didn't exist. Change this to return
a standard 400 error response if the blueprint doesn't exist.
composer-cli is already setup to handle receiving json when an error is
returned so just the toml API response for `blueprints/save` needed to
be changed.
`os.path.exists("/run/weldr/api.socket")` returns False for users which have no
access. This leads to composer printing that the file does not exist, which is
misleading.
Since it's no possible to distinguish the two cases, fix this problem by
combining them and showing a single error message.
Anaconda requires the root password to be set or locked, so if there
isn't anything setting it we write out 'rootpw --lock'
Also adds tests for this.
Resolves: rhbz#1626122
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1595917 and
https://github.com/rpm-software-management/dnf/pull/1200 for
more on this. Briefly, DNF before 3.0 presented this config
value as a list...and mutating it worked. DNF from 3.0 until
3.6 presented it as a list...mutating it didn't work, but also
didn't *fail*, so this has actually not been doing anything on
DNF 3.x but we haven't noticed.
In DNF 3.6 values like this are presented as tuples instead of
lists, to try and catch usages like this, and it worked! We
need to change this one.
There is an additional weirdness here. tsflags is actually, in
libdnf terms, an OptionStringListAppend option: that means that
when something tries to *set* its value, the new value is just
appended to the existing list of values. This is very weird
behaviour when you're interacting with it like this, but
happens to be quite useful, as we can just 'set' the value to
a list like this and it will actually get appended (which is
what we want), and this one syntax happens to work correctly in
DNF 2.x, 3.0 through 3.5.1, and 3.6.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
When the kickstart is handed off to Anaconda for building it will
download its own copy of the metadata and re-run the depsolve. So if the
dnf cache isn't current there will be a mismatch and the build will
fail to find some of the versions in final-kickstart.ks
This adds a new context to DNFLock, .lock_check, that will force a check
of the metadata. It also implements its own timeout and forces a
refresh of the metadata when that expires because the dnf expiration
doesn't always work as expected.
Resolves: rhbz#1631561
Ends up you cannot use the kickstart user command on root, since it
already exists, so we have to translate that into a rootpw command.
So [[customizations.user]] with name = "root" only support key, which
will set the ssh key, and password which will use rootpw to set the
password. plain text or encrypted are supported.
Related: rhbz#1626122
This differs from lmc's --make-ami in that creates a full disk image instead of
an fsimage. Create a raw disk image with a / and /boot partitions, and enable
sshd, chronyd, and cockpit by default.
Remove `except` block which immediately raises the same exception again (it's
not a subclass of another caught exception, so this is safe).
Remove a false positive, because it is not emitted from the code base.
Disable subprocess-popen-preexec-fn in startProgram, which is not used
internally.
lorax uses pyanaconda's SimpleConfigParser in three different
places (twice with a copy that's been dumped into pylorax, once
by importing it), just to do a fairly simple job: read some
values out of /etc/os-release. The only value SimpleConfigParser
is adding over Python's own ConfigParser here is to read a file
with no section headers, and to unquote the values. The cost is
either a dependency on pyanaconda, or needing to copy the whole
of simpleparser plus some other utility bits from pyanaconda
into lorax. This seems like a bad trade-off.
This changes the approach: we copy one very simple utility
function from pyanaconda (`unquote`), and do some very simple
wrapping of ConfigParser to handle reading a file without any
section headers, and returning unquoted values. This way we can
read what we need out of os-release without needing a dep on
pyanaconda or to copy lots of things from it into pylorax.
Resolves: #449Resolves: #450
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
In the near-future there may be /lib/modules/ directories for older
kernels with weak dependencies listed. These may not match the installed
kernel(s) so we cannot depend on them to drive generate_module_data.
Instead use the existing findkernels() function to get the list of
installed kernels and iterate those, running depmod on them.
Resolves: rhbz#1622213
blueprints/changes is different, each blueprint has it's own total,
limited by the call's limit. So it needs to find the max total of all
the requested blueprints.
The blueprints/changes API is a bit different from the others, the total
that it includes is for each blueprint, not one total for all of them,
since there will be a different number of commits for each.
The function is passed the dict, and it can be used to select the total
to use for retrieving all of the results. If it isn't included it will
use data["total"] which works fine in most cases.
Add a limit argument to all potentially paginated results, equal to
whatever the composer backend is the total number of results. This still
has the potential to provide truncated data if the number of results
increases between the two HTTP requests.
Resolves: #404
This adds the following optional arguments to the /compose/status route:
- type, matches the compose_type field
- status, matches the queue_status field
- blueprint, matches the blueprint field
A value of 1 is too low for heavy users of the API, such as the weldr-web
interface.
This is also systemd's default for sockets it opens. Using lorax-composer with
socket activation already results in a backlog of SOMAXCONN connections.
Currently we are making MBR disk images for qcow2 and partitioned disk,
so the UEFI packages aren't required at this point.
Move the clearpart command into compose.py so that in the futute it can
use clearpart --disklabel to create a GPT image, and add the required
packages to the package set.
The idea here is to make sure all return points have the same type for
the error cases. There's not really all that many, so they just go in
one patch. Some of these could potentially turn into more specialized
errors later.
(cherry picked from commit fd901c5e3f)
Note the exception string checking around compose_type. I didn't really
want to introduce a new exception type just for this, but also didn't
want to duplicate strings. I'd be open to other suggestions for how to
do this.
(cherry picked from commit b3bb438254)
This adds some fairly redundant code to the beginning of all the
blueprint routes to attempt reading a commit from git for the
blueprint's recipe. If it succeeds, the blueprint exists and the route
can continue. Otherwise, return an error. Hopefully this doesn't slow
things down too much.
(cherry picked from commit a925cc7ddb)
Note that this also changes the return type of uuid_info to return None
when an unknown ID is given. The other uuid_* functions are fine
because they are checked ahead of time.
(cherry picked from commit 6497b4fb65)
Each element in the errors value is now a dict, with a msg field and an
id field. The id field contains a value out of errors.py that can be
used by the front end to key on. The msg field is the same as what's
been there.
The idea is to keep the number of IDs somewhat limited so there's not a
huge number of things for the front end to know.
(cherry picked from commit 9677b012da)
This should make it easier to return more complex error structures. It
also doesn't appear to matter - tests still pass without changes.
(cherry picked from commit 4c3f93e329)
Make sure no UTF8 characters are allowed and return an error if they
are.
Also includes tests to make sure the correct error is returned.
(cherry picked from commit 86d79cd8a6)
Currently the code is not UTF8 safe, so we need to return a clear error
when invalid characters are passed in.
This also adds tests for the routes to confirm that an error is
correctly returned.
(cherry picked from commit 74f5def3d4)
This patch does two things:
1) Add "compose list", which lists compose UUIDs and other basic info,
2) Fix up "blueprints list", "modules list", "sources list", and
"compose types" so their output is just a plain list of identifiers
This handles the case where a route is requested, but without a required
parameter. So, /blueprints/info is requested instead of
/blueprints/info/http-server. It accomplishes this via a decorator, so
a lot of these route-related functions now have quite a few decorators
attached to them.
Typo'd URLs (/blueprints/nfo for instance) will still return a 404. I
think this is a reasonable thing to do.
(cherry picked from commit 5daf2d416a)
Unfortunately, this isn't very useful if /modules/info is provided with
multiple modules. yum doesn't traceback when doPackageLists is given
something that doesn't exist. It just returns an empty list. If
/modules/info is given just one module and yum gives us an empty list,
it's easy to say what happened. If /modules/info is given several
modules and just one does not exist, we will not be able to detect that.
Fixing this would require doing more yum operations, which is likely to
slow things down and isn't the direction I want to be going.
(cherry picked from commit 8e948e4a4d)
Right now, this is when the compose is queued up, when it is started by
anaconda, and when it is finished (whether that's success or not).
(cherry picked from commit 3ba9d53b8b)
If one of the timestamps isn't present (for instance, the finished
timestamp for a job that is still running), null is returned.
(cherry picked from commit 17c40ef271)
This is responsible for writing out a new times.toml file, containing
important timestamps in the life of a compose. This seems a little more
reliable than attempting to infer things from the filesystem, especially
in light of the fact that we can't ever really know when a file was
created.
(cherry picked from commit b59d59b124)