Previously this symlinked them to /dev/null, which didn't really
accomplish anything since they get recreated. So just remove them so
python can decide whether or not to recreate them.
When we stopped caring about ppc and ppc64, we changed several
instances of three-item tuples:
("ppc", "ppc64", "ppc64le")
into...this:
("ppc64le")
which is not a single item tuple, but just the string "ppc64le"
in some extraneous braces. It so happens that the right thing
still happened in all relevant cases , we think, but it's wrong.
There's no need to be using an iterator at all for a single
item, so just change them all to == "ppc64le" or != "ppc64le" as
appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
AFAICS, the devices that need these firmwares - various boards
built by NXP, https://www.nxp.com - are all aarch64. So we don't
need to carry these firmware files in the installer env for other
arches.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Mellanox Spectrum devices are switches intended for data centers.
It is I guess feasible that someone might want to install Fedora
on one, but from the product pages and data sheets, I believe
they all have management interfaces that do not require this
firmware to work, and that's what you'd use if you needed a
network connection during OS deployment. The firmware is only
needed for the actual switched interfaces, and we don't need to
make those work during installation.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
I based this on the output of a recent installer image build:
https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/compose/branched/Fedora-33-20200904.n.0/logs/x86_64/buildinstall-Everything-logs/pylorax.log
I looked at every runtime-cleanup related error there and tried
to make appropriate changes. In many cases this means just
removing a line that isn't needed any more because the package
in question just went away or is no longer pulled into the
installer environment. In other cases packages changed name or
files moved around, and I tried to make appropriate updates. In
a few cases files moved to another package but I wasn't sure
enough it would still be safe to remove them so I just left them
in place. Most of the changes here I'm pretty sure should be
safe, though there *could* be unforeseen fallout from e.g. fixing
the removals from procps to be removals from procps-ng - it's
been years since that package was renamed, so something *could*
have started using those binaries in the meantime. I did at least
check that anaconda itself does not.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
These are for devices that just aren't going to be needed during
install, like video encode/decode accelerators, TV capture cards,
webcams, and some sound firmwares that should probably be in
alsa-firmware but aren't. This is a fairly conservative cut, I
will split some possibly more controversial cuts into separate
commits for ease of detachment. The linux-firmware WHENCE file is
an invaluable resource in figuring this out.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 6025da1421.
It ends up that using the install.img with qemu and PXE and fips=1 is a
common use case. Without vmlinuz in the install.img rootfs it has
nothing to run the check against.
Related: rhbz#1782737
The kernel in /boot is not needed. Keep the .vmlinuz*hmac file so that
fips mode can check it (this requires dracut-050 or later).
Related: rhbz#1782737
Some of the files no longer exist, some of them have moved. In the case
of dracut the 98systemd directory was renamed to 98dracut-systemd, but
nobody noticed.
This updates the following:
* rename 98systemd to 98dracut-systemd so scripts are in the
install.img
* drop fedora-release removefrom, it now only has os-release
fedora-repos has the repo files, not anaconda, they are moved by
runtime-postinstall.tmpl
* Use initscripts to keep the /etc/init.d, chkconfig only has an empty
directory.
* gtk2-engines is no longer installed
* metacity doesn't include anything in /etc/
* /usr/share/X11/rgb.txt is no longer installed
* libgstbadallocators-1.0.so
The eject utility moved into util-linux and the package was dropped, but
since the runtime-cleanup template is using `removefrom util-linux
--allbut` it was never added to the boot.iso after the move.
This removes the package request for eject and adds it to the list of
binaries to keep from util-linux.
Anaconda uses zram to allow installation on low memory systems.
We used to have a custom script called "zram-stats", that can be
used to test and debug zram usage during installation.
The script no longer works & zramctl now provides much better
output than our script ever did. So we decided to decommission
the old Anaconda provided script & use zramctl instead.
So change the cleanup rule in the Lorax boot.iso template
to keep the zramctl utility.
Related: rhbz#1561773
Some files are created in non-reproducible way, including including
random data explicitly (/etc/machine-id), timestamps (fontconfig cache,
ldconfig aux-cache, certs cache), or entries in random order (groups,
systemd catalog, package list).
Fix this by either making the files reproducible, or removing them.
It looks like gnome-helper grew a dependency on it so let's not remove
it. From today's pungi run we can see this error in the verify:
```
libgstgl-1.0.so.0, needed by /usr/bin/gnome-help, not found
```
This will allow anaconda to fetch kickstarts using https when installing
with fips=1
Leave vmlinuz and .vmlinuz.hmac in /boot
dracut-fips module needs the vmlinuz.hmac file in order to boot.
As of webkitgtk4-2.17.5-1.fc27 , it needs these two as well as
the others. This is breaking Rawhide composes at present.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This is required in the future for anaconda to be able to inspect the
supported locales in Atomic Host installations. This is the same patch
as https://github.com/rhinstaller/lorax/pull/194 but for the master
branch.
Library libmenu.so is needed by lp_diag binary from ppc64-diag
package. It leads to incomplete finish of compose iso generation
on Power. Keeping libmenu.so on PowerPC should fix the problem.
Resolves: rhbz#1461775
Signed-off-by: Sinny Kumari <sinny@redhat.com>
with readline 7 libreadline.so moved to libdir as a result it is
currently removed in the cleanup phase, however it is needed
Signed-off-by: Dennis Gilmore <dennis@ausil.us>
Signed-off-by: Brian C. Lane <bcl@redhat.com>
Follow-up of moving to sshd-keygen.target in anaconda-sshd.service
(#1331753)
* Do not remove /etc/ssh/moduli
* slogin symlink is already removed
* Do not remove sshd-keygen
The latest POWER platform allows a host machine to configure guests
running in a different endian mode. Guests configured in this way may
have their bootloader configuration file corrupted after installation if
the file was not fully written to disk. The host machine would read the
journal and try to finish writing the file in the wrong endian mode.
Issuing an fsfreeze and unfreeze gives more assurance that the
configuration file is properly written before a reboot; this patch adds
fsfreeze to the installer runtime environment.
Related: rhbz#1315468
The sound, video and scanner firmware packages were removed during
cleanup. Instead, do not install them to begin with.
uhd-firmware is an addon package for a software radio tool and not
kernel firmware at all. Besides being 86MB on its own, it pulls in boost
and Tk, so leave all of that out.
webkitgtk4, a dependency of yelp, links to a lot of things. A lot of the
libraries pulled in through the dependency avalanche will never be used,
especially those that are dependencies of gstreamer plugins, so try to
clean some of it up.
The ast module depends on:
drm,drm_kms_helper,ttm,syscopyarea,i2c-core,sysfillrect,sysimgblt,i2c-algo-bit
This retains the syscopyarea, sysfillrect, and sysimgblt modules.
Resolves: rhbz#1272658