The docker phase always failed because `-ti` was passed even though the
the output was not a terminal.
Also remove the check for /usr/bin/docker in the setup phase. It didn't
test that the daemon was running. More importantly, it didn't abort the
test anwyay (and there doesn't seem to be a good way to do this in
beakerlib).
Allows to run the tests on multiple operating systems and on the
infrastructure that the Cockpit team maintains.
`make vm` downloads one of Cockpit's test images (override which one
with TEST_OS) and installs rpms build from the local checkout of lorax.
The resulting image is placed in `test/images/$TEST_OS`.
TEST_OS can be set to any of Cockpit's supported images (default:
fedora-30).
Run `make check-vm` to run the CLI checks in the VM. The bulk of the
work is done in `test/check-cli`, which uses Cockpit's `bots` library to
start the VM and run the script in it.
Also included is a `test/run` script, which is the entrypoint for
Cockpit's test infrastructure.
The filesystem was too small because Anaconda always adds the kernel,
but the template uses --nocore so it doesn't take that into account.
Add it to the template so that the filesystem size will be large enough
to hold the extra packages.
To maintain consistency with the other options this changes firewall to
combine the existing settings from the image template with the settings
from the blueprint.
Also updated the docs, added a new test for it, and sorted the output
for consistency.
Make it clear that the services are added to services already listed in
the image templates, and that you can specify any systemd unit filename.
Older releases are more restrictive, and this documentation will need to
be updated when these changes are backported.
Add support for enabling and disabling systemd services in the
blueprint. It works like this:
[customizations.services]
enabled = ["sshd", "cockpit.socket", "httpd"]
disabled = ["postfix", "telnetd"]
They are *added* to any existing settings in the kickstart templates.
You can now open ports in the firewall, using port numbers or service
names:
[customizations.firewall]
ports = ["22:tcp", "80:tcp", "imap:tcp", "53:tcp", "53:udp"]
Or enable/disable services registered with firewalld:
[customizations.firewall.services]
enabled = ["ftp", "ntp", "dhcp"]
disabled = ["telnet"]
If the template contains firewall --disabled it cannot be overridden,
under the assumption that it is required for the image to boot in the
selected environment.
You can now set the keyboard layout and language. Eg.
[customizations.locale]
languages = ["en_CA.utf8", "en_HK.utf8"]
keyboard = "de (dvorak)"
Existing entries in the kickstart templates are replaced with the new
ones. If there are no entries then it will default to 'keyboard us' and
'lang en_US.UTF-8'
Includes tests, and leaves the existing keyboard and lang entries in the
templates with a note that they can be replaced by the blueprint.
This fixes the customizations list problem earlier than in
add_customizations.
In the recipe it should be [customizations] not [[customizations]]
which creates a list. If it was used that way grab the first element and
replace the list with it.
For example:
[customizations.timezone]
timezone = "US/Samoa"
ntpservers = ["0.pool.ntp.org"]
Also includes tests.
This removes the timezone kickstart command from all of the templates
except for google.ks which needs to set it's own ntp servers and timezone.
If timezone isn't included in the blueprint, and it is not already in a
template, it will be set to 'timezone UTC' by default.
If timezone is set in a template it is left as-is, under the assumption
that the image type requires it to boot correctly.
The goal here is to do the minimum needed to get the images setup for
use so they can have more complex customizations applied later.
I think this list is a pretty good minimal set of features without going
full kickstart.
- verify SemVer .patch number will be automatically updated when
we push the blueprint a second time without changing version
- verify show displays the content in TOML format and it matches
what is on disk. Because of that also start with empty packages
and groups fields in the initial toml. If they are missing they
will be added automatically by lorax-composer and this simplifies
the test
- verify delete works
xorrisofs needs to use iso-level 3 when creating images with large
files. This adds tests to all the relevant templates, just like we used
to do for udf and mkisofs.
The original "recipes" term is indicated in the composer-cli description,
but the identifier has been changed to "blueprints" with later releases.
This commit changes the string to "blueprints".
Instances, Volumes, Snapshots, AMIs and s3 objects with the "keep_me" tag will
not be deleted automatically even if they are older then the specified time limit.
This is based on the VHD compose type, with the following differences:
* Use the vhdx format instead of vhd
* No WALinuxAgent
* Install hyperv-daemons
The hyperv-daemons are activated through udev rules, so there is no need
to add them to the services line.
This option will create an optionally compressed tarball containing a
disk image. This format is used by Google's Compute Engine.
This also adds a new option, tar_disk_name, to set the name of the disk
image that will be wrapped in the final tarball. opts.image_name
continues to be the final output file name.
If provided, round the disk image size up to a multiple of the value.
This allows for image formats with specific size-alignment requirements
(e.g., disk size must be in GiB).
Make sure that dotfiles are installed when not directly under /
Make sure / is not packaged in the rpm (it will cause a conflict with
the filesystem package).
Make sure that using destination="/" works
rpmfluff was including / in the rpm, which conflicts with
filesystem.rpm
The rpm globs are pretty limited, and we don't actually know the file
paths until later, so we have to use a glob or a directory.
So when the destination is / it now uses /* to select all the files and
sub-directories in the archive. The limitation of this is that it cannot
support dotfiles directly under /, they will cause a rpmbuild error.
For destinations other than / it uses the name of the directory, so
dotfiles are fine in that situation.