Marvell Prestera firmware has been split into its own subpackage,
so instead of stripping the files from linux-firmware, exclude
the package from the globed install command.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5286e4d917)
As Peter Robinson explains here:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2011615#c3
these are not useful, as the devices they're for do not support
netinst-style deployment.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
These firmwares are for Qualcomm smartphone chipsets (SM845 and
SM8250). Don't think they're any use in network install images.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
grub2-2.06-3 changes where the unicode.pf2 font file is stored.
This changes the efi.tmpl to install it from the new location, which
means that it depends on grub2-2.06-3, but there is no way to express
this in the runtime-install.tmpl so if you see a failure like:
2021-07-08 16:10:05,586: OSError: nothing matching /var/tmp/lorax/lorax.t80f74er/installroot/boot/grub2/fonts/unicode.pf2 in /
it means the new version of grub2 wasn't in the repos you used when
running lorax.
Fixes#1165
These were apparently lost in the transition to livemedia-creator.
livecd-creator added them in it's code, and lmc based its live config
files on the the boot.iso configs which do not include it (on purpose).
Fedora has split xorg-x11-font-utils, with bdftopcf, mkfontscale and
fonttosfnt being split out into separate packages. Remove all of those too.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
In f34 and beyond, the old xorg-x11-server-utils package was split up
into seperate packages for each util. This was to allow them to rev at
their own pace instead of requiring all of them to rebuild at once.
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1932754
and
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/XorgUtilityDeaggregation
We need to adjust lorax (in f34+) to not try and remove the
xorg-x11-server-utils package (as it no longer exists) and also to
install the 2 utils that we need from it for installs.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Fenzi <kevin@scrye.com>
It never used vesa directly, it passes nomodeset, so make it less
confusing. Also simplify the menu text so that it fits on the screen
for distributions with long names.
anaconda in F34 and Rawhide recently stopped accepting params
without the inst. prefix, so 'rescue' does nothing except print
a warning now. We need to use `inst.rescue`. This has worked for
quite a long time so will be OK at least on all Fedoras and RHEL
8, not sure about RHEL 7.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The difference between the anaconda-install-{env,img}-deps packages is how
they treat dependencies. The -env package leaves some dependencies as weak to
allow less featureful builds. The -img package hard-requires everything
Anaconda could potentially use and ensures everything works.
For boot.iso, the latter is preferable. Its usage moves some things from the
templates to that package.
A post-installation script in fedora-live-base.ks actually modifies
Lorax (not idempotently) with the change in this commit while it is
running. This modification belongs directly in Lorax instead.
Note a subtle distinction in behavior that has been preserved here.
Lorax will copy the livecd-iso-to-disk script from the installroot
(if present). Running livecd-creator will copy it from the existing
root filesystem instead.
Since Fedora 30, license files are missing from the ISO filesystem
of live or installer images (including official builds). The source
path to these files changed when they were moved into a subpackage
named fedora-release-common (or generic-release-common).
Also, copy the license files from the installroot, rather than the
existing root filesystem.
There's no reason for it to run, it can't notify anyone. But disabling
the service, or masking it, doesn't work so remove the service files
from the rootfs.
Resolves: rhbz#1888730
mk-s390-cdboot has stopped working because the kernel outgrew the
hard-coded offset it used when creating cdboot.img. IBM now has a script
in s390utils that can do the same thing so use the upstream script
instead.
This drops mk-s390-cdboot script, switches the s390 templates to use
mk-s390image from s390utils.
It adds @ROOT@ to cdboot.prm, and sets inst.stage2 so that the installer
image will be found when booting the iso.
Resolves: rhbz#1891778
Some of the options have been removed, others are now the default.
MOTD still needs to be printed, the boot environment doesn't include the
pam motd module.
Resolves: rhbz#1872892
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>
blivet-gui-runtime requires PolicyKit-authentication-agent. If
we just let dnf pick what to satisfy that requirement with, it
picks lxpolkit, which requires gtk2. Specifying polkit-gnome
instead should I think give us a smaller footprint, its deps
seem quite small.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
gnome-firmware is a GNOME app for installing firmwares, no use
here at all. sigrok-firmware is for signal analyzers, again, no
need for it here.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
libnotify dropped the requirement just a couple of months after
this line was added, but we never took it back out again.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
The expectation is that all environments where an editor might be
used should ship GNU nano by default and tools should activate it
when an "editor" is requested. This change should ensure that for
the install media runtime environment.
Reference: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/UseNanoByDefault
Resolves: rhbz#1874094
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
Seems petitboot can't properly parse the live image grub config on ppc, thus
booting fails on bare-metal. Fix the problem by removing the obsolete 32-bit
entries.
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