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.
Change the docs-in-docker target to generate the docs for the NEXT
release, not the current one. Also pass in uid/gid so that the new files
can be set to the correct ownership instead of root.
Modify docs/conf.py to bump the version of the docs if
LORAX_VERSION=next is set in the environment.
This allows iso builds to include the extra kernel boot parameters by
passing them to the arch-specific live/*tmpl template.
Also adds tests to make sure it is written to config.toml in the build
metadata.
The shlex splitting can fail, resulting in error messages like:
ERROR livemedia-creator: No closing quotation
without any context in the log files. This logs the line that failed to
be split and expanded.
Sometimes it is necessary to modify the kernel command-line of the
image, this adds support for a [customizations.kernel] section to the
blueprint:
[customizations.kernel]
append = "nosmt=force"
This will be appended to the kickstart's bootloader --append argument.
Includes tests for modifying the bootloader line, the kickstart
template, and examining the final-kickstart.ks created for a compose.
- Check final-kickstart.ks for the rpm source
- Check final-kickstart.ks for the rpm package name and version
- Make sure depsolve works
- Make sure errors from a bad repo are returned correctly
- Make sure errors from a bad reference are returned correctly
This moves _wait_for_status into a helper function so it can be shared
between the test classes.
This hooks up creation of the rpm to the build, adds it to the
kickstart, and passes the url to Anaconda. The dnf repo with the rpms is
created under the results directory so it will be included when
downloading the build's results.
This adds support, documentation, and testing for a [[repos.git]]
blueprint section that can be used to install files from a git
repository. It will create an rpm that will be added to the build,
and included in the metadata that can be downloaded. This allows you to
accurately keep track of the source of configuration files and extra
metadata that is added to the build.
The source repo and reference will be listed in the rpm's summary making
it easy to discover on the installed system.
It was substituting _ which didn't match what pungi uses for creating
the DVD. Make things consistent and use - as the replacement character.
Resolves: rhbz#1687882
this will allow you to test against installed RPM like so:
# export CLI="/usr/bin/composer-cli"
# make test_images
If you already have lorax-composer running then you can directly
execute test scripts:
# ./tests/cli/test_build_and_deploy_aws.sh
Use constants so we won't have to edit a dozen places in the test when
the package versions are bumped.
Also switch to using Fedora 31 GPG key now that it has branched for
Fedora 30.
Reading a blueprint wasn't checking to see if it had been deleted so it
was returning the most recent commit before it had been deleted. This
allowed things like starting a compose with a blueprint that technically
doesn't exist.
One exception to this is the /changes/ route, it must be available so
that you can use the commit hash to undo a delete.
This also adds tests for the various operations.
Resolves: rhbz#1682113
In order to support iso creation on multiple arches with the templates
we need to be able to select different packages based on arch.
lorax-composer uses the arch-specific Lorax templates in order to
generate the output iso so this patch:
1. Creates a new template and type to parse it, live-install.tmpl
which contains only installpkg commands and #if clauses for arch
2. Removes bootloader related packages from the live-iso.ks
3. Remove dracut-config-rescue exclusion because it can cause problems
with some blueprints.
4. Switch logo requirement to system-logos which is satisfied by
generic-logos or fedora-logos. This prevents conflicts when a blueprint
installs fedora-release-workstation.
So in the future, if x86.tmpl, etc. need a new package to support
creating the iso it should be added to the correct section in
./share/live/live-install.tmpl
If a package is excluded in the template and later added by a blueprint
or dependency, anaconda will fail to finish the installation. So remove
the -dracut-config-rescue exclusion and instead remove the rescue
artifacts in %post
Some platforms, like ppc64, require that the /boot partition be present.
It doesn't hurt to have it there on other platforms so instead of trying
to add per-arch kickstart templates just use reqpart --add-boot
everywhere.
reqpart can be used to make kickstarts more platform agnostic, creating
needed partitions without lmc having to keep track of the arch-specific
needs. eg. ppc64 needs prepboot and /boot
This increases the size of the disk based on whether reqpart or
reqpart --add-boot is in the kickstart.
Note that this is only valid for partitioned disk output types, not
for filesystem images or live iso output.