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.
(cherry picked from commit 4f701e7e92)
Related: rhbz#1709595
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.
(cherry picked from commit 4d35668ab5)
Related: rhbz#1709595
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.
(cherry picked from commit e5a8700bdf)
Related: rhbz#1709595
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.
(cherry picked from commit 95c288d829)
Related: rhbz#1709595
This compose type creates a partitioned disk as a qcow2 file, but with
only one partition instead of using a separate /boot.
(cherry picked from commit 44e14176bb)
Resolves: rhbz#1689140
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.
Related: rhbz#1687743
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.
Resolves: rhbz#1645189
This is similar to the AMI type, but also adds open-vm-tools and does not do
anything special to the partitioning
(cherry picked from commit 1056bfc25b)
Resolves: rhbz#1628646
This does pretty much the same things as the AMI compose type, but also
replaces NetworkManager with the Azure linux agent.
(cherry picked from commit e0c236ff36)
Resolves: rhbz#1628648
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.
(cherry picked from commit 18188bf6cf)
Resolves: rhbz#1628647
If we leave the root account w/o a password people will use it that way,
leading to insecure images. Also if we use a default password. So lock
the root account in the templates.
Users will need to do one of these things:
1. Use [[customizations.user]] in their blueprint to configure root or
another user.
2. Use [[customizations.sshkey]] to set a key for root
2. Install a package that configures a user at install time
3. Install a package that sets up a user at boot time (eg. cloud-init)
This also drops the auth line from the kickstart templates, allowing it
to use the default password algoritm instead of md5.
Resolves: rhbz#1626122
We only have qemu-kvm available, so use that. This also means that there
will not me any support for using qemu with arches that are different
from the host.
This adds a new argument to projects_depsolve and
projects_depsolve_with_size that contains the group list, unfortunately.
I would have prefered adding a function that just returns a list of all
the contents of a group and then add that to what was being passed into
projects_depsolve. However, there does not appear to be any good way to
do that in yum aside from a lot of grubbing around in the comps object,
which I am unwilling to do.
(cherry picked from commit 0259f3564d)
Normally you want to document the NEXT release, not the last. This
allows you to build the documentation using:
LORAX_VERSION="29.6" make docs
(cherry picked from commit d47d38e0c8)
We had only been indirectly pulling in GConf, and anyways
nothing was listening to these keys.
<kalev> I still think it's a fallout from 27a90d973f
Really in general, if we wanted to make changes like this
it'd probably be a lot simpler to do them on boot or so.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1581838
(cherry picked from commit bb3d8edd06)
mock now uses systemd-nspawn by default, but it cannot setup the
/dev/loop* nodes that are needed by lorax and livemedia-creator so users
will need to pass --old-chroot to mock if they are using it.
These were set by livecd-creator, and the %post section was used to
setup the license files on the / of the iso which will not work from
inside anaconda so drop it completely.