- docs: Remove composer-cli.1 manpage

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Brian C. Lane 2021-04-26 16:28:21 -07:00
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From cc7430fbbd7f72e5d6efd3e83efe2616de3a5d58 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Brian C. Lane" <bcl@redhat.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2021 16:24:12 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] docs: Remove composer-cli.1
---
docs/man/composer-cli.1 | 922 ----------------------------------------
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-.\" Man page generated from reStructuredText.
-.
-.TH "COMPOSER-CLI" "1" "Mar 04, 2021" "35.0" "Lorax"
-.SH NAME
-composer-cli \- Composer Cmdline Utility Documentation
-.
-.nr rst2man-indent-level 0
-.
-.de1 rstReportMargin
-\\$1 \\n[an-margin]
-level \\n[rst2man-indent-level]
-level margin: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
--
-\\n[rst2man-indent0]
-\\n[rst2man-indent1]
-\\n[rst2man-indent2]
-..
-.de1 INDENT
-.\" .rstReportMargin pre:
-. RS \\$1
-. nr rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level] \\n[an-margin]
-. nr rst2man-indent-level +1
-.\" .rstReportMargin post:
-..
-.de UNINDENT
-. RE
-.\" indent \\n[an-margin]
-.\" old: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
-.nr rst2man-indent-level -1
-.\" new: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
-.in \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]u
-..
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B Authors
-Brian C. Lane <\fI\%bcl@redhat.com\fP>
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBcomposer\-cli\fP is an interactive tool for use with a WELDR API server,
-managing blueprints, exploring available packages, and building new images. As
-of Fedora 34, \fIosbuild\-composer <https://osbuild.org>\fP is the recommended
-server.
-.sp
-It requires the server to be installed on the local system, and the user
-running it needs to be a member of the \fBweldr\fP group.
-.SH COMPOSER-CLI CMDLINE ARGUMENTS
-.sp
-Lorax Composer commandline tool
-
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-usage: composer\-cli [\-h] [\-j] [\-s SOCKET] [\-\-log LOG] [\-a APIVER] [\-\-test TESTMODE] [\-V] ...
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Positional Arguments
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.Bargs
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Named Arguments
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B\-j, \-\-json
-Output the raw JSON response instead of the normal output.
-.sp
-Default: False
-.TP
-.B\-s, \-\-socket
-Path to the socket file to listen on
-.sp
-Default: "/run/weldr/api.socket"
-.TP
-.B\-\-log
-Path to logfile (./composer\-cli.log)
-.TP
-.B\-a, \-\-api
-API Version to use
-.sp
-Default: "1"
-.TP
-.B\-\-test
-Pass test mode to compose. 1=Mock compose with fail. 2=Mock compose with finished.
-.sp
-Default: 0
-.TP
-.B\-V
-show program\(aqs version number and exit
-.sp
-Default: False
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B compose start [\-\-size XXXX] <BLUEPRINT> <TYPE> [<IMAGE\-NAME> <PROVIDER> <PROFILE> | <IMAGE\-NAME> <PROFILE.TOML>]
-Start a compose using the selected blueprint and output type. Optionally start an upload.
-\-\-size is supported by osbuild\-composer, and is in MiB.
-.TP
-.B compose start\-ostree [\-\-size XXXX] [\-\-parent PARENT] [\-\-ref REF] [\-\-url url] <BLUEPRINT> <TYPE> [<IMAGE\-NAME> <PROFILE.TOML>]
-Start an ostree compose using the selected blueprint and output type. Optionally start an upload. This command
-is only supported by osbuild\-composer. \-\-size is in MiB.
-.TP
-.B compose types
-List the supported output types.
-.TP
-.B compose status
-List the status of all running and finished composes.
-.TP
-.B compose list [waiting|running|finished|failed]
-List basic information about composes.
-.TP
-.B compose log <UUID> [<SIZE>]
-Show the last SIZE kB of the compose log.
-.TP
-.B compose cancel <UUID>
-Cancel a running compose and delete any intermediate results.
-.TP
-.B compose delete <UUID,...>
-Delete the listed compose results.
-.TP
-.B compose info <UUID>
-Show detailed information on the compose.
-.TP
-.B compose metadata <UUID>
-Download the metadata use to create the compose to <uuid>\-metadata.tar
-.TP
-.B compose logs <UUID>
-Download the compose logs to <uuid>\-logs.tar
-.TP
-.B compose results <UUID>
-Download all of the compose results; metadata, logs, and image to <uuid>.tar
-.TP
-.B compose image <UUID>
-Download the output image from the compose. Filename depends on the type.
-.TP
-.B blueprints list
-List the names of the available blueprints.
-.TP
-.B blueprints show <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Display the blueprint in TOML format.
-.TP
-.B blueprints changes <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Display the changes for each blueprint.
-.TP
-.B blueprints diff <BLUEPRINT> <FROM\-COMMIT> <TO\-COMMIT>
-Display the differences between 2 versions of a blueprint.
-FROM\-COMMIT can be a commit hash or NEWEST
-TO\-COMMIT can be a commit hash, NEWEST, or WORKSPACE
-.TP
-.B blueprints save <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Save the blueprint to a file, <BLUEPRINT>.toml
-.TP
-.B blueprints delete <BLUEPRINT>
-Delete a blueprint from the server
-.TP
-.B blueprints depsolve <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Display the packages needed to install the blueprint.
-.TP
-.B blueprints push <BLUEPRINT>
-Push a blueprint TOML file to the server.
-.TP
-.B blueprints freeze <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Display the frozen blueprint\(aqs modules and packages.
-.TP
-.B blueprints freeze show <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Display the frozen blueprint in TOML format.
-.TP
-.B blueprints freeze save <BLUEPRINT,...>
-Save the frozen blueprint to a file, <blueprint\-name>.frozen.toml.
-.TP
-.B blueprints tag <BLUEPRINT>
-Tag the most recent blueprint commit as a release.
-.TP
-.B blueprints undo <BLUEPRINT> <COMMIT>
-Undo changes to a blueprint by reverting to the selected commit.
-.TP
-.B blueprints workspace <BLUEPRINT>
-Push the blueprint TOML to the temporary workspace storage.
-.TP
-.B modules list
-List the available modules.
-.TP
-.B projects list
-List the available projects.
-.TP
-.B projects info <PROJECT,...>
-Show details about the listed projects.
-.TP
-.B sources list
-List the available sources
-.TP
-.B sources info <SOURCE\-NAME,...>
-Details about the source.
-.TP
-.B sources add <SOURCE.TOML>
-Add a package source to the server.
-.TP
-.B sources change <SOURCE.TOML>
-Change an existing source
-.TP
-.B sources delete <SOURCE\-NAME>
-Delete a package source.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-status show Show API server status.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B upload info <UPLOAD\-UUID>
-Details about an upload
-.TP
-.B upload start <BUILD\-UUID> <IMAGE\-NAME> [<PROVIDER> <PROFILE>|<PROFILE.TOML>]
-Upload a build image to the selected provider.
-.TP
-.B upload log <UPLOAD\-UUID>
-Show the upload log
-.TP
-.B upload cancel <UPLOAD\-UUID>
-Cancel an upload with that is queued or in progress
-.TP
-.B upload delete <UPLOAD\-UUID>
-Delete the upload and remove it from the build
-.TP
-.B upload reset <UPLOAD\-UUID>
-Reset the upload so that it can be tried again
-.TP
-.B providers list <PROVIDER>
-List the available providers, or list the <provider\(aqs> available profiles
-.TP
-.B providers show <PROVIDER> <PROFILE>
-show the details of a specific provider\(aqs profile
-.TP
-.B providers push <PROFILE.TOML>
-Add a new profile, or overwrite an existing one
-.TP
-.B providers save <PROVIDER> <PROFILE>
-Save the profile\(aqs details to a TOML file named <PROFILE>.toml
-.TP
-.B providers delete <PROVIDER> <PROFILE>
-Delete a profile from a provider
-.UNINDENT
-
-.SH EDIT A BLUEPRINT
-.sp
-Start out by listing the available blueprints using \fBcomposer\-cli blueprints
-list\fP, pick one and save it to the local directory by running \fBcomposer\-cli
-blueprints save http\-server\fP\&.
-.sp
-Edit the file (it will be saved with a .toml extension) and change the
-description, add a package or module to it. Send it back to the server by
-running \fBcomposer\-cli blueprints push http\-server.toml\fP\&. You can verify that it was
-saved by viewing the changelog \- \fBcomposer\-cli blueprints changes http\-server\fP\&.
-.sp
-See the \fI\%Example Blueprint\fP for an example.
-.SH BUILD AN IMAGE
-.sp
-Build a \fBqcow2\fP disk image from this blueprint by running \fBcomposer\-cli
-compose start http\-server qcow2\fP\&. It will print a UUID that you can use to
-keep track of the build. You can also cancel the build if needed.
-.sp
-The available types of images is displayed by \fBcomposer\-cli compose types\fP\&.
-Currently this consists of: alibaba, ami, ext4\-filesystem, google, hyper\-v,
-live\-iso, openstack, partitioned\-disk, qcow2, tar, vhd, vmdk
-.sp
-You can optionally start an upload of the finished image, see \fI\%Image Uploads\fP for
-more information.
-.SH MONITOR THE BUILD STATUS
-.sp
-Monitor it using \fBcomposer\-cli compose status\fP, which will show the status of
-all the builds on the system. You can view the end of the anaconda build logs
-once it is in the \fBRUNNING\fP state using \fBcomposer\-cli compose log UUID\fP
-where UUID is the UUID returned by the start command.
-.sp
-Once the build is in the \fBFINISHED\fP state you can download the image.
-.SH DOWNLOAD THE IMAGE
-.sp
-Downloading the final image is done with \fBcomposer\-cli compose image UUID\fP and it will
-save the qcow2 image as \fBUUID\-disk.qcow2\fP which you can then use to boot a VM like this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-qemu\-kvm \-\-name test\-image \-m 1024 \-hda ./UUID\-disk.qcow2
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH IMAGE UPLOADS
-.sp
-\fBcomposer\-cli\fP can upload the images to a number of services, including AWS,
-OpenStack, and vSphere. The upload can be started when the build is finished,
-by using \fBcomposer\-cli compose start ...\fP or an existing image can be uploaded
-with \fBcomposer\-cli upload start ...\fP\&. In order to access the service you need
-to pass authentication details to composer\-cli using a TOML file, or reference
-a previously saved profile.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-With \fBosbuild\-composer\fP you can only specify upload targets during
-the compose process.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH PROVIDERS
-.sp
-Providers are the services providers with Ansible playbook support under
-\fB/usr/share/lorax/lifted/providers/\fP, you will need to gather some provider
-specific information in order to authenticate with it. You can view the
-required fields using \fBcomposer\-cli providers template <PROVIDER>\fP, eg. for AWS
-you would run:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-composer\-cli upload template aws
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The output looks like this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-provider = "aws"
-
-[settings]
-aws_access_key = "AWS Access Key"
-aws_bucket = "AWS Bucket"
-aws_region = "AWS Region"
-aws_secret_key = "AWS Secret Key"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Save this into an \fBaws\-credentials.toml\fP file and use it when running \fBstart\fP\&.
-.SS AWS
-.sp
-The access key and secret key can be created by going to the
-\fBIAM\->Users\->Security Credentials\fP section and creating a new access key. The
-secret key will only be shown when it is first created so make sure to record
-it in a secure place. The region should be the region that you want to use the
-AMI in, and the bucket can be an existing bucket, or a new one, following the
-normal AWS bucket naming rules. It will be created if it doesn\(aqt already exist.
-.sp
-When uploading the image it is first uploaded to the s3 bucket, and then
-converted to an AMI. If the conversion is successful the s3 object will be
-deleted. If it fails, re\-trying after correcting the problem will re\-use the
-object if you have not deleted it in the meantime, speeding up the process.
-.SH PROFILES
-.sp
-Profiles store the authentication settings associated with a specific provider.
-Providers can have multiple profiles, as long as their names are unique. For
-example, you may have one profile for testing and another for production
-uploads.
-.sp
-Profiles are created by pushing the provider settings template to the server using
-\fBcomposer\-cli providers push <PROFILE.TOML>\fP where \fBPROFILE.TOML\fP is the same as the
-provider template, but with the addition of a \fBprofile\fP field. For example, an AWS
-profile named \fBtest\-uploads\fP would look like this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-provider = "aws"
-profile = "test\-uploads"
-
-[settings]
-aws_access_key = "AWS Access Key"
-aws_bucket = "AWS Bucket"
-aws_region = "AWS Region"
-aws_secret_key = "AWS Secret Key"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-You can view the profile by using \fBcomposer\-cli providers aws test\-uploads\fP\&.
-.SH BUILD AN IMAGE AND UPLOAD RESULTS
-.sp
-If you have a profile named \fBtest\-uploads\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-composer\-cli compose start example\-http\-server ami "http image" aws test\-uploads
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Or if you have the settings stored in a TOML file:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-composer\-cli compose start example\-http\-server ami "http image" aws\-settings.toml
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-It will return the UUID of the image build, and the UUID of the upload. Once
-the build has finished successfully it will start the upload process, which you
-can monitor with \fBcomposer\-cli upload info <UPLOAD\-UUID>\fP
-.sp
-You can also view the upload logs from the Ansible playbook with:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-\(ga\(gacomposer\-cli upload log <UPLOAD\-UUID>\(ga\(ga
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The type of the image must match the type supported by the provider.
-.SH UPLOAD AN EXISTING IMAGE
-.sp
-You can upload previously built images, as long as they are in the \fBFINISHED\fP state, using \fBcomposer\-cli upload start ...\(ga\fP\&. If you have a profile named \fBtest\-uploads\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-composer\-cli upload start <UUID> "http\-image" aws test\-uploads
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Or if you have the settings stored in a TOML file:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-composer\-cli upload start <UUID> "http\-image" aws\-settings.toml
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This will output the UUID of the upload, which can then be used to monitor the status in the same way
-described above.
-.SH DEBUGGING
-.sp
-There are a couple of arguments that can be helpful when debugging problems.
-These are only meant for debugging and should not be used to script access to
-the API. If you need to do that you can communicate with it directly in the
-language of your choice.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-json\fP will return the server\(aqs response as a nicely formatted json output
-instead of printing what the command would usually print.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-test=1\fP will cause a compose start to start creating an image, and then
-end with a failed state.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-test=2\fP will cause a compose to start and then end with a finished state,
-without actually composing anything.
-.SH BLUEPRINT REFERENCE
-.sp
-Blueprints are simple text files in \fI\%TOML\fP format that describe
-which packages, and what versions, to install into the image. They can also define a limited set
-of customizations to make to the final image.
-.sp
-A basic blueprint looks like this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-name = "base"
-description = "A base system with bash"
-version = "0.0.1"
-
-[[packages]]
-name = "bash"
-version = "4.4.*"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBname\fP field is the name of the blueprint. It can contain spaces, but they will be converted to \fB\-\fP
-when it is written to disk. It should be short and descriptive.
-.sp
-\fBdescription\fP can be a longer description of the blueprint, it is only used for display purposes.
-.sp
-\fBversion\fP is a \fI\%semver compatible\fP version number. If
-a new blueprint is uploaded with the same \fBversion\fP the server will
-automatically bump the PATCH level of the \fBversion\fP\&. If the \fBversion\fP
-doesn\(aqt match it will be used as is. eg. Uploading a blueprint with \fBversion\fP
-set to \fB0.1.0\fP when the existing blueprint \fBversion\fP is \fB0.0.1\fP will
-result in the new blueprint being stored as \fBversion 0.1.0\fP\&.
-.SS [[packages]] and [[modules]]
-.sp
-These entries describe the package names and matching version glob to be installed into the image.
-.sp
-The names must match the names exactly, and the versions can be an exact match
-or a filesystem\-like glob of the version using \fB*\fP wildcards and \fB?\fP
-character matching.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Currently there are no differences between \fBpackages\fP and \fBmodules\fP
-in \fBosbuild\-composer\fP\&. Both are treated like an rpm package dependency.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-For example, to install \fBtmux\-2.9a\fP and \fBopenssh\-server\-8.*\fP, you would add
-this to your blueprint:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[packages]]
-name = "tmux"
-version = "2.9a"
-
-[[packages]]
-name = "openssh\-server"
-version = "8.*"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [[groups]]
-.sp
-The \fBgroups\fP entries describe a group of packages to be installed into the image. Package groups are
-defined in the repository metadata. Each group has a descriptive name used primarily for display
-in user interfaces and an ID more commonly used in kickstart files. Here, the ID is the expected
-way of listing a group.
-.sp
-Groups have three different ways of categorizing their packages: mandatory, default, and optional.
-For purposes of blueprints, mandatory and default packages will be installed. There is no mechanism
-for selecting optional packages.
-.sp
-For example, if you want to install the \fBanaconda\-tools\fP group you would add this to your
-blueprint:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[groups]]
-name="anaconda\-tools"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBgroups\fP is a TOML list, so each group needs to be listed separately, like \fBpackages\fP but with
-no version number.
-.SS Customizations
-.sp
-The \fB[customizations]\fP section can be used to configure the hostname of the final image. eg.:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations]
-hostname = "baseimage"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This is optional and may be left out to use the defaults.
-.SS [customizations.kernel]
-.sp
-This allows you to append arguments to the bootloader\(aqs kernel commandline. This will not have any
-effect on \fBtar\fP or \fBext4\-filesystem\fP images since they do not include a bootloader.
-.sp
-For example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.kernel]
-append = "nosmt=force"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [[customizations.sshkey]]
-.sp
-Set an existing user\(aqs ssh key in the final image:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[customizations.sshkey]]
-user = "root"
-key = "PUBLIC SSH KEY"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The key will be added to the user\(aqs authorized_keys file.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBkey\fP expects the entire content of \fB~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [[customizations.user]]
-.sp
-Add a user to the image, and/or set their ssh key.
-All fields for this section are optional except for the \fBname\fP, here is a complete example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[customizations.user]]
-name = "admin"
-description = "Administrator account"
-password = "$6$CHO2$3rN8eviE2t50lmVyBYihTgVRHcaecmeCk31L..."
-key = "PUBLIC SSH KEY"
-home = "/srv/widget/"
-shell = "/usr/bin/bash"
-groups = ["widget", "users", "wheel"]
-uid = 1200
-gid = 1200
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If the password starts with \fB$6$\fP, \fB$5$\fP, or \fB$2b$\fP it will be stored as
-an encrypted password. Otherwise it will be treated as a plain text password.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBkey\fP expects the entire content of \fB~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [[customizations.group]]
-.sp
-Add a group to the image. \fBname\fP is required and \fBgid\fP is optional:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[customizations.group]]
-name = "widget"
-gid = 1130
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [customizations.timezone]
-.sp
-Customizing the timezone and the NTP servers to use for the system:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.timezone]
-timezone = "US/Eastern"
-ntpservers = ["0.north\-america.pool.ntp.org", "1.north\-america.pool.ntp.org"]
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The values supported by \fBtimezone\fP can be listed by running \fBtimedatectl list\-timezones\fP\&.
-.sp
-If no timezone is setup the system will default to using \fIUTC\fP\&. The ntp servers are also
-optional and will default to using the distribution defaults which are fine for most uses.
-.sp
-In some image types there are already NTP servers setup, eg. Google cloud image, and they
-cannot be overridden because they are required to boot in the selected environment. But the
-timezone will be updated to the one selected in the blueprint.
-.SS [customizations.locale]
-.sp
-Customize the locale settings for the system:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.locale]
-languages = ["en_US.UTF\-8"]
-keyboard = "us"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The values supported by \fBlanguages\fP can be listed by running \fBlocalectl list\-locales\fP from
-the command line.
-.sp
-The values supported by \fBkeyboard\fP can be listed by running \fBlocalectl list\-keymaps\fP from
-the command line.
-.sp
-Multiple languages can be added. The first one becomes the
-primary, and the others are added as secondary. One or the other of \fBlanguages\fP
-or \fBkeyboard\fP must be included (or both) in the section.
-.SS [customizations.firewall]
-.sp
-By default the firewall blocks all access except for services that enable their ports explicitly,
-like \fBsshd\fP\&. This command can be used to open other ports or services. Ports are configured using
-the port:protocol format:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.firewall]
-ports = ["22:tcp", "80:tcp", "imap:tcp", "53:tcp", "53:udp"]
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Numeric ports, or their names from \fB/etc/services\fP can be used in the \fBports\fP enabled/disabled lists.
-.sp
-The blueprint settings extend any existing settings in the image templates, so if \fBsshd\fP is
-already enabled it will extend the list of ports with the ones listed by the blueprint.
-.sp
-If the distribution uses \fBfirewalld\fP you can specify services listed by \fBfirewall\-cmd \-\-get\-services\fP
-in a \fBcustomizations.firewall.services\fP section:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.firewall.services]
-enabled = ["ftp", "ntp", "dhcp"]
-disabled = ["telnet"]
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Remember that the \fBfirewall.services\fP are different from the names in \fB/etc/services\fP\&.
-.sp
-Both are optional, if they are not used leave them out or set them to an empty list \fB[]\fP\&. If you
-only want the default firewall setup this section can be omitted from the blueprint.
-.sp
-NOTE: The \fBGoogle\fP and \fBOpenStack\fP templates explicitly disable the firewall for their environment.
-This cannot be overridden by the blueprint.
-.SS [customizations.services]
-.sp
-This section can be used to control which services are enabled at boot time.
-Some image types already have services enabled or disabled in order for the
-image to work correctly, and cannot be overridden. eg. \fBami\fP requires
-\fBsshd\fP, \fBchronyd\fP, and \fBcloud\-init\fP\&. Without them the image will not
-boot. Blueprint services are added to, not replacing, the list already in the
-templates, if any.
-.sp
-The service names are systemd service units. You may specify any systemd unit
-file accepted by \fBsystemctl enable\fP eg. \fBcockpit.socket\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[customizations.services]
-enabled = ["sshd", "cockpit.socket", "httpd"]
-disabled = ["postfix", "telnetd"]
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS [[repos.git]]
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Currently \fBosbuild\-composer\fP does not support \fBrepos.git\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fB[[repos.git]]\fP entries are used to add files from a \fI\%git repository\fP
-repository to the created image. The repository is cloned, the specified \fBref\fP is checked out
-and an rpm is created to install the files to a \fBdestination\fP path. The rpm includes a summary
-with the details of the repository and reference used to create it. The rpm is also included in the
-image build metadata.
-.sp
-To create an rpm named \fBserver\-config\-1.0\-1.noarch.rpm\fP you would add this to your blueprint:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[[repos.git]]
-rpmname="server\-config"
-rpmversion="1.0"
-rpmrelease="1"
-summary="Setup files for server deployment"
-repo="PATH OF GIT REPO TO CLONE"
-ref="v1.0"
-destination="/opt/server/"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-rpmname: Name of the rpm to create, also used as the prefix name in the tar archive
-.IP \(bu 2
-rpmversion: Version of the rpm, eg. "1.0.0"
-.IP \(bu 2
-rpmrelease: Release of the rpm, eg. "1"
-.IP \(bu 2
-summary: Summary string for the rpm
-.IP \(bu 2
-repo: URL of the get repo to clone and create the archive from
-.IP \(bu 2
-ref: Git reference to check out. eg. origin/branch\-name, git tag, or git commit hash
-.IP \(bu 2
-destination: Path to install the / of the git repo at when installing the rpm
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-An rpm will be created with the contents of the git repository referenced, with the files
-being installed under \fB/opt/server/\fP in this case.
-.sp
-\fBref\fP can be any valid git reference for use with \fBgit archive\fP\&. eg. to use the head
-of a branch set it to \fBorigin/branch\-name\fP, a tag name, or a commit hash.
-.sp
-Note that the repository is cloned in full each time a build is started, so pointing to a
-repository with a large amount of history may take a while to clone and use a significant
-amount of disk space. The clone is temporary and is removed once the rpm is created.
-.SH EXAMPLE BLUEPRINT
-.sp
-This example blueprint will install the \fBtmux\fP, \fBgit\fP, and \fBvim\-enhanced\fP
-packages. It will set the \fBroot\fP ssh key, add the \fBwidget\fP and \fBadmin\fP
-users as well as a \fBstudents\fP group:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-name = "example\-custom\-base"
-description = "A base system with customizations"
-version = "0.0.1"
-
-[[packages]]
-name = "tmux"
-version = "*"
-
-[[packages]]
-name = "git"
-version = "*"
-
-[[packages]]
-name = "vim\-enhanced"
-version = "*"
-
-[customizations]
-hostname = "custombase"
-
-[[customizations.sshkey]]
-user = "root"
-key = "A SSH KEY FOR ROOT"
-
-[[customizations.user]]
-name = "widget"
-description = "Widget process user account"
-home = "/srv/widget/"
-shell = "/usr/bin/false"
-groups = ["dialout", "users"]
-
-[[customizations.user]]
-name = "admin"
-description = "Widget admin account"
-password = "$6$CHO2$3rN8eviE2t50lmVyBYihTgVRHcaecmeCk31LeOUleVK/R/aeWVHVZDi26zAH.o0ywBKH9Tc0/wm7sW/q39uyd1"
-home = "/srv/widget/"
-shell = "/usr/bin/bash"
-groups = ["widget", "users", "students"]
-uid = 1200
-
-[[customizations.user]]
-name = "plain"
-password = "simple plain password"
-
-[[customizations.user]]
-name = "bart"
-key = "SSH KEY FOR BART"
-groups = ["students"]
-
-[[customizations.group]]
-name = "widget"
-
-[[customizations.group]]
-name = "students"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH AUTHOR
-Weldr Team
-.SH COPYRIGHT
-2018, Red Hat, Inc.
-.\" Generated by docutils manpage writer.
-.
--
2.26.3

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
Name: lorax Name: lorax
Version: 35.1 Version: 35.1
Release: 1%{?dist} Release: 2%{?dist}
Summary: Tool for creating the anaconda install images Summary: Tool for creating the anaconda install images
License: GPLv2+ License: GPLv2+
@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ URL: https://github.com/weldr/lorax
# git checkout -b archive-branch lorax-%%{version}-%%{release} # git checkout -b archive-branch lorax-%%{version}-%%{release}
# tito build --tgz # tito build --tgz
Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tar.gz Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tar.gz
Patch0: 0001-docs-Remove-composer-cli.1.patch
BuildRequires: python3-devel BuildRequires: python3-devel
BuildRequires: make BuildRequires: make
@ -135,6 +136,7 @@ Lorax templates for creating the boot.iso and live isos are placed in
%prep %prep
%setup -q -n %{name}-%{version} %setup -q -n %{name}-%{version}
%patch0 -p1
%build %build