fedora-kickstarts/fedora-iot.ks

119 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

# This is the kickstart for Fedora IoT disk images.
text # don't use cmdline -- https://github.com/rhinstaller/anaconda/issues/931
lang en_US.UTF-8
keyboard us
timezone --utc Etc/UTC
auth --useshadow --passalgo=sha512
selinux --enforcing
rootpw --lock --iscrypted locked
# Add most common consoles console=ttyAMA0 console=ttyS0 console=ttyS1 as kernel boot parameter
bootloader --timeout=1 --append="console=tty1 console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=ttyS1,115200n8 console=ttyAMA0,115200n8 net.ifnames=0 modprobe.blacklist=vc4"
network --bootproto=dhcp --device=link --activate --onboot=on
services --enabled=NetworkManager,sshd,rngd,initial-setup,zram-swap
# tell Initial Setup to run in the reconfig mode
firstboot --reconfig --enable
zerombr
clearpart --all --initlabel --disklabel=msdos
autopart --nohome --noswap --type=plain
# Equivalent of %include fedora-repo.ks
# Pull from the ostree repo that was created during the compose
ostreesetup --nogpg --osname=fedora-iot --remote=fedora-iot --url=https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/compose/iot/repo/ --ref=fedora/29/${basearch}/iot
reboot
%post --erroronfail
# Find the architecture we are on
arch=$(uname -m)
# Setup Raspberry Pi firmware
if [[ $arch == "aarch64" ]] || [[ $arch == "armv7l" ]]; then
if [[ $arch == "aarch64" ]]; then
cp -P /usr/share/uboot/rpi_3/u-boot.bin /boot/efi/rpi3-u-boot.bin
else
cp -P /usr/share/uboot/rpi_2/u-boot.bin /boot/fw/rpi2-u-boot.bin
cp -P /usr/share/uboot/rpi_3_32b/u-boot.bin /boot/fw/rpi3-u-boot.bin
fi
fi
# Set the origin to the "main ref", distinct from /updates/ which is where bodhi writes.
# We want consumers of this image to track the two week releases.
ostree admin set-origin --index 0 fedora-iot https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/iot/29/ "fedora/29/${arch}/iot"
# Make sure the ref we're supposedly sitting on (according
# to the updated origin) exists.
ostree refs "fedora-iot:fedora/29/${arch}/iot" --create "fedora-iot:fedora/29/${arch}/iot"
# Remove the old ref so that the commit eventually gets cleaned up.
ostree refs "fedora-iot:fedora/29/${arch}/iot" --delete
# delete/add the remote with new options to enable gpg verification
# and to point them at the cdn url
ostree remote delete fedora-iot
ostree remote add --set=gpg-verify=true --set=gpgkeypath=/etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-fedora-29-primary fedora-iot 'https://dl.fedoraproject.org/iot/repo/'
# older versions of livecd-tools do not follow "rootpw --lock" line above
# https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964299
passwd -l root
# Work around https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1193590
cp /etc/skel/.bash* /var/roothome
echo -n "Network fixes"
# initscripts don't like this file to be missing.
cat > /etc/sysconfig/network << EOF
NETWORKING=yes
NOZEROCONF=yes
EOF
# Remove any persistent NIC rules generated by udev
rm -vf /etc/udev/rules.d/*persistent-net*.rules
# And ensure that we will do DHCP on eth0 on startup
cat > /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 << EOF
DEVICE="eth0"
BOOTPROTO="dhcp"
ONBOOT="yes"
TYPE="Ethernet"
PERSISTENT_DHCLIENT="yes"
EOF
echo "Removing random-seed so it's not the same in every image."
rm -f /var/lib/systemd/random-seed
echo "Packages within this iot image:"
echo "-----------------------------------------------------------------------"
rpm -qa
echo "-----------------------------------------------------------------------"
# Note that running rpm recreates the rpm db files which aren't needed/wanted
rm -f /var/lib/rpm/__db*
echo "Zeroing out empty space."
# This forces the filesystem to reclaim space from deleted files
dd bs=1M if=/dev/zero of=/var/tmp/zeros || :
rm -f /var/tmp/zeros
echo "(Don't worry -- that out-of-space error was expected.)"
# For trac ticket https://pagure.io/atomic-wg/issue/128
rm -f /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ens3
echo "Adding Developer Mode GRUB2 menu item."
/usr/libexec/atomic-devmode/bootentry add
# Disable network service here, as doing it in the services line
# fails due to RHBZ #1369794
/sbin/chkconfig network off
# Anaconda is writing an /etc/resolv.conf from the install environment.
# The system should start out with an empty file, otherwise cloud-init
# will try to use this information and may error:
# https://bugs.launchpad.net/cloud-init/+bug/1670052
truncate -s 0 /etc/resolv.conf
%end