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			23 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			564 lines
		
	
	
		
			23 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
Image building tools for OpenStack
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==================================
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These tools are the components of TripleO
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(https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/TripleO) that are responsible for
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building disk images.
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This repository has the core functionality for building disk images, file
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system images and ramdisk images for use with OpenStack (both virtual and bare
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metal). The core functionality includes the various operating system specific
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modules for disk/filesystem images, and deployment and hardware inventory
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ramdisks.
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The TripleO project also develops elements that can be used to deploy
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OpenStack itself. These live in the TripleO elements repository
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(https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/tripleo-image-elements).
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What tools are there?
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---------------------
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* disk-image-create [-a i386|amd64|armhf] -o filename {element} [{element} ...]
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  Create an image of element {element}, optionally mixing in other elements.
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  Element dependencies are automatically included. Support for other
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  architectures depends on your environment being able to run binaries of that
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  platform. For instance, to enable armhf on Ubuntu install the qemu-user-static
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  package. The default output format from disk-image-create is qcow2. To instead
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  output a tarball pass in "-t tar". This tarball could then be used as an image
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  for a linux container(see docs/docker.md).
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* ramdisk-image-create -o filename {element} [{element} ...] : Create a kernel+
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  ramdisk pair for running maintenance on bare metal machines (deployment,
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  inventory, burnin etc).
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    To generate kernel+ramdisk pair for use with nova-baremetal, use
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    ramdisk-image-create -o deploy.ramdisk deploy-baremetal
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    To generate kernel+ramdisk pair for use with ironic, use
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    ramdisk-image-create -o deploy.ramdisk deploy-ironic
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* disk-image-get-kernel filename : **DEPRECATED** Extract the appropriate
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  kernel and ramdisk to use when doing PXE boot using filename as the image
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  for a machine. Consider using the `baremetal` element, rather than this tool.
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* elements can be found in the top level elements directory.
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* element-info : Extract information about elements.
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Why?
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----
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Automation: While users and operators can manually script or put together ram
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disks and disk images, mature automation makes customisation and testing easier.
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Installation
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============
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* Clone the repository locally, then add bin to your path.
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* Make sure you have qemu-img (qemu-utils package on Ubuntu/Debian,
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  qemu on Fedora/RHEL/openSUSE) and kpartx installed.
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Invocation
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==========
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The scripts can generally just be run. Options can be set on the command line
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or by exporting variables to override those present in lib/img-defaults. -h to
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get help.
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The image building scripts expect to be able to invoke commands with sudo, so if you
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want them to run non-interactively, you should either run them as root, with
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sudo -E, or allow your build user to run any sudo command without password.
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Using the variable ELEMENTS\_PATH will allow to specify multiple elements locations.
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It's a colon (:) separated path list, and it will work in a first path/element found,
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first served approach. The included elements tree is used when no path is supplied,
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and is added to the end of the path if a path is supplied.
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By default, the image building scripts will not overwrite existing disk images,
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allowing you to compare the newly built image with the existing one. To change
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that behaviour, set the variable OVERWRITE\_OLD\_IMAGE to any value that isn't
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0.
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Requirements
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============
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If you have 4GB of available physical RAM\*, or more, diskimage-builder will
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create a tmpfs mount to build the image in. This will improve image build time
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by building in RAM. This can be disabled completely by passing --no-tmpfs to
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disk-image-create. ramdisk-image-create builds a regular image and then within
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that does ramdisk creation. If tmpfs is not used, you will need enough room in
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/tmp to store two uncompressed cloud images. If you do have tmpfs, you will
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still need /tmp space for one uncompressed cloud image and about 20% of that
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for working files.
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\* As reported by /proc/meminfo MemTotal
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Caches and offline mode
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=======================
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Since retrieving and transforming operating system image files, git
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repositories, Python or Ruby packages, and so on can be a significant
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overhead, we cache many of the inputs to the build process. The cache
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location is read from DIB\_IMAGE\_CACHE. `Writing an element`_
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describes the interface within disk-image-builder for caching. When
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invoking disk-image-builder, the ``--offline`` option will instruct
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disk-image-builder to not refresh cached resources.
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Note that we don't maintain operating system package caches, instead
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depending on your local infrastructure (e.g. Squid cache, or an APT or
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Yum proxy) to facilitate caching of that layer, so you need to arrange
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independently for offline mode. For more information about setting up
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a squid proxy, consult the [TripleO
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documentation](http://docs.openstack.org/developer/tripleo-incubator/devtest_setup.html#f3).
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Base images
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-----------
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These are cached by the standard elements - fedora, redhat, ubuntu,
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debian and opensuse.
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source-repositories
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-------------------
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Git repositories and tarballs obtained via the source-repositories element will
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be cached.
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Install Types
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-------------
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Install types permit elements to be installed from different sources, such as
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git repositories, distribution packages, or pip. The default install type
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is 'source' but it can be modified on the disk-image-create command line
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via the --install-type option. For example you can set:
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    --install-type=package
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to enable package installs by default. Alternately, you can also
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set DIB\_DEFAULT\_INSTALLTYPE.
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Many elements expose different install types. The different implementations
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live under `<install-dir-prefix>-<install-type>-install` directories under an
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element's install.d. The base element enables the chosen install type by
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symlinking the correct hook scripts under install.d directly.
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`<install-dir-prefix>` can be a string of alphanumeric and '-' characters, but
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typically corresponds to the element name.
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For example, the nova element would provide:
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    nova/install.d/nova-package-install/74-nova
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    nova/install.d/nova-source-install/74-nova
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The following symlink would be created for the package install type:
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    install.d/74-nova -> nova-package-install/74-nova
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Or, for the source install type:
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    install.d/74-nova -> nova-source-install/74-nova
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All other scripts that exist under install.d for an element will be executed as
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normal. This allows common install code to live in a script under install.d.
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To set the install type for an element define an environment variable
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`DIB_INSTALLTYPE_<install_dir_prefx>`. Note that if you used `-` characters in
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your install directory prefix, those need to be replaced with `_` in the
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environment variable.
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For example, to enable the package install type for the set of nova elements
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that use `nova` as the install type prefix, define the following:
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    export DIB_INSTALLTYPE_nova=package
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C and C++ compilation
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---------------------
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Ccache is configured by the base element. Any compilation that honours ccache
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will be cached.
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PyPI
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----
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The pypi element will bind mount a PyPI mirror from the cache dir and configure
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pip and easy-install to use it.
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Design
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======
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Images are built using a chroot and bind mounted /proc /sys and /dev. The goal
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of the image building process is to produce blank slate machines that have all
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the necessary bits to fulfill a specific purpose in the running of an OpenStack
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cloud: e.g. a nova-compute node. Images produce either a filesystem image with
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a label of cloudimg-rootfs, or can be customised to produce whole disk images
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(but will still contain a filesystem labelled cloudimg-rootfs). Once the file
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system tree is assembled a loopback device with filesystem (or partition table
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and file system) is created and the tree copied into it. The file system
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created is an ext4 filesystem just large enough to hold the file system tree
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and can be resized up to 1PB in size.
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An element is a particular set of code that alters how the image is built, or
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runs within the chroot to prepare the image. E.g. the local-config element
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copies in the http proxy and ssh keys of the user running the image build
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process into the image, whereas the vm element makes the image build a regular
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VM image with partition table and installed grub boot sector. The mellanox
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element adds support for mellanox infiniband hardware to both the deploy
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ramdisk and the built images.
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Images must specify a base distribution image element. Currently base
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distribution elements exist for fedora, rhel, ubuntu, debian and
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opensuse. Other distributions may be added in future, the
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infrastructure deliberately makes few assumptions about the exact
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operating system in use.  The base image has opensshd running (a new
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key generated on first boot) and accepts keys via the cloud metadata
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service, loading them into the distribution specific default user
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account.
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The goal of a built image is to have any global configuration ready to roll,
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but nothing that ties it to a specific cloud instance: images should be able to
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be dropped into a test cloud and validated, and then deployed into a production
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cloud (usually via bare metal nova) for production use. As such, the image
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contents can be modelled as three distinct portions:
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- global content: the actual code, kernel, always-applicable config (like
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  disabling password authentication to sshd).
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- metadata / config management provided configuration: user ssh keys, network
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  address and routes, configuration management server location and public key,
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  credentials to access other servers in the cloud. These are typically
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  refreshed on every boot.
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- persistent state: sshd server key, database contents, swift storage areas,
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  nova instance disk images, disk image cache. These would typically be stored
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  on a dedicated partition and not overwritten when re-deploying the image.
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The goal of the image building tools is to create machine images that contain
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the correct global content and are ready for 'last-mile' configuration by the
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nova metadata API, after which a configuration management system can take over
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(until the next deploy, when it all starts over from scratch).
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Existing elements
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-----------------
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Elements are found in the subdirectory elements. Each element is in a directory
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named after the element itself. Elements *should* have a README.md in the root
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of the element directory describing what it is for.
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Writing an element
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------------------
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Conform to the following conventions:
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* Use the environment for overridable defaults, prefixing environment variable
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  names with "DIB\_". For example: DIB\_MYDEFAULT=${DIB\_MYDEFAULT:-default}
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  If you do not use the DIB\_ prefix you may find that your overrides are
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  discarded as the build environment is sanitised.
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* Consider that your element co-exists with many others and try to guard
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  against undefined behaviours. Some examples:
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  * Two elements use the source-repositories element, but use the same filename
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    for the source-repositories config file. Files such as these (and indeed the
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    scripts in the various .d directories listed below) should be named such
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    that they are unique. If they are not unique, when the combined tree is
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    created by disk-image-builder for injecting into the build environment, one
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    of the files will be overwritten.
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  * Two elements copy different scripts into /usr/local/bin with the same name.
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    If they both use set -e and cp -n then the conflict will be caught and cause
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    the build to fail.
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* If your element mounts anything into the image build tree ($TMP\_BUILD\_DIR)
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  then it will be automatically unmounted when the build tree is unmounted -
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  and not remounted into the filesystem image - if the mount point is needed
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  again, your element will need to remount it at that point.
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* If caching is required, elements should use a location under
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  $DIB\_IMAGE\_CACHE.
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* Elements should allow for remote data to be cached. When
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  $DIB\_OFFLINE is set, this cached data should be used if
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  possible. See the *Global image-build variables* section of this
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  document for more information.
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### Phase Subdirectories ###
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Make as many of the following subdirectories as you need, depending on what
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part of the process you need to customise. The subdirectories are executed in
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the order given here. Scripts within the subdirectories should be named with a
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two-digit numeric prefix, and are executed in numeric order.
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* root.d: Create or adapt the initial root filesystem content. This is where
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  alternative distribution support is added, or customisations such as
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  building on an existing image.
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  Only one element can use this at a time unless particular care is taken not
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  to blindly overwrite but instead to adapt the context extracted by other
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  elements.
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 * runs: outside chroot
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 * inputs: $ARCH=i386|amd64|armhf $TARGET\_ROOT=/path/to/target/workarea
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* extra-data.d: pull in extra data from the host environment that hooks may
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  need during image creation. This should copy any data (such as SSH keys,
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  http proxy settings and the like) somewhere under $TMP\_HOOKS\_PATH.
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 * runs: outside chroot
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 * inputs: $TMP\_HOOKS\_PATH
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 * outputs: None
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* pre-install.d: Run code in the chroot before customisation or packages are
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  installed. A good place to add apt repositories.
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 * runs: in chroot
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* install.d: Runs after pre-install.d in the chroot. This is a good place to
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  install packages, chain into configuration management tools or do other
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  image specific operations.
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 * runs: in chroot
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* post-install.d: Run code in the chroot. This is a good place to perform
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  tasks you want to handle after the OS/application install but before the
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  first boot of the image. Some examples of use would be: Run chkconfig
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  to disable unneeded services and clean the cache left by the package
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  manager to reduce the size of the image.
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 * runs: in chroot
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* block-device.d: customise the block device that the image will be made on
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  (e.g. to make partitions). Runs after the target tree has been fully
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  populated but before the cleanup hook runs.
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 * runs: outside chroot
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 * inputs: $IMAGE\_BLOCK\_DEVICE={path} $TARGET\_ROOT={path}
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 * outputs: $IMAGE\_BLOCK\_DEVICE={path}
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* finalise.d: Perform final tuning of the root filesystem. Runs in a chroot
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  after the root filesystem content has been copied into the mounted
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  filesystem: this is an appropriate place to reset SELinux metadata, install
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  grub bootloaders and so on. Because this happens inside the final image, it
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  is important to limit operations here to only those necessary to affect the
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  filesystem metadata and image itself. For most operations, post-install.d
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  is preferred.
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 * runs: in chroot
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* cleanup.d: Perform cleanup of the root filesystem content. For
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  instance, temporary settings to use the image build environment HTTP proxy
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  are removed here in the dpkg element.
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 * runs: outside chroot
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 * inputs: $ARCH=i386|amd64|armhf $TARGET\_ROOT=/path/to/target/workarea
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Other Subdirectories
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Elements may have other subdirectories that are processed by specific elements
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rather than the diskimage-builder tools themselves.
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One example of this is the ``bin`` directory.  The ``rpm-distro``, ``dpkg`` and
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``opensuse`` elements install all files found in the ``bin`` directory into
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``/usr/local/bin`` within the image as executable files.
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Environment Variables
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To set environment variables for other hooks, add a file to environment.d.
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This directory contains bash script snippets that are sourced before running
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scripts in each phase.
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DIB exposes an internal IMAGE\_ELEMENT variable which provides elements access
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to the full set of elements that are included in the image build. This can
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be used to process local in-element files across all the elements
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(pkg-map for example).
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Dependencies
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Each element can use the following files to define or affect dependencies:
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* element-deps: a plain text, newline separated list of elements which will
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  be added to the list of elements built into the image at image creation time.
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* element-provides: A plain text, newline separated list of elements which
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  are provided by this element. These elements will be excluded from elements
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  built into the image at image creation time. For example if element A depends
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  on element B and element C includes element B in its "element-provides"
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  file and A and C are included when building an image, then B is not used.
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Ramdisk Elements
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Ramdisk elements support the following files in their element directories:
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* binary-deps.d : text files listing executables required to be fed into the
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  ramdisk. These need to be present in $PATH in the build chroot (i.e. need to
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  be installed by your elements as described above).
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* init.d : POSIX shell script fragments that will be appended to the default
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  script executed as the ramdisk is booted (/init).
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* ramdisk-install.d : called to copy files into the ramdisk. The variable
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  TMP\_MOUNT\_PATH points to the root of the tree that will be packed into
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  the ramdisk.
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* udev.d : udev rules files that will be copied into the ramdisk.
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Element coding standard
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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- lines should not include trailing whitespace.
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- there should be no hard tabs in the file.
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- indents are 4 spaces, and all indentation should be some multiple of
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  them.
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- `do` and `then` keywords should be on the same line as the if, while or
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  for conditions.
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Global image-build variables
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----------------------------
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* DIB\_OFFLINE : this is always set. When not empty, any operations that
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  perform remote data access should avoid it if possible. If not possible
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  the operation should still be attempted as the user may have an external
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  cache able to keep the operation functional.
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* DIB\_IMAGE\_ROOT\_FS\_UUID : this contains the UUID of the root fs, when
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  diskimage-builder is building a disk image. This works only for ext
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  filesystems.
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 | 
						|
* DIB\_IMAGE\_CACHE : path to where cached inputs to the build process
 | 
						|
  are stored. Defaults to ~/.cache/image_create.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Structure of an element
 | 
						|
-----------------------
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
The above-mentioned global content can be further broken down in a way that
 | 
						|
encourages composition of elements and reusability of their components. One
 | 
						|
possible approach to this would be to label elements as either a "driver",
 | 
						|
"service", or "config" element. Below are some examples.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
- Driver-specific elements should only contain the necessary bits for that
 | 
						|
  driver:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
      elements/
 | 
						|
         driver-mellanox/
 | 
						|
            init           - modprobe line
 | 
						|
            install.d/
 | 
						|
               10-mlx      - package installation
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
- An element that installs and configures Nova might be a bit more complex,
 | 
						|
  containing several scripts across several phases:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
      elements/
 | 
						|
         service-nova/
 | 
						|
            source-repository-nova - register a source repository
 | 
						|
            pre-install.d/
 | 
						|
               50-my-ppa           - add a PPA
 | 
						|
            install.d/
 | 
						|
               10-user             - common Nova user accts
 | 
						|
               50-my-pack          - install packages from my PPA
 | 
						|
               60-nova             - install nova and some dependencies
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
- In the general case, configuration should probably be handled either by the
 | 
						|
  meta-data service (eg, o-r-c) or via normal CM tools
 | 
						|
  (eg, salt). That being said, it may occasionally be desirable to create a
 | 
						|
  set of elements which express a distinct configuration of the same software
 | 
						|
  components.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
In this way, depending on the hardware and in which availability zone it is
 | 
						|
to be deployed, an image would be composed of:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
 * zero or more driver-elements
 | 
						|
 * one or more service-elements
 | 
						|
 * zero or more config-elements
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
It should be noted that this is merely a naming convention to assist in
 | 
						|
managing elements. Diskimage-builder is not, and should not be, functionally
 | 
						|
dependent upon specific element names.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
diskimage-builder has the ability to retrieve source code for an element and
 | 
						|
place it into a directory on the target image during the extra-data phase. The
 | 
						|
default location/branch can then be overridden by the process running
 | 
						|
diskimage-builder, making it possible to use the same element to track more
 | 
						|
then one branch of a git repository or to get source for a local cache. See
 | 
						|
elements/source-repositories/README.md for more information.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Debugging elements
 | 
						|
------------------
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
The build-time environment and command line arguments are captured by the
 | 
						|
'base' element and written to /etc/dib\_environment and /etc/dib\_arguments
 | 
						|
inside the image.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Export 'break' to drop to a shell during the image build. Break points can be
 | 
						|
set either before or after any of the hook points by exporting
 | 
						|
"break=[before|after]-hook-name". Multiple break points can be specified as a
 | 
						|
comma-delimited string. Some examples:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* break=before-block-device-size will break before the block device size hooks
 | 
						|
  are called.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* break=before-pre-install will break before the pre-install hooks.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* break=after-error will break after an error during a in target hookpoint.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Images are built such that the Linux kernel is instructed not to switch into
 | 
						|
graphical consoles (i.e. it will not activate KMS). This maximises
 | 
						|
compatibility with remote console interception hardware, such as HP's iLO.
 | 
						|
However, you will typicallly only see kernel messages on the console - init
 | 
						|
daemons (e.g. upstart) will usually be instructed to output to a serial
 | 
						|
console so nova's console-log command can function. There is an element in the
 | 
						|
tripleo-image-elements repository called "remove-serial-console" which will
 | 
						|
force all boot messages to appear on the main console.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Ramdisk images can be debugged at run-time by passing "troubleshoot" as a
 | 
						|
kernel command line argument, or by pressing "t" when an error is reached. This
 | 
						|
will spawn a shell on the console (this can be extremely useful when network
 | 
						|
interfaces or disks are not detected correctly).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Testing Elements
 | 
						|
----------------
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Elements can be tested using python. To create a test:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* Create a directory called 'tests' in the element directory.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* Create an empty file called '\_\_init\_\_.py' to make it into a python
 | 
						|
  package.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
* Create your test files as 'test\_whatever.py', using regular python test
 | 
						|
  code.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
To run all the tests use testr - `testr run`. To run just some tests provide
 | 
						|
one or more regex filters - tests matching any of them are run -
 | 
						|
`testr run apt-proxy`.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Third party elements
 | 
						|
--------------------
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Additional elements can be incorporated by setting ELEMENTS_PATH, for example
 | 
						|
if one were building tripleo-images, the variable would be set like::
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
        export ELEMENTS_PATH=tripleo-image-elements/elements
 | 
						|
        disk-image-create rhel7 cinder-api
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Copyright
 | 
						|
=========
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Copyright 2012 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
 | 
						|
Copyright (c) 2012 NTT DOCOMO, INC.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
All Rights Reserved.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
 | 
						|
not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
 | 
						|
a copy of the License at
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 | 
						|
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
 | 
						|
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
 | 
						|
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
 | 
						|
under the License.
 |