project-config/nodepool/elements
Ian Wienand 2badcc1893 Add a dib-builddate file
Add a build-date timestamp file to the nodepool-base element and
output that as part of the "network-info" macro that we run at the
start of most tests.

This will allow non-priviledged users to quickly see the date the node
running their test was built on, which can be correlated to the logs
on nodepool.openstack.org to help debug issues that might have to do
with the underlying image build.

Change-Id: Id0c9f6203ed487350285031d3965bc6290370a27
2016-03-01 15:16:15 +11:00
..
cache-bindep Remove CentOS6 from nodepool scripts 2015-12-04 22:11:22 +01:00
cache-devstack Cleanup the early devstack clone script 2016-01-19 11:11:28 +11:00
node-devstack Add python3-dev 2015-10-22 15:08:28 +02:00
nodepool-base Add a dib-builddate file 2016-03-01 15:16:15 +11:00
openstack-repos diskimage-builder element cleanups for dib-lint 2015-10-08 11:33:03 +11:00
puppet Install puppet using build_git system-config 2015-12-08 13:43:47 -08:00
slave-db Reorganizes project-config 2014-09-25 11:41:04 -04:00
README.rst Determine CentOS 6 platform in cache-devstack 2015-05-01 20:57:05 +00:00

Using diskimage-builder to build devstack-gate nodes

In addition to being able to just download and consume images that are the same as what run devstack-gate, it's easy to make your own for local dev or testing - or just for fun.

Install diskimage-builder

Install the dependencies:

sudo apt-get install kpartx qemu-utils curl python-yaml

Install diskimage-builder:

sudo -H pip install diskimage-builder

Build an image

Building an image is simple, we have a script!

DISTRO="ubuntu" bash tools/build-image.sh

See the script for environment variables to set distribution, etc. You should be left with a .qcow2 image file of your selected distribution.

It is a good idea to set TMP_DIR to somewhere with plenty of space to avoid the disappointment of a full-disk mid-way through the script run.

While testing, consider exporting DIB_OFFLINE=true, to skip updating the cache.

Mounting the image

If you would like to examine the contents of the image, you can mount it on a loopback device using qemu-nbd.

sudo apt-get install qemu-utils
sudo modprobe nbd max_part=16
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/newimage
sudo qemu-nbd -c /dev/nbd1 /path/to/devstack-gate-precise.qcow2
sudo mount /dev/nbd1p1 /tmp/newimage

or use the scripts

sudo apt-get install qemu-utils
sudo modprobe nbd max_part=16
sudo tools/mount-image.sh devstack-gate-precise.qcow2
sudo tools/umount-image.sh

Other things

It's a qcow2 image, so you can do tons of things with it. You can upload it to glance, you can boot it using kvm, and you can even copy it to a cloud server, replace the contents of the server with it and kexec the new kernel.