project-config/nodepool/elements
James Polley aeadb73010 Always use sudo -H when pip installing
Recent versions of pip will create ~/.cache if it doesn't already exist.

If this happens while running "sudo pip" the resulting dir will be owned
by root and 700 - which breaks anything else on the system that wants to
use ~/.cache

I *think* this finds all instances of "sudo pip" in this repo and fixes
them to use -H. This should mean they always run in the right ~

Change-Id: I47ddb3b591df6ac2100f09b38c9b8a03cb1ba1ff
closes-bug: #1405732
2014-12-26 10:41:58 +01:00
..
cache-devstack Support name change in devstack to debs 2014-12-11 13:46:47 -08:00
node-devstack Reorganizes project-config 2014-09-25 11:41:04 -04:00
nodepool-base Always use sudo -H when pip installing 2014-12-26 10:41:58 +01:00
openstack-repos Rename config => system-config for nodepool 2014-10-17 21:28:44 +00:00
puppet Stop defaulting node builds to Puppet 2 2014-12-12 15:24:01 +00:00
slave-db Reorganizes project-config 2014-09-25 11:41:04 -04:00
README.rst Always use sudo -H when pip installing 2014-12-26 10:41:58 +01:00

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.

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 devstack-gate-precise.qcow2
sudo mount /dev/nbd1 /tmp/newimage

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.